US2866205A - Pocket guard and liner for garments - Google Patents

Pocket guard and liner for garments Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2866205A
US2866205A US590593A US59059356A US2866205A US 2866205 A US2866205 A US 2866205A US 590593 A US590593 A US 590593A US 59059356 A US59059356 A US 59059356A US 2866205 A US2866205 A US 2866205A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pocket
liner
garment
guard
opening
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US590593A
Inventor
Alex R Croxton
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
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US590593A priority Critical patent/US2866205A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2866205A publication Critical patent/US2866205A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41DOUTERWEAR; PROTECTIVE GARMENTS; ACCESSORIES
    • A41D27/00Details of garments or of their making
    • A41D27/20Pockets; Making or setting-in pockets

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a pocket guard and liner for garments, and in particular a readily attachable and removeable guard member for the peripheral edges of pocket openings in garments and a similarly readily removeable liner for the conventional pocket of the garment.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a guard of the character set forth which may be readily applied to and removed from a garment without the necessity of any modification of the garment in order to receive and retain such guard.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide the combination of a pocket guard and a pocket liner which may be removably secured to a garment so as to protect the pocket openings thereof and at the same time to provide a pocket itself which may be detachably secured with the guard.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates the protective liner as applied to a conventional pair of trousers.
  • Fig. 2 is a view illustrating the guard and liner of the present invention in open position showing the front and rear elements thereof.
  • FIG. 3 is an inside view of the pocket and liner taken from the side obverse of that shown in Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken on line 4--4 of Fig. 2.
  • the pocket liner and guard construction includes forward and rear protective members united at top and bottom and providing an intermediate opening corresponding to the opening of the normal garment pocket.
  • These members are of course formed of leather, plastic, treated textile or other suitable highly wear resistant material.
  • vertical slits are provided to receive therethrough the supporting belt of the garment to thus retain the pocket in appropriate position without requiring any alteration or modification of the garment itself.
  • the liner of the present invention is secured to both of said members, being open therebetween so as to permit access to the pocket liner.
  • the liner is formed with side, bottom and top closures so as to form a complete pocket which may rest within the normal garment pocket and which will receive the frictional wear and other damaging factors to which the normal pocket would otherwise be subjected.
  • the garment to which the present form of invention is shown as applied is a conventional pair of trousers generally indicated by the numeral 10, which are provided with the usual side pocket opening.
  • the front pocket edge 11 confronts the rear pocket opening edge 12 and defines the pocket opening 13 to which the normal pocket material 14 is secured by conventional stitching as at 15.
  • the guard itself includes a forwardly extending piece of wear resisting material, such as leather or the like, indicated at 16 and formed with a wide upper portion 17 designed to extend above the pocket opening and provide it with vertical slits 18 defining belt receiving tunnel 19 by which the protector is secured in appropriate position.
  • the forward edge of the forward element 16 may curve rearwardly and downwardly to form an edge 20 of any appropriate design to meet the demands of artistic taste.
  • a rear element 21 Associated with the forward element 16 is a rear element 21, having a top elongate section 22 corresponding to the section 17, and united thereto in any suitable manner as by the stitching indicated at 23.
  • the rear element is also provided with vertical slits 24, defining belt tunnel 25, and the rear edge of the rear element is shown at 26 to he downwardly and inwardly curved in conformity with the artistic design which is to be carried out.
  • the confronting edges of the intermediate portions of the front and rear elements are formed with return bent flange-like webs 31 and 32, respectively, to which the open edges of an otherwise enclosed envelope-like pocket 'liner 33 is attached, the liner being formed in normal pocket design, but of such diminished dimension as to be received conveniently within the usual pocket 14, as shown in Fig. 4.
  • the bottom 35 and rear edge 36 are stitched to form an enclosure as is the top edge 37.
  • the liner is formed of a single piece of material, the front edge 34 constituting a return portion of the maten'al, leaving the open edges to be secured to the flange-like panels 31 and 32.
  • theliner when the protective liner is to be used, theliner is inserted in the usual pocket of the garment and the supporting belt for the garment is woven through at 19 and 25 to hold the liner in outstretched position across the pocket opening of the garment with the intermediate unstitched opening between the elements conforming to and registering with the pocket opening of the garment. It will be seen that the suspension of the device by the normal belt for the garment provides ready support which maintains appropriate registration of the device, and that such support and registration are obtained without the use of any modification of the garment itself or without .any securing means other than the belt.
  • the structure provides for the ready removal of the protector to be used on other garments as desired.
  • the reinforced leather edges of the unsecured edges between the front and the rear element receive the frictional wear, and that the liner receives the hand and relieves the garment pocket 14 from wear and abrasion or tearing.
  • the edges of the elements are figured to provide such artistic embellishments as may be desired.
  • a pocket guard and liner for the vertically open side pockets of a pair of trousers including a pocket shaped liner having an opening, and a guard fastened to said liner at said opening including forwardly and rearwardly extending wear resistant elements joined together above the top of said liner, each of said elements being adapted to fold over and lie against a garment surface adjacent the pocket opening thereof and to extend thereabove, the upward extending portion defining belt receiving loops forwardly and rearwardly of said opening.
  • a pocket guard and liner for a side pocket of a garment including, a pocket shaped liner having a side opening, a guard fastened to said liner at said opening for supporting said liner forwardly of said opening, said guard including forwardly and rearwardly extending wear resistant elements joined together above the top of said liner, said rearwardly extending element being of larger area than said forwardly extending element, each of said elements being adapted to fold over and lie against a garment surface adjacent the side pocket opening thereof and to extend thereabove, the upwardly extending portion defining belt receiving loops forwardly and rearwardly of said opening.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Details Of Garments (AREA)

Description

Dec. 30, 1958 I A. R. CROXTON 2,865,205
POCKET GUARD AND LINER FOR GARMENTS Filed June 11, 1956 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 l INVENTOR. ALEX P. C/POXTON ATTORN Y Dec. 30, 1958 A. R CROXTON 2,366,205
POCKET GUARD AND LINER FOR GARMENTS Filed June 11, 1956 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 1 1' 4 INVENTOR.
ALEX R. CQOXTO/V United States Patent POCKET GUARD AND LINER FOR GARMENTS Alex R. Croxton, Atlanta, Ga. Application June 11, 1956, Serial No. 590,593
2 Claims. (Cl. 2-247) This invention relates to a pocket guard and liner for garments, and in particular a readily attachable and removeable guard member for the peripheral edges of pocket openings in garments and a similarly readily removeable liner for the conventional pocket of the garment.
Guards, reinforcements and protective members for the edge portions of pocket openings of garments have long been known; however, despite the common knowledge of the undue wear and friction to which pocket openings are subjected, such devices have not been widely used primarily because of the ditficulties involved in the application of such devices without change and modification of the garment itself and .due to the complicated structures which have been proposed. In most instances such devices have to be specifically designed to meet the specific shape, size and style of the garment pocket opening to which they are to be applied; and, furthermore, it has usually been necessary to modify the garment itself in some manner. Furthermore, it will be obvious that such prior known structures have been difiicult of attachment and detachment and in many instances are not readily applicable from one garment to another.
It is therefore among the primary objects of the present invention to provide a pocket guard for the opening edges surrounding garment pocket apertures which will be simple in construction, rugged and durable and well designed to meet the demands of economic manufacture.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a guard of the character set forth which may be readily applied to and removed from a garment without the necessity of any modification of the garment in order to receive and retain such guard.
A further object of the present invention is to provide the combination of a pocket guard and a pocket liner which may be removably secured to a garment so as to protect the pocket openings thereof and at the same time to provide a pocket itself which may be detachably secured with the guard.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide a pocket guard which may be readily secured and detached in appropriate position and secured against inadvertent movement from such position and without necessity of permanent stitching or securing means interconnected with the material of the garment itself.
More specifically, it is an object of the present invention to provide a pocket guard and liner which may be conveniently retained in appropriate position by the normal belt for the garment.
Numerous other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from consideration of the following specification taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 illustrates the protective liner as applied to a conventional pair of trousers.
Fig. 2 is a view illustrating the guard and liner of the present invention in open position showing the front and rear elements thereof.
, 2,866,205 Patented Dec. 30, 1958 Fig. 3 is an inside view of the pocket and liner taken from the side obverse of that shown in Fig. 2.
Fig. 4 is a cross-sectional view taken on line 4--4 of Fig. 2.
It will of course be obvious that in the practice of the present invention various elements may be modified in accordance with specific requirements; however, in that form of the invention here shown by way of illustration the pocket liner and guard construction includes forward and rear protective members united at top and bottom and providing an intermediate opening corresponding to the opening of the normal garment pocket. These members are of course formed of leather, plastic, treated textile or other suitable highly wear resistant material. At the upper edges of the united members, vertical slits are provided to receive therethrough the supporting belt of the garment to thus retain the pocket in appropriate position without requiring any alteration or modification of the garment itself. The liner of the present invention is secured to both of said members, being open therebetween so as to permit access to the pocket liner. The liner is formed with side, bottom and top closures so as to form a complete pocket which may rest within the normal garment pocket and which will receive the frictional wear and other damaging factors to which the normal pocket would otherwise be subjected.
Referring now more particularly to the drawings, the garment to which the present form of invention is shown as applied is a conventional pair of trousers generally indicated by the numeral 10, which are provided with the usual side pocket opening. As more clearly shown in Fig. 4, the front pocket edge 11 confronts the rear pocket opening edge 12 and defines the pocket opening 13 to which the normal pocket material 14 is secured by conventional stitching as at 15. The guard itself includes a forwardly extending piece of wear resisting material, such as leather or the like, indicated at 16 and formed with a wide upper portion 17 designed to extend above the pocket opening and provide it with vertical slits 18 defining belt receiving tunnel 19 by which the protector is secured in appropriate position. Below the substantially rectangular portion 17, the forward edge of the forward element 16 may curve rearwardly and downwardly to form an edge 20 of any appropriate design to meet the demands of artistic taste. Associated with the forward element 16 is a rear element 21, having a top elongate section 22 corresponding to the section 17, and united thereto in any suitable manner as by the stitching indicated at 23. The rear element is also provided with vertical slits 24, defining belt tunnel 25, and the rear edge of the rear element is shown at 26 to he downwardly and inwardly curved in conformity with the artistic design which is to be carried out. At the lower end of the elements 16 and 21, their confronting faces are joined by stitching 28 conforming with the stitching 23 to unite the elements at their upper and lower portions, leaving therebetween an unsecured opening 30 through which the hand may be extended for access to the liner hereinafter referred to.
For forming the liner, the confronting edges of the intermediate portions of the front and rear elements are formed with return bent flange- like webs 31 and 32, respectively, to which the open edges of an otherwise enclosed envelope-like pocket 'liner 33 is attached, the liner being formed in normal pocket design, but of such diminished dimension as to be received conveniently within the usual pocket 14, as shown in Fig. 4. The bottom 35 and rear edge 36 are stitched to form an enclosure as is the top edge 37. As is shown here, the liner is formed of a single piece of material, the front edge 34 constituting a return portion of the maten'al, leaving the open edges to be secured to the flange- like panels 31 and 32. D
From the foregoing it will be seen that, when the protective liner is to be used, theliner is inserted in the usual pocket of the garment and the supporting belt for the garment is woven through at 19 and 25 to hold the liner in outstretched position across the pocket opening of the garment with the intermediate unstitched opening between the elements conforming to and registering with the pocket opening of the garment. It will be seen that the suspension of the device by the normal belt for the garment provides ready support which maintains appropriate registration of the device, and that such support and registration are obtained without the use of any modification of the garment itself or without .any securing means other than the belt. Hence there is no modification of the garment and no securing of the garment between it and the protector and liner, and the structure provides for the ready removal of the protector to be used on other garments as desired. It will of course be noted that, when the hand is to be inserted in the liner, the reinforced leather edges of the unsecured edges between the front and the rear element receive the frictional wear, and that the liner receives the hand and relieves the garment pocket 14 from wear and abrasion or tearing. As noted, the edges of the elements are figured to provide such artistic embellishments as may be desired. In practice, it will of course be understood that the invention is not limited nor confined to the specific details herein shown, and that numerous changes, modifications, and the full use of equivalents may be resorted to in the practice of the invention without departing from the spirit or scope thereof as defined in the appended claims.
I claim:
1. A pocket guard and liner for the vertically open side pockets of a pair of trousers including a pocket shaped liner having an opening, and a guard fastened to said liner at said opening including forwardly and rearwardly extending wear resistant elements joined together above the top of said liner, each of said elements being adapted to fold over and lie against a garment surface adjacent the pocket opening thereof and to extend thereabove, the upward extending portion defining belt receiving loops forwardly and rearwardly of said opening.
2. A pocket guard and liner for a side pocket of a garment including, a pocket shaped liner having a side opening, a guard fastened to said liner at said opening for supporting said liner forwardly of said opening, said guard including forwardly and rearwardly extending wear resistant elements joined together above the top of said liner, said rearwardly extending element being of larger area than said forwardly extending element, each of said elements being adapted to fold over and lie against a garment surface adjacent the side pocket opening thereof and to extend thereabove, the upwardly extending portion defining belt receiving loops forwardly and rearwardly of said opening.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 623,460 Bishop Apr. 18, 1899 689,843 Atkins Dec. 31, 1901 887,479 Jones May 12, 1908 1,150,432 Hess Aug. 17, 1915
US590593A 1956-06-11 1956-06-11 Pocket guard and liner for garments Expired - Lifetime US2866205A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US590593A US2866205A (en) 1956-06-11 1956-06-11 Pocket guard and liner for garments

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US590593A US2866205A (en) 1956-06-11 1956-06-11 Pocket guard and liner for garments

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2866205A true US2866205A (en) 1958-12-30

Family

ID=24362857

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US590593A Expired - Lifetime US2866205A (en) 1956-06-11 1956-06-11 Pocket guard and liner for garments

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2866205A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3101482A (en) * 1961-07-14 1963-08-27 Frances O Rahjes Liner for pockets
US3777313A (en) * 1972-09-01 1973-12-11 M Bergsten Sports pocket for wearing apparel
US20110145980A1 (en) * 2009-12-21 2011-06-23 D Alessandro Brett Non-Slip Pockets

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US623460A (en) * 1899-04-18 Augustus b
US689843A (en) * 1901-04-04 1901-12-31 Frank John Atkins Pencil-holder.
US887479A (en) * 1907-12-20 1908-05-12 Davis L Jones Detachable-pocket.
US1150432A (en) * 1914-08-10 1915-08-17 Frank Hess Garment-pocket.

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US623460A (en) * 1899-04-18 Augustus b
US689843A (en) * 1901-04-04 1901-12-31 Frank John Atkins Pencil-holder.
US887479A (en) * 1907-12-20 1908-05-12 Davis L Jones Detachable-pocket.
US1150432A (en) * 1914-08-10 1915-08-17 Frank Hess Garment-pocket.

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3101482A (en) * 1961-07-14 1963-08-27 Frances O Rahjes Liner for pockets
US3777313A (en) * 1972-09-01 1973-12-11 M Bergsten Sports pocket for wearing apparel
US20110145980A1 (en) * 2009-12-21 2011-06-23 D Alessandro Brett Non-Slip Pockets
US8806666B2 (en) * 2009-12-21 2014-08-19 Brett D'Alessandro Non-slip pockets

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7823220B2 (en) Multi-configuration item of clothing
US4249268A (en) Garment composed of non-stretchable body portion entirely covered by loop fasteners and stretchable portions not so covered
US4445233A (en) Hosiery with included pocket
US3537108A (en) Pocket construction
US2065693A (en) Golf bag
US2079220A (en) Sportsman's coat
US2544618A (en) Hunting license holder
US2557445A (en) Garment with detachable pockets
US2725573A (en) Garment pocket
US2866205A (en) Pocket guard and liner for garments
US1444750A (en) Dispatch jacket
US2740506A (en) Flexible travel bag with stiffening means
US2594053A (en) Child's chair protector with bib feature
US3462764A (en) Auxiliary pocket for garments
US2177906A (en) Protective container
US2788040A (en) Purse
US2489868A (en) Double pocket garment of the patch pocket type
US2874827A (en) Garment bag
US3135967A (en) Handkerchief holder
US3218651A (en) Dual purpose ladies' garment
US2825068A (en) Auxiliary garment pocket
US1746459A (en) Foot muff
US2078550A (en) Gaiter
US3021930A (en) Molding strips for a luggage case
US2490496A (en) Advertising display card for trousers