US2054198A - Sponge applicator - Google Patents

Sponge applicator Download PDF

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US2054198A
US2054198A US643626A US64362632A US2054198A US 2054198 A US2054198 A US 2054198A US 643626 A US643626 A US 643626A US 64362632 A US64362632 A US 64362632A US 2054198 A US2054198 A US 2054198A
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sponge
soap
face
pocket
applicator
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US643626A
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Jones W Bartlett
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A47FURNITURE; DOMESTIC ARTICLES OR APPLIANCES; COFFEE MILLS; SPICE MILLS; SUCTION CLEANERS IN GENERAL
    • A47KSANITARY EQUIPMENT NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; TOILET ACCESSORIES
    • A47K7/00Body washing or cleaning implements
    • A47K7/02Bathing sponges, brushes, gloves, or similar cleaning or rubbing implements

Definitions

  • a sponge as of rubber, adapted to hold a cake of soap or the like, which when empty is a solid sponge having no open chamber therein. It is provided with a pocket, the sides of which are normally in contact. In the forms there illustrated a cake of soap in the pocket is faced with porous sponge material through the pores of which water may enter, and from which soap and water may be discharged.
  • the sponge is ordinarily used in the hands as a bath sponge, is entirely flexible, and is free from attached parts, such as metal, so that it is not likely to injure the body, or to cause tearing of itself.
  • the present invention applies not only to sponges which are solid when empty I as described in my prior patent, but also to any sponges in which thesoap cake is housed. Because the sponge applicators of my prior patent are the preferred form, the present invention will be described and illustrated by reference to sponges having a spaceless pocket therein to receive a cake of soap and the like.
  • One general object of the invention is there fore the provision of a sponge with a means or construction which tends to protect the holding two separate layers so as to leave apocket between them.
  • the present invention may be applied to either form as will appear hereinafter by reference to the various forms disclosed inthe accompanying drawing in which:
  • Figs. 1 and 2 are plan views of sponges of different shapes; showing the outline of the pockets therein.
  • Fig. 3 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig. 1, showing a sealing of the pores of an originally porous sponge.
  • Fig. 4 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig.- 1, showing a sealing of the pores of a sponge comprised of cemented layers.
  • Fig. 5 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig. 1, showing a sponge of cemented layers of different porosity, the fine-grained sponge be ing relatively ineffectual as an applicator face.
  • Figs. 1 and 2 indicate two shapes which are suitable and convenient for bath 40 or hand sponges. Either of the forms when filled with a cake of soap may bulge the sides outwardly. In all the figures the empty article is shown and it is to be understood that it is an article with a double utility. Without asoap or other flller it is a solid sponge. Witha filler it is an efflcient applicator for soap orthe like, having one face as the principal operating face for applying material such as soap, and having the other face much less In my prior patent above referred to I 5 sirability of determining the thickness of a sponge rubber layer over the soap by reference to the porosity of the sponge material. Some sponge rubber is coarse in texture, and some is very fine.
  • the very fine texture is less porous, and it is with more difliculty that soap solution can be exuded therefrom when used as an envelope for soap.
  • the porosity of a layer of fine grained sponge or of a too-thick layer of coarse grained sponge may be increased by perforations, but this is not desirable, as perforations merely create water channels to the soap. Such channels reduce the lathering quality and cause more rapid loss of soap by dissolution.
  • I may utilize the variations in sponge material, such as rubber to form a sponge applicator which is highly porous or open on one face, and which is much less porous on the other face.
  • the less porous face layer is preferably so closed, either by the fineness of texture or thickness of material, that it is relatively inoperable to dispense soap compared with the other face layer, as shown below with reference to Fig. 5.
  • Such a face layer has its cushioning action in the structure without its applicator function.
  • I may treat sponge material which would otherwise be operable as an applicator on both faces, by partial sealing of the pores of one face layer.
  • Fig. 1 the numeral l0 indicates a sponge which is rectangular in shape.
  • a pocket I I exists in the sponge and is defined by the line [2, made according to my said prior patent, with a constricted neck or opening 13.
  • Fig. 3 is a crosssection of said sponge on line :z::c of Fig. 1. It shows the sponge to be a solid block of sponge rubber l4 in which the heavy line I 5 indicates the cut which forms pocket H.
  • Fig. 2 represents a sponge I! of elliptical shape, with pocket I 8 defined by line I9 which also defines a constricted opening 20 into the pocket.
  • This may be made of a single block of sponge material or of layers of material secured together as described in my prior patent.
  • Fig, 3 I represent a sponge of a solid cake 28 of sponge rubber, cut to form a pocket 29, and treated to seal or partially close the pores on one face.
  • the block may be uniform in sponge texture so that either face is operable.
  • One face may be filled with a suitable filler such as rubber particles. or cement partially to close the pores of the layer. Where a cement, such as rubber is used the filled face may be heated and compressed, thereby permanently to compress the sponge and seal pores.
  • the permanent compression can be progressive from the face, which may be in the form of a thin porous layer, somewhat irregular and mottled, to the more open pores at a distance inward, at or near the pocket 29.
  • surface 30 represents such a mottled surface
  • the layers wet with a rubber cement at 32 may be placed together, laid on a hot plate, and compressed, The plate is allowed to cool, so that only the surface of layer 32 is highly heated and sealed. The heat dries out the solvent from the cement, and the vapor in the sponge aids in the sealing action to form mottled surface 36.
  • Fig. 5 I show a sponge which has two cemented layers 46 and 41 of sponge rubber.
  • Layer 46 is sufficiently open and poro to function as an applicator face.
  • Layer 4! is so fine in texture that it is relatively inoperative as an applicator face when it has a cushioning thickness as illustrated.
  • the article is also a useful sponge, because of its solidity, and it is an improved sponge because one face is more functional as a sponge, as to liquid capacity than the other, yet each face has substantially equal functional capacity, as to cushioning or resiliency.
  • the surfaces are fiat and parallel when the sponge is empty, it is obvious that conve'x surfaces are contemplated, and that the article is itself convex at the surfaces when there is soap inside.
  • the fiat or convex forms are termed substantially fiat forms to distinguish them from the balltype.
  • the invention is preferred in substantially fiat form, but it is not necessarily limited thereto.
  • a fiat layer is desired over the soap pocket so that the porosity for soap'discharge is uniform. Where discharge is required only at one face, the other face may be extended, and may be hemispherical if desired. Such greater thickness would render uniformly porous rubber relatively impervious to. the discharge of soap.
  • part of the sponge at one face of the pocket being open and'porous from the pocket through to those which may fall within the scope of the inthe exposed surface for the application of soap or. 60
  • a sponge applicator comprising two layers of sponge material in part secured together in flatwise relation so as to form a pocket therebetween for the receipt of soap or the like, one layer'being relatively porous to provide an applicator face, and the other layer having a sponge texture facing the pocket, said layer being relatively much less porous to provide a face which is substantially inefl'ective as an applicator face, both layers being porous to effect evaporation from the pocket.
  • a sponge applicator comprising two layers of sponge material in part secured together in flatwise reiation so as to form a pocket therebetween with sponge texture facing both sides of the pocket for the receipt of soap or the like, one layer having its porosity reduced by a partial sealing oi! its pores.
  • a sponge applicator comprising a sponge unit having a pocket therein, one part of the W. BARTLETT JONES.

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Epidemiology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Cleaning Implements For Floors, Carpets, Furniture, Walls, And The Like (AREA)

Description

Sept. 15, 1936.
w. B. JONES 2,054,198
SPONGE APPLICATOR Filed Nov. 21, 1932 mamas-4:50 W5 lva z/enior" Patented Sept. 15, 1936 UNITED STATES PATENT" OFFICE 2,054,198 SPONGE APPIJOATOB W. Bartlett Jones, Chicago, Ill.
Application November 21, 1932, Serial No. 643,628
4 Claims. (Cl. 15-'-122) 5' The present invention relates to sponge applicators f the type disclosed in my copending application Serial No. 261,913, filed March 15, 1928, now Patent No. 1,909,966, issued May 23, 1933.
Ordinary bath sponges have a uniform spongesurface exterior. In use they exude ,water uniformly all over, into the hand holding the sponge as well as on to the surface of the body where the sponge is applied. This alone is not a great inconvenience or disadvantage. However, where soap is used, it is usually rubbed into the surface of the sponge and then the soapy side of the sponge is applied to the body.
In my prior patent above referred to, there is disclosed particularly a sponge, as of rubber, adapted to hold a cake of soap or the like, which when empty is a solid sponge having no open chamber therein. It is provided with a pocket, the sides of which are normally in contact. In the forms there illustrated a cake of soap in the pocket is faced with porous sponge material through the pores of which water may enter, and from which soap and water may be discharged. The sponge is ordinarily used in the hands as a bath sponge, is entirely flexible, and is free from attached parts, such as metal, so that it is not likely to injure the body, or to cause tearing of itself.
In using the soap-filled article above described soap passes through both faces of the article, and on the face adjacent the holding hand the soap is really quite ineffective. Soap is not only wasted, but the holding hand is subjectedexcessively to theaction of soap.
The present invention applies not only to sponges which are solid when empty I as described in my prior patent, but also to any sponges in which thesoap cake is housed. Because the sponge applicators of my prior patent are the preferred form, the present invention will be described and illustrated by reference to sponges having a spaceless pocket therein to receive a cake of soap and the like.
Because it is desirable to have thesoapcontained in an article between. resilient cushions, and because only one of the cushionsisreally effective for transmission of soap,'! provide by this invention a sponge envelope in which one of the cushion layers is inefl'ectively pervious to the emcient or inoperable for such purpose.
soap or other detergent substance to render it a non-applicator surface.
One general object of the invention is there fore the provision of a sponge with a means or construction which tends to protect the holding two separate layers so as to leave apocket between them. The present invention may be applied to either form as will appear hereinafter by reference to the various forms disclosed inthe accompanying drawing in which:
Figs. 1 and 2 are plan views of sponges of different shapes; showing the outline of the pockets therein. Fig. 3 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig. 1, showing a sealing of the pores of an originally porous sponge.
Fig. 4 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig.- 1, showing a sealing of the pores of a sponge comprised of cemented layers.
Fig. 5 is a cross-section of a sponge generally like Fig. 1, showing a sponge of cemented layers of different porosity, the fine-grained sponge be ing relatively ineffectual as an applicator face.
In the accompanying drawing'I have shown the various forms in cross-section on line :n--:z: of
Figs. 1 and 2. The Figs. 1 and 2 indicate two shapes which are suitable and convenient for bath 40 or hand sponges. Either of the forms when filled with a cake of soap may bulge the sides outwardly. In all the figures the empty article is shown and it is to be understood that it is an article with a double utility. Without asoap or other flller it is a solid sponge. Witha filler it is an efflcient applicator for soap orthe like, having one face as the principal operating face for applying material such as soap, and having the other face much less In my prior patent above referred to I 5 sirability of determining the thickness of a sponge rubber layer over the soap by reference to the porosity of the sponge material. Some sponge rubber is coarse in texture, and some is very fine. The very fine texture is less porous, and it is with more difliculty that soap solution can be exuded therefrom when used as an envelope for soap. The porosity of a layer of fine grained sponge or of a too-thick layer of coarse grained sponge may be increased by perforations, but this is not desirable, as perforations merely create water channels to the soap. Such channels reduce the lathering quality and cause more rapid loss of soap by dissolution. In the present invention I aim to use as the operating face a layer of sponge which needs no perforations and which is sufficiently thick or thin for efficiency, according to its texture or porosity.
In the present invention I may utilize the variations in sponge material, such as rubber to form a sponge applicator which is highly porous or open on one face, and which is much less porous on the other face. The less porous face layer is preferably so closed, either by the fineness of texture or thickness of material, that it is relatively inoperable to dispense soap compared with the other face layer, as shown below with reference to Fig. 5. Such a face layer has its cushioning action in the structure without its applicator function. I may treat sponge material which would otherwise be operable as an applicator on both faces, by partial sealing of the pores of one face layer.
There are numerous ways of embodying the present invention in practical form, some of which are quite economically manufactured compared to other forms.
In Fig. 1 the numeral l0 indicates a sponge which is rectangular in shape. A pocket I I exists in the sponge and is defined by the line [2, made according to my said prior patent, with a constricted neck or opening 13. Fig. 3 is a crosssection of said sponge on line :z::c of Fig. 1. It shows the sponge to be a solid block of sponge rubber l4 in which the heavy line I 5 indicates the cut which forms pocket H.
Fig. 2 represents a sponge I! of elliptical shape, with pocket I 8 defined by line I9 which also defines a constricted opening 20 into the pocket. This may be made of a single block of sponge material or of layers of material secured together as described in my prior patent.
In Fig, 3 I represent a sponge of a solid cake 28 of sponge rubber, cut to form a pocket 29, and treated to seal or partially close the pores on one face. Originally. the block may be uniform in sponge texture so that either face is operable. One face may be filled with a suitable filler such as rubber particles. or cement partially to close the pores of the layer. Where a cement, such as rubber is used the filled face may be heated and compressed, thereby permanently to compress the sponge and seal pores. The permanent compression can be progressive from the face, which may be in the form of a thin porous layer, somewhat irregular and mottled, to the more open pores at a distance inward, at or near the pocket 29. The
surface 30 represents such a mottled surface,
a volatile rubber solvent aid in this action. In
The layers wet with a rubber cement at 32 may be placed together, laid on a hot plate, and compressed, The plate is allowed to cool, so that only the surface of layer 32 is highly heated and sealed. The heat dries out the solvent from the cement, and the vapor in the sponge aids in the sealing action to form mottled surface 36.
In Fig. 5 I show a sponge which has two cemented layers 46 and 41 of sponge rubber. Layer 46 is sufficiently open and poro to function as an applicator face. Layer 4! is so fine in texture that it is relatively inoperative as an applicator face when it has a cushioning thickness as illustrated.
Without soap or other filler the article is also a useful sponge, because of its solidity, and it is an improved sponge because one face is more functional as a sponge, as to liquid capacity than the other, yet each face has substantially equal functional capacity, as to cushioning or resiliency. Although I have shown forms in which the surfaces are fiat and parallel when the sponge is empty, it is obvious that conve'x surfaces are contemplated, and that the article is itself convex at the surfaces when there is soap inside. In general the fiat or convex forms are termed substantially fiat forms to distinguish them from the balltype. The invention is preferred in substantially fiat form, but it is not necessarily limited thereto. A fiat layer is desired over the soap pocket so that the porosity for soap'discharge is uniform. Where discharge is required only at one face, the other face may be extended, and may be hemispherical if desired. Such greater thickness would render uniformly porous rubber relatively impervious to. the discharge of soap.
One advantage of porosity on both faces is the ability of the sponge to dry out the pocket from both sides. Where one side is sealed, soap be-- comes soggy. and soft soap is formed with a loss of cake form. V
The invention is not to be considered as limited to the forms herein disclosed. Other variations and modifications are contemplated, such as in the appended claims.
unit having a pocket on the interior thereof for the reception of a cake of soap or the like, one
part of the sponge at one face of the pocket being open and'porous from the pocket through to those which may fall within the scope of the inthe exposed surface for the application of soap or. 60
the like thereby upon wetting the sponge, and the opposite portion of the sponge on the other side of said pocket having a relatively morefinegrained sponge structure and of less porosity whereby it is relatively ineffective as an applicator surface both layers being porous to effect evaporationfrom the pocket 2. A sponge applicator comprising two layers of sponge material in part secured together in flatwise relation so as to form a pocket therebetween for the receipt of soap or the like, one layer'being relatively porous to provide an applicator face, and the other layer having a sponge texture facing the pocket, said layer being relatively much less porous to provide a face which is substantially inefl'ective as an applicator face, both layers being porous to effect evaporation from the pocket.
3. A sponge applicator comprising two layers of sponge material in part secured together in flatwise reiation so as to form a pocket therebetween with sponge texture facing both sides of the pocket for the receipt of soap or the like, one layer having its porosity reduced by a partial sealing oi! its pores.
4. A sponge applicator comprising a sponge unit having a pocket therein, one part of the W. BARTLETT JONES.
US643626A 1932-11-21 1932-11-21 Sponge applicator Expired - Lifetime US2054198A (en)

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Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2686327A (en) * 1952-03-05 1954-08-17 John L King Mop pad having a pocket receiving a detachable handle
US2697847A (en) * 1951-02-07 1954-12-28 Levinson Isaac Soap sponge and holder
US3014233A (en) * 1958-08-06 1961-12-26 Colgate Palmolive Co Scouring pads and method and apparatus for making them
US3067450A (en) * 1960-08-10 1962-12-11 Mirth Happy Bath sponge
US4240760A (en) * 1978-07-21 1980-12-23 Brewster Laboratories, Inc. Foam scrubbing device incorporating a cleanser
US6485822B1 (en) 2000-09-18 2002-11-26 Sbi, Inc. Multi-layer combination sponge
US20060159512A1 (en) * 2005-01-19 2006-07-20 Gary Ashe Foam applicator
USD957772S1 (en) * 2019-07-18 2022-07-12 Acufloor, LLC Sponge
USD957771S1 (en) * 2019-04-22 2022-07-12 Acufloor, LLC Sponge

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2697847A (en) * 1951-02-07 1954-12-28 Levinson Isaac Soap sponge and holder
US2686327A (en) * 1952-03-05 1954-08-17 John L King Mop pad having a pocket receiving a detachable handle
US3014233A (en) * 1958-08-06 1961-12-26 Colgate Palmolive Co Scouring pads and method and apparatus for making them
US3067450A (en) * 1960-08-10 1962-12-11 Mirth Happy Bath sponge
US4240760A (en) * 1978-07-21 1980-12-23 Brewster Laboratories, Inc. Foam scrubbing device incorporating a cleanser
US6485822B1 (en) 2000-09-18 2002-11-26 Sbi, Inc. Multi-layer combination sponge
US20060159512A1 (en) * 2005-01-19 2006-07-20 Gary Ashe Foam applicator
USD957771S1 (en) * 2019-04-22 2022-07-12 Acufloor, LLC Sponge
USD957772S1 (en) * 2019-07-18 2022-07-12 Acufloor, LLC Sponge

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