US20070201773A1 - Chewingbag, A Bag For Herbal Material That Can Be Chewed On - Google Patents

Chewingbag, A Bag For Herbal Material That Can Be Chewed On Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20070201773A1
US20070201773A1 US10/599,743 US59974305A US2007201773A1 US 20070201773 A1 US20070201773 A1 US 20070201773A1 US 59974305 A US59974305 A US 59974305A US 2007201773 A1 US2007201773 A1 US 2007201773A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
bag
cloth
herbal material
bit
string
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US10/599,743
Inventor
Maarten Driessen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from NL1025898A external-priority patent/NL1025898C2/en
Priority claimed from NL1028072A external-priority patent/NL1028072C1/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of US20070201773A1 publication Critical patent/US20070201773A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A24TOBACCO; CIGARS; CIGARETTES; SIMULATED SMOKING DEVICES; SMOKERS' REQUISITES
    • A24BMANUFACTURE OR PREPARATION OF TOBACCO FOR SMOKING OR CHEWING; TOBACCO; SNUFF
    • A24B13/00Tobacco for pipes, for cigars, e.g. cigar inserts, or for cigarettes; Chewing tobacco; Snuff

Definitions

  • the solution is a wrapping for the herbal material strong enough to be chewed on and capable of letting through the liquid with the dissolved substances but holding back the vegetable pulp.
  • the wrapping can be made out of textile and the form or shape or structure of it should not be unpleasant to hold in the mouth and it ought to be made out of materials that are not hazardous to the health.
  • firm but smooth and unpainted cloth made out of cotton, linen, flax, silk, or hemp could be used.
  • Maybe synthetic cloth like polyester could be used as well but this is not a product from nature and it could be of greater risk to the health.
  • the wrapping could be filled/stuffed and sealed by the manufacturer making it look like a little pillow. It also could be a little bag that could be filled by the consumer himself.
  • the measures could be 3 to 4 cm with an opening on one of the smaller sides.
  • a small funnel could make it easier to fill the bag.
  • To seal the partially filled bag a bit of string or a plastic Cable-Tie could be placed around the twisted neck of the opening.
  • To prevent the fastener from slipping off while being used a thickening could be made round the opening of the bag. The thickening can be made from a thicker thread woven into the material of the bag at a distance of 1 ⁇ 2 cm from the opening.
  • the fastener can also be a spherical shaped and beadlike form K that can be placed on the twisted neck of the opening of the bag by turning it around.
  • the twisted neck of the opening can be pressed and hold tight inside the hole of K using a countersinked screw that is placed square onto the hole of K.
  • K can be made out of two parts using a hinge to connect them.
  • One part of K can have a gully and the other part can have a ledge and the hole of K can be formed by the space in between them.
  • the twisted neck of the opening of the bag can be placed in the gully to be pressed tight with the ledge of the other part.
  • the two hinging parts of K can be fastened with a countersinked screw or clasp.
  • a raw or rugged structure can be placed on the bottom of the gully or on the top of the ledge to have more grip on the twisted neck of the opening of the bag.
  • the opening of a bag sealed with a bit of string or a Cable-Tie has a rim/edging that is spreading and even could be raveling out. What we do not want in the mouth is a rim/edging spreading and raveling out. This can be prevented by making sure the rim of the opening of the bag will not be sticking out of the other end of the hole of K.
  • the sealed opening of the bag can also be smooth if the bit of string or the Cable-Tie is not placed around the twisted neck of the opening but placed mostly on the inside of the opening making it possible for the rim of the opening to be folded to the inside while sealing the opening.
  • the opening of the bag to be divided into a square and the bit of string is tacked through the material near each angular point of the square as well as on both sides of each angular point of the square.
  • the bit of string should now be on the outside of the bag for a little bit at three of the angular points of the square and the two ends of the bit of string should be outside the bag near the fourth angular point of the square.
  • the distances between the places where the bit of string is tacked through the material and the rim of the opening is about 3 ⁇ 4 cm.
  • the rim of the opening can be folded to the inside.
  • the inwardly folded rim of the opening can now be sealed by pulling the string tight and knotting its ends together.
  • a plastic Cable-Tie can be tacked through the material of the bag in the same manner as the bit of string has been. Filling the bag and folding the rim of the opening to the inside is easier using a plastic Cable-Tie because the hoop formed by the plastic strand of the Cable-Tie supplies the opening of the bag with shape and firmness while the bit of string supplies no support at all.
  • the frame can have an opening containing four hooks on the inside. The distances between the hooks are all the same. The three little pieces of the bit of string on the outside of the bag as well as the two ends can be placed around the hooks inside the frame. If the bag is partially filled and the rim of the opening has been folded inwardly the bag can be slid from the hooks to be sealed.
  • a rectangle with a hole or a cylindrical shaped form made out plastic with four hooks on the inside of its opening could be used to support the bit of string.
  • a round piece of cloth (drawing 1 ) with for example a diameter of 12 cm could be used.
  • the bit of string or the Cable-Tie could be tacked through the round piece of cloth as if the upper side of the round piece of cloth is like the inside of the bag, as if the edging of the round piece of cloth is like the rim of the opening of the bag and as if the underside of the round piece of cloth is like the outside of the bag.
  • intersections of the two square lines and the circle are like the angular points of the square into which the opening of the bag was imaginary divided in order to establish the places to tack the bit of string or the Cable-Tie through the material.
  • the bit of string or the Cable-Tie will be on the underside of the round piece of cloth for a little bit at three of the the intersection points and so will the two ends be at the fourth intersection point.
  • a square piece of cloth of 15 cm wide could be used containing ever decreasing circles with two square lines all having the same centre.
  • the consumer himself could cut the piece of cloth into the size he needs and tack the bit of string or the Cable-Tie through it near the intersection points.
  • two pair of square lines could be used. The lines of one pair are parallel to each other at a distance of about 1 ⁇ 2 cm. At the intersection points of the two pair of lines and the circles the bit of string or the Cable-Tie can be tacked through the piece of cloth.
  • Unpainted smooth and thin but firm cotton cloth commonly used to make sheets could be used to make a wrapping to put the herbal material into.
  • a Cable-Tie is easy to use but it can not be used repeatedly.
  • a re-usable design O could be made. If the bag or the round piece of cloth are not worn out they could be cleaned and re-used without having to run an other Cable-Tie through it.
  • O can look like a common Cable-Tie but the little rectangle placed in an oblique line with the strand it has to block (in order to prevent the little ribs on the plastic strand from going the wrong way) must have the capability to be moved and be replaced in order to release the strand temporary.
  • the little ‘home’ of the Cable-Tie with the hole, through which one end of the little plastic strand (which is connected with the other end to the ‘home’) should be led, consist out of two parts that can be reconnected to each other repeatedly using a fastener.
  • the little rectangle that has been placed in an oblique line with the strand could also independently be moved and replaced up against the plastic strand using a little screw.
  • the little plastic strand with the ribs can also be an independent part with a thickening at one end that could get stuck inside an opening of the little ‘home’ of the Cable-Tie as if they are one during the use of them.
  • K could hold on to the bit of string tightly.
  • an independent plastic strand with ribs and a thickening at one end could be used to seal the wrapping and therefore it could be led through K to be hold on tight to.
  • a raw or rugged structure or a little rectangle placed in an oblique line on the inside of K as if it was a common Cable-Tie could be used to prevent the strand from slipping. If K is made out of two parts the little plastic strand and the wrapping could be re-used.
  • the wrapping When not cut off the little plastic strand or the bit of string can be used like the stick of a lollipop to hold the wrapping into the mouth. After the chewing and the tasting of the herbal material the wrapping could be opened and if wanted the herbal material could still be eaten and swallowed with some water in order not to loose any of the active substances.
  • the use of the wrapping could be an alternative for eating candy or using tea or smoking marijuana or other herbs.
  • a mixture of herbal material could be made specially selected for use in the Chewing-bags described above.
  • the mixture or the components itself could be selected regarding its capability to dissolve in a liquid and especially in sputum and also regarding the speed and the duration of the dissolving. Also special attention could be made regarding the taste and the way the consumer experiences the taste of the mixture and the effects of it to the state of mind or the temper and the health.
  • the mixture can be put together creating several sorts regarding characteristics as taste and the effect to the state of mind and the temper and the health.

Abstract

A Chewing-Bag, a bag for herbal material that can be chewed on. A wrapping made out of textile to put fresh dried and pulverised herbal material into like the herbal material that could be found and used in the kitchen. A wrapping that can be held in the mouth capable to endure being chewed on. The taste and the active substances can be tasted and absorbed via the sputtum without any direct contact between the contents of the bag and the mouth. The structure of the cloth holds back the pulp but lets through the liquid with the dissolved substances. The rim of the bag or the edging of the piece of cloth can be folded inwardly resulting in a sealed opening smoothly shaped without any ravels. A round piece of cloth with the same capability to be used as Chewing-Bag. A piece of cloth with markings indicating the consumer how to adjust the size himself ad where to tack the bit of string or the Cable-Tie that can be re-used and a little strand that can be an independent part of it. A mixture of herbal material especially made to be used in combination with a Chewing-Bag.

Description

  • We want to be able to hold pulverized herbal or other vegetable material in our mouth to let the taste and the active substances be absorbed by the mouth or be swallowed together with the fluids of the mouth. It is meant for fresh dried and pulverized herbs that are if possible not manufactured any further like those herbs found in the kitchen or grown in the garden. Not wanted is all the loose material in the mouth and the unwanted swallowing of it. Not wanted is it sticking persistently to the teeth. Not wanted is the tongue or other parts of the mouth getting irritated or damaged because of a contact with the herbal material that is to direct.
  • The solution is a wrapping for the herbal material strong enough to be chewed on and capable of letting through the liquid with the dissolved substances but holding back the vegetable pulp. The wrapping can be made out of textile and the form or shape or structure of it should not be unpleasant to hold in the mouth and it ought to be made out of materials that are not hazardous to the health. For example firm but smooth and unpainted cloth made out of cotton, linen, flax, silk, or hemp could be used. Maybe synthetic cloth like polyester could be used as well but this is not a product from nature and it could be of greater risk to the health.
  • The wrapping could be filled/stuffed and sealed by the manufacturer making it look like a little pillow. It also could be a little bag that could be filled by the consumer himself. The measures could be 3 to 4 cm with an opening on one of the smaller sides. A small funnel could make it easier to fill the bag. To seal the partially filled bag a bit of string or a plastic Cable-Tie could be placed around the twisted neck of the opening. To prevent the fastener from slipping off while being used a thickening could be made round the opening of the bag. The thickening can be made from a thicker thread woven into the material of the bag at a distance of ½ cm from the opening.
  • The fastener can also be a spherical shaped and beadlike form K that can be placed on the twisted neck of the opening of the bag by turning it around. The twisted neck of the opening can be pressed and hold tight inside the hole of K using a countersinked screw that is placed square onto the hole of K. Also K can be made out of two parts using a hinge to connect them. One part of K can have a gully and the other part can have a ledge and the hole of K can be formed by the space in between them. The twisted neck of the opening of the bag can be placed in the gully to be pressed tight with the ledge of the other part. The two hinging parts of K can be fastened with a countersinked screw or clasp. A raw or rugged structure can be placed on the bottom of the gully or on the top of the ledge to have more grip on the twisted neck of the opening of the bag. The opening of a bag sealed with a bit of string or a Cable-Tie has a rim/edging that is spreading and even could be raveling out. What we do not want in the mouth is a rim/edging spreading and raveling out. This can be prevented by making sure the rim of the opening of the bag will not be sticking out of the other end of the hole of K. The sealed opening of the bag can also be smooth if the bit of string or the Cable-Tie is not placed around the twisted neck of the opening but placed mostly on the inside of the opening making it possible for the rim of the opening to be folded to the inside while sealing the opening. To accomplish this we imagine the opening of the bag to be divided into a square and the bit of string is tacked through the material near each angular point of the square as well as on both sides of each angular point of the square. The bit of string should now be on the outside of the bag for a little bit at three of the angular points of the square and the two ends of the bit of string should be outside the bag near the fourth angular point of the square. The distances between the places where the bit of string is tacked through the material and the rim of the opening is about ¾ cm. After the bag is partially filled the rim of the opening can be folded to the inside. The inwardly folded rim of the opening can now be sealed by pulling the string tight and knotting its ends together. Instead of the bit of string a plastic Cable-Tie can be tacked through the material of the bag in the same manner as the bit of string has been. Filling the bag and folding the rim of the opening to the inside is easier using a plastic Cable-Tie because the hoop formed by the plastic strand of the Cable-Tie supplies the opening of the bag with shape and firmness while the bit of string supplies no support at all. To supply the opening of the bag with firmness while using a bit of string a frame bend out of metal wire could help. The frame can have an opening containing four hooks on the inside. The distances between the hooks are all the same. The three little pieces of the bit of string on the outside of the bag as well as the two ends can be placed around the hooks inside the frame. If the bag is partially filled and the rim of the opening has been folded inwardly the bag can be slid from the hooks to be sealed. Instead of the frame a rectangle with a hole or a cylindrical shaped form made out plastic with four hooks on the inside of its opening could be used to support the bit of string.
  • Instead of the bag a round piece of cloth (drawing 1) with for example a diameter of 12 cm could be used. The bit of string or the Cable-Tie could be tacked through the round piece of cloth as if the upper side of the round piece of cloth is like the inside of the bag, as if the edging of the round piece of cloth is like the rim of the opening of the bag and as if the underside of the round piece of cloth is like the outside of the bag. To achieve this we draw two square lines and a circle with a diameter of 9 cm on the round piece of cloth and they all have the same centre. The intersections of the two square lines and the circle are like the angular points of the square into which the opening of the bag was imaginary divided in order to establish the places to tack the bit of string or the Cable-Tie through the material. On the circle near the intersection points as well as on both sides of the intersection points the bit of string or the Cable-Tie will be tacked through the material. The bit of string or the Cable-Tie will be on the underside of the round piece of cloth for a little bit at three of the the intersection points and so will the two ends be at the fourth intersection point.
  • Also a square piece of cloth of 15 cm wide could be used containing ever decreasing circles with two square lines all having the same centre. The consumer himself could cut the piece of cloth into the size he needs and tack the bit of string or the Cable-Tie through it near the intersection points. Instead of two square lines two pair of square lines could be used. The lines of one pair are parallel to each other at a distance of about ½ cm. At the intersection points of the two pair of lines and the circles the bit of string or the Cable-Tie can be tacked through the piece of cloth.
  • Unpainted smooth and thin but firm cotton cloth commonly used to make sheets could be used to make a wrapping to put the herbal material into.
  • A Cable-Tie is easy to use but it can not be used repeatedly. A re-usable design O could be made. If the bag or the round piece of cloth are not worn out they could be cleaned and re-used without having to run an other Cable-Tie through it. O can look like a common Cable-Tie but the little rectangle placed in an oblique line with the strand it has to block (in order to prevent the little ribs on the plastic strand from going the wrong way) must have the capability to be moved and be replaced in order to release the strand temporary. This can be achieved by making the little ‘home’ of the Cable-Tie with the hole, through which one end of the little plastic strand (which is connected with the other end to the ‘home’) should be led, consist out of two parts that can be reconnected to each other repeatedly using a fastener. The little rectangle that has been placed in an oblique line with the strand could also independently be moved and replaced up against the plastic strand using a little screw. The little plastic strand with the ribs can also be an independent part with a thickening at one end that could get stuck inside an opening of the little ‘home’ of the Cable-Tie as if they are one during the use of them.
  • To be able to re-use a wrapping without having to run through the material an other bit of string the endings of the bit of string could be led through the spherical shaped and beadlike form K instead of being knotted together. K could hold on to the bit of string tightly. Instead of the bit of string an independent plastic strand with ribs and a thickening at one end could be used to seal the wrapping and therefore it could be led through K to be hold on tight to. A raw or rugged structure or a little rectangle placed in an oblique line on the inside of K as if it was a common Cable-Tie could be used to prevent the strand from slipping. If K is made out of two parts the little plastic strand and the wrapping could be re-used.
  • When not cut off the little plastic strand or the bit of string can be used like the stick of a lollipop to hold the wrapping into the mouth. After the chewing and the tasting of the herbal material the wrapping could be opened and if wanted the herbal material could still be eaten and swallowed with some water in order not to loose any of the active substances.
  • The use of the wrapping could be an alternative for eating candy or using tea or smoking marijuana or other herbs.
  • One should be totally aware of the existence of herbal material that will be a serious risk and a danger to the health if chewed on or swallowed.
  • A mixture of herbal material could be made specially selected for use in the Chewing-bags described above.
  • While compiling the mixture the mixture or the components itself could be selected regarding its capability to dissolve in a liquid and especially in sputum and also regarding the speed and the duration of the dissolving. Also special attention could be made regarding the taste and the way the consumer experiences the taste of the mixture and the effects of it to the state of mind or the temper and the health. The mixture can be put together creating several sorts regarding characteristics as taste and the effect to the state of mind and the temper and the health.

Claims (2)

1. A Chewing-bag made out of textile and having an opening on one side, for enabling chewing of a herbal material, the textile:
being not unpleasant to hold in the mouth
being strong enough to chew on
having a structure that holds back pulp of the herbal material but lets through liquid and dissolved substances released therefrom.
2.-9. (canceled)
US10/599,743 2004-04-07 2005-04-07 Chewingbag, A Bag For Herbal Material That Can Be Chewed On Abandoned US20070201773A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NL1025898A NL1025898C2 (en) 2004-04-08 2004-04-08 Chewing bag containing herbal material, is made of non-toxic textile to hold pulp of herbal material and to let out liquid and dissolved substances
NL1025898 2004-04-08
NL1028072A NL1028072C1 (en) 2004-04-08 2005-01-20 Chewing bag containing herbal material, is made of non-toxic textile to hold pulp of herbal material and to let out liquid and dissolved substances
NL1028072 2005-01-20
NL1028714A NL1028714C2 (en) 2004-04-08 2005-04-07 A plum bag (a herb bag on which you can chew).
PCT/NL2005/000267 WO2005097609A1 (en) 2004-04-08 2005-04-07 Chewingbag, a bag for herbal material that can be chewed on
NL1028714 2005-04-07

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20070201773A1 true US20070201773A1 (en) 2007-08-30

Family

ID=34969290

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/599,743 Abandoned US20070201773A1 (en) 2004-04-07 2005-04-07 Chewingbag, A Bag For Herbal Material That Can Be Chewed On

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (1) US20070201773A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1740474A1 (en)
JP (1) JP4708418B2 (en)
NL (1) NL1028714C2 (en)
WO (1) WO2005097609A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
AT15642U1 (en) * 2017-01-04 2018-03-15 Walter Hohenauer Mag tooth pillows

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1185651A (en) * 1915-12-10 1916-06-06 William L Fross Tobacco-bag.
US1234279A (en) * 1916-11-13 1917-07-24 Crassus Buchanan Tobacco-catridge.
US2555088A (en) * 1949-07-01 1951-05-29 Herbert G Irwin Fishhook bait
US3757798A (en) * 1972-01-03 1973-09-11 W Lambert Method of reducing dependence on tobacco
US4607479A (en) * 1983-12-14 1986-08-26 Svenska Tobaks Ab Apparatus for packaging given quantities of snuff
US4839982A (en) * 1988-05-13 1989-06-20 Wood Robert G Fishing lure
US5050999A (en) * 1990-07-26 1991-09-24 Loon Iii James C Van Open-mesh net bag and method of forming the same
US5092681A (en) * 1990-11-10 1992-03-03 Ashley Iii William G Drawstring trash container
US5364348A (en) * 1993-10-04 1994-11-15 Berry Sr Donald P Device for supplying food to a person while avoiding choking
US5645353A (en) * 1989-05-23 1997-07-08 Linnell; Michael Charles Mail bags
US6162516A (en) * 1995-10-11 2000-12-19 Derr; Dedric M. System and method for protecting oral tissues from smokeless tobacco
US6247260B1 (en) * 2000-02-14 2001-06-19 Arnold Kandlbinder Fish bait protector

Family Cites Families (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB189915550A (en) * 1899-07-29 1900-06-02 Marie Bertels An Improved-Bag for Preserving Flowers or the like.
NL6617069A (en) * 1965-12-08 1967-06-09
JPS5116680U (en) * 1974-07-24 1976-02-06
GB2201721A (en) * 1987-03-04 1988-09-07 Robert Owen Appleby Re-usable bag fastener
JPH065496U (en) * 1992-06-29 1994-01-25 株式会社ホウセン商会 Packaging tobacco
JPH07149326A (en) * 1993-11-25 1995-06-13 Diatex Co Ltd Opening work method in charging contents in container bag and opening holder
JPH10329611A (en) * 1997-06-04 1998-12-15 Yutaka Giken Co Ltd Luggage room sheet
NL1009802C1 (en) * 1998-08-05 2000-02-08 Hubertus Johannes Bernardus Sc Closure.
AU6001700A (en) * 1999-07-19 2001-02-05 Andrew John Ashworth Apparatus and method for administration of medication
DE10040565A1 (en) * 2000-08-15 2002-03-07 Schulz Hans Herrmann Tooth cleaning device
AU2003226146A1 (en) * 2002-04-01 2003-10-20 Vinterus Technologies Llc Method and apparatus for removing chlorine from water and methods for manufacturing the same
DE20310117U1 (en) * 2003-07-01 2003-09-11 Koenig Josef Closure for bag shaped container has a lacing cord threaded through holes around the top of the bag for rapid securing by pulling and knotting the free ends

Patent Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1185651A (en) * 1915-12-10 1916-06-06 William L Fross Tobacco-bag.
US1234279A (en) * 1916-11-13 1917-07-24 Crassus Buchanan Tobacco-catridge.
US2555088A (en) * 1949-07-01 1951-05-29 Herbert G Irwin Fishhook bait
US3757798A (en) * 1972-01-03 1973-09-11 W Lambert Method of reducing dependence on tobacco
US4607479A (en) * 1983-12-14 1986-08-26 Svenska Tobaks Ab Apparatus for packaging given quantities of snuff
US4839982A (en) * 1988-05-13 1989-06-20 Wood Robert G Fishing lure
US5645353A (en) * 1989-05-23 1997-07-08 Linnell; Michael Charles Mail bags
US5050999A (en) * 1990-07-26 1991-09-24 Loon Iii James C Van Open-mesh net bag and method of forming the same
US5092681A (en) * 1990-11-10 1992-03-03 Ashley Iii William G Drawstring trash container
US5364348A (en) * 1993-10-04 1994-11-15 Berry Sr Donald P Device for supplying food to a person while avoiding choking
US6162516A (en) * 1995-10-11 2000-12-19 Derr; Dedric M. System and method for protecting oral tissues from smokeless tobacco
US6247260B1 (en) * 2000-02-14 2001-06-19 Arnold Kandlbinder Fish bait protector

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1740474A1 (en) 2007-01-10
NL1028714C2 (en) 2006-11-28
NL1028714A1 (en) 2005-10-20
JP4708418B2 (en) 2011-06-22
JP2007535448A (en) 2007-12-06
WO2005097609A1 (en) 2005-10-20

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US11019954B2 (en) Disposable combined squeezer/stirrer/dispenser/brewer device
US9930914B2 (en) Seamless oral pouch product
US7849785B1 (en) Disposable combined squeezer/stirrer/dispenser/brewer device with bottom cup
US20060169791A1 (en) Sip straw with consumable component
WO2017146933A1 (en) A single use tubular straw
US20070201773A1 (en) Chewingbag, A Bag For Herbal Material That Can Be Chewed On
US20140178532A1 (en) Beverage Mixing Apparatus and Methods of Making and Using the Same
US20160106631A1 (en) Biting and comforter device for infants
US20060142800A1 (en) Infant teething and feeding apparatus
US20160376094A1 (en) Tea bag tag adhesive
CN1964896A (en) Chewing bag containing herbal material, is made of non-toxic textile to hold pulp of herbal material
ES2386064T3 (en) Conditioning containing food product, the food product being fresh and natural kiwi
KR200438703Y1 (en) Tool for transporting flower pot
CN204264629U (en) A kind of Moisture-proof environment-friendlyshoe melon seed bag
JP3051091U (en) Wrap with aperture
FR2902772A1 (en) Hot drink e.g. ground coffee, packaging device for use in e.g. house, has crown cap including plastic membrane isolating content of cap from water, where capsule`s content is mixed when drink is heated and ready to be consumed by user
AU2014100458A4 (en) An Infusion Package and Assembly
KR101795441B1 (en) Portable container and container manufacturing method
RU142240U1 (en) BREWING BAG
KR200256247Y1 (en) Funnel for putting powdered milk in baby bottle
KR100912141B1 (en) Coffee pack combination spoon
TWM585770U (en) Agar packaging structure
KR20130001986U (en) Disposable icecream support paper
TWM465376U (en) Mini bottle having star-like candies
BR202012003668U2 (en) DEVICE FOR EXHIBITION AND SALE OF BALCONY PACKED FOOD

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION