US3216645A - Packaging - Google Patents
Packaging Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US3216645A US3216645A US337802A US33780264A US3216645A US 3216645 A US3216645 A US 3216645A US 337802 A US337802 A US 337802A US 33780264 A US33780264 A US 33780264A US 3216645 A US3216645 A US 3216645A
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- Prior art keywords
- plate
- tongue
- handle
- carton
- container
- Prior art date
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B65—CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
- B65D—CONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
- B65D5/00—Rigid or semi-rigid containers of polygonal cross-section, e.g. boxes, cartons or trays, formed by folding or erecting one or more blanks made of paper
- B65D5/42—Details of containers or of foldable or erectable container blanks
- B65D5/44—Integral, inserted or attached portions forming internal or external fittings
- B65D5/46—Handles
- B65D5/46008—Handles formed separately from the container body
- B65D5/46016—Straps used as handles fixed to the container by glueing, stapling, heat-sealing
Definitions
- the object of the present invention is to provide a simple, cheap, and easily installed handle for a carton or container which may be used or not, depend-ing upon the will of the packer or the consumer, and which is universally applicable to packages of various sorts and sizes.
- the invention contemplates the provision of a handle plate made of paperboard, or other suitable material, having a tongue part either integral with it, or otherwise securely connected to it, and which, when inserted on the interior of a carton or container and aligned with the hole in the exterior wall thereof, may be pulled through the hole at will, and used as a handle, or retracted to inoperative position within the container.
- the invention contemplates such a handle plate in which a tongue is incised from the body thereof so as to leave one end of the tongue rooted in cantilever fashion to the body of the plate, while at its opposite end, the tongue is provided with an enlarged head portion; and between the root end and the head end of the tongue, there is a slender elongated section suitable for gripping in the hand, and made somewhat longer than a cooperating hole to be provided in the exterior wall of a carton or container, and through which the slender portion of the tongue may be drawn from the interior to the exterior to serve such purposes.
- FIGURE l is a perspective view of a carton provided with a handle constructed in accordance with the present invention.
- FIGURE 2 is a plan view of the blank from which the handled carton of FIGURE l is made;
- FIGURE 3 is a sectional view taken along line 3 3 of FIGURE 2;
- FIGURE 4 is a sectional view taken along line 4 4 of FIGURE 2, and showing in dotted lines the position of the head of the tongue when the handle is in use;
- FIGURE 5 is a sectional view taken along line 5 5, and showing in dotted lines the position of the tongue relative to the contents of the package when the handle is in use;
- FIGURE 6 is a perspective View of an exterior Wall of a carton appropriately punched for use with the form of handle plate shown in FIGURE 7;
- FIGURE 7 is a perspective view of the handle plate.
- the carton or container to which the handle plate of the present invention is applied may be of any chosen style or construction, and that shown in the drawings is rice merely to illustrate a typical container or carton with which the handle plate of the present invention may be selectively combined, and used or not as desired.
- the form of container illustrated is of a type commonly used for packing twenty-four cans of beer, and is shown generally in U.S. Patent No. 2,990,992.
- the carton 1 is made from a blank, shown in full lines in FIGURE 2, which consists of a number of panels (each of which becomes a confining wall of the nal carton) and flaps, including a panel 2 selected as the one upon which to provide a handle, it being understood, however, that the handle may be provided on any chosen panel of the container which ultimately becomes one of its confining walls.
- the container illustrated may be identical with other containers out of the same production lot which are not equipped with handles. In other words, from a given production lot, some may be selected to be provided with handles, while others may be selected to go unequipped with handles.
- the only ditference between the blanks made for use with handles and the blanks made for use without handles is the provision in the former of a bowitie-shaped hole 3.
- the entire production run of the cartons may be provided with such holes, and the handle applied to only some of them, while the balance are either left open or otherwise closed, as the handle of the present invention is of a character such that it may be applied either in the box factory or at the point of packing, or, indeed, at the point where it goes into the hands of the ultimate consumer, provided the carton blank have formed in it a hole of a configuration such as to pass the slender portion of the tongue in the handle plate now to be described.
- the handle plate 4 in the form shown, is a rectangular piece of material, such as paperboard, from the midsection of which there is incised, or blanked out with a Icuttling die, a tongue 5.
- the tongue 5 preferably remains integral with Ithe plat-e 4 at the root end 6 of the tongue, and is not thereadjacent operated upon in any way which would substantially reduce the strength of the junction between the root end of the tongue and the body of the plate.
- the tongue 5 is provided with a head S having, at its proximal side, a pair of shoulders 9 of a width substantially greater than the slender intermediate part of tongue 5.
- the handle plate is provided in a container wherein the contents, such as can C, are disposed so as to interfere (as shown in FIGURE 5) with downward movement of head 3 relative to the body of plate 4, the plate 4- is cut out adjacent shoulders 9 to provide an opening lll of Width no less than shoulders 9, and extending toward the root end 6 for a distance suicient to permit movement of head 8 in the plane of plate 4 until it clears the crest of can C and can move downwardly into the space between adjacent cans into the posiltion shown in dotted lines in FIGURE 5.
- the plate 4 is further cut out adjacent the intermediate portion of tongue 5 to leave open spaces 11 for a purpose later to be described.
- the hole 3 in panel 2 of the carton blank is provided with arcuate enlargements 12 at the center thereof.
- the arcuate enlargements l2 correspond in size and configuration to the open spaces il in plate 4, and are intended to be aligned with each other when the handle plate is applied to the carton or carton blank.
- the open spaces lll, together with the arcuate enlargements l2 provide access from the exterior for fingers to grip the 3 tongue 5 and draw it outwardly int-o the arched condition shown clearly in FIGURE 1, and shown in dotted lines in FIGURES 4 and 5.
- the plate 4 Given a carton blank provided with a hole, such as 3, in a position where it is desired to apply a handle and of size suihcient to accommodate the passage therethrough of the slender intermediate portion of tongue 5, the plate 4 -can readily be applied to the underside of the panel, such as 2. In so applying it, the openings 11 and 12 are aligned with each other as aforesaid, so that the head 8 of tongue 5 extends outwardly beyond the nearest terminus of hole 3, and the root end 6 is adjacent the opposite terminus of hole 3 as shown clearly in FIGURE 5.
- the plate 4 may, if desired, be connected to panel 2 by adhesive, stapling, or otherwise, provided no part of tongue 5 (including head 8 and root end 6) be so secured.
- plate 4 In many instances, however, it is unnecessary to positively connect plate 4 to panel 2, or any other .portion of the carton, as the contained merchandise will serve to hold it in position where the intermediate portion of tongue 5 is accessible for gripping through openings 12 from the exterior; and the construction is such that, particularly when plate 4 is of dimension substantially corresponding to the dimensions of the panel to which it is applied, no positive connection between the two is necessary because the strains imparted by the load yof the contents are sustained by the plate 4. In any event, the tongue 5 must be of sufficient strength to sustain such load, and consequently any tendency to tear occurs within the plate 4, and not within panel 2 of the carton.
- plate 4 Adequate strength for such purpose can readily be built into plate 4, as, for example, with a carton of the character and for the purpose described, plate 4 may be made of three plies of ninety-pound Kraft Liner laminated together, with the grain of at least the two outer plies running in the direction indicated by the arrow in FIGURE 7.
- the load is sustained at one end of tongue 5 by engagement between shoulders 9 and the underside of plate 4 at the proxima-l end of openings 10.
- the load is transmitted to the body of plate 4 through the root end of the tongue, and any tendency to tear at this position is alleviated by the provision of slits 13 flaring outwardly at an angle of about 45.
- Such slits relieve excessive concentrations of stress at the junction between the root end 6 and the body of plate 4, and thereby minimize the tendency to tear.
- the handle plate 4 may be provided with longitudinally extending, ⁇ centrally disposed, siits 15 and 16.
- slits 15 and 16 maybe aligned with discontinuous slits 14, and thus panel 2 is permitted readily to fold along a line extending generally between opposite slits 14 and thereby act as a hinge in the process of opening the package.
- the slits 15 and 16 if terminated a quarter to a half-inch away from the root end 6 and the head 8 of tongue 5, do not substantially impair the load-carrying capacity of the handle; and the plate 4 does not prevent folding of panel 2, as above described, in the process of opening.
- plate 4 is made entirely separate from the blank of the carton or container, it is to be understood that, under many circumstances and conditions, it may be desirable to form the plate as a ap adjacent the panel in which the handle is desired. This may be done by folding the flap back beneath the panel provided with the hole to accommodate tongue 5, and then providing the manufacturers joint of the carton or container at the corner where the flap constituting plate 4 was infolded.
- said plate being cut out proximally adjacent said shoulders to permit movement of said terminal portion while caged in the plane of said plate for a distance sufficient to remove it from tangence with said can and bring it into position above a space between cans in which latter position said terminal portion is free to rock:
- the handle plate of claim 3 having but one of said terminal portions, and wherein said point is included in a force-transmitting root connection at the end of said tongue remote from said terminal portion.
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Cartons (AREA)
- Packages (AREA)
Description
Nov. 9, 1965 R. R. HEMANN 3,216,645
PACKAGING Filed Jan. 15, 1964 1N VENTOR.
United States Patent O 3,216,645 PACKAGING Ronald R. Heimann, New Douglas, Ill., assigner to Alton Box Board Company, Alton, Ill., a corporation of Delaware Filed `Ian. 15, 1964, Ser. No. 337,802 4 Claims. (Cl. 229-52) This invention relates generally to packaging, and particularly to the application of handles to cartons and containers.
While the art abounds with instances in which cartons and containers have been constructed with integated handle parts, in the case of cartons made of paperboard and the like, the provision of such a handle has required either extensive, and sometimes prohibitive, amounts of hand labor, or the provision of expensive equipment whose utility is limited to the particular carton or container at hand. In either event, the provision of such handles on cartons and containers has involved an expense which has largely limi-ted their application.
The object of the present invention, generally stated, is to provide a simple, cheap, and easily installed handle for a carton or container which may be used or not, depend-ing upon the will of the packer or the consumer, and which is universally applicable to packages of various sorts and sizes.
Generally' stated, the invention contemplates the provision of a handle plate made of paperboard, or other suitable material, having a tongue part either integral with it, or otherwise securely connected to it, and which, when inserted on the interior of a carton or container and aligned with the hole in the exterior wall thereof, may be pulled through the hole at will, and used as a handle, or retracted to inoperative position within the container.
'More speciiically, the invention contemplates such a handle plate in which a tongue is incised from the body thereof so as to leave one end of the tongue rooted in cantilever fashion to the body of the plate, while at its opposite end, the tongue is provided with an enlarged head portion; and between the root end and the head end of the tongue, there is a slender elongated section suitable for gripping in the hand, and made somewhat longer than a cooperating hole to be provided in the exterior wall of a carton or container, and through which the slender portion of the tongue may be drawn from the interior to the exterior to serve such purposes.
One embodiment of the Iinvention is illustrated in the accompanying drawing, in which:
FIGURE l is a perspective view of a carton provided with a handle constructed in accordance with the present invention;
FIGURE 2 is a plan view of the blank from which the handled carton of FIGURE l is made;
FIGURE 3 is a sectional view taken along line 3 3 of FIGURE 2;
FIGURE 4 is a sectional view taken along line 4 4 of FIGURE 2, and showing in dotted lines the position of the head of the tongue when the handle is in use;
FIGURE 5 is a sectional view taken along line 5 5, and showing in dotted lines the position of the tongue relative to the contents of the package when the handle is in use;
FIGURE 6 is a perspective View of an exterior Wall of a carton appropriately punched for use with the form of handle plate shown in FIGURE 7;
FIGURE 7 is a perspective view of the handle plate.
The carton or container to which the handle plate of the present invention is applied may be of any chosen style or construction, and that shown in the drawings is rice merely to illustrate a typical container or carton with which the handle plate of the present invention may be selectively combined, and used or not as desired. The form of container illustrated is of a type commonly used for packing twenty-four cans of beer, and is shown generally in U.S. Patent No. 2,990,992.
In the form shown, the carton 1 is made from a blank, shown in full lines in FIGURE 2, which consists of a number of panels (each of which becomes a confining wall of the nal carton) and flaps, including a panel 2 selected as the one upon which to provide a handle, it being understood, however, that the handle may be provided on any chosen panel of the container which ultimately becomes one of its confining walls. The container illustrated may be identical with other containers out of the same production lot which are not equipped with handles. In other words, from a given production lot, some may be selected to be provided with handles, while others may be selected to go unequipped with handles. In such case, the only ditference between the blanks made for use with handles and the blanks made for use without handles is the provision in the former of a bowitie-shaped hole 3. Indeed, in many situations, the entire production run of the cartons .may be provided with such holes, and the handle applied to only some of them, while the balance are either left open or otherwise closed, as the handle of the present invention is of a character such that it may be applied either in the box factory or at the point of packing, or, indeed, at the point where it goes into the hands of the ultimate consumer, provided the carton blank have formed in it a hole of a configuration such as to pass the slender portion of the tongue in the handle plate now to be described.
The handle plate 4, in the form shown, is a rectangular piece of material, such as paperboard, from the midsection of which there is incised, or blanked out with a Icuttling die, a tongue 5. The tongue 5 preferably remains integral with Ithe plat-e 4 at the root end 6 of the tongue, and is not thereadjacent operated upon in any way which would substantially reduce the strength of the junction between the root end of the tongue and the body of the plate. However, along the slender portion of tongue 5, it is desirable to provide a series of spaced score lines 7, on the underside thereof, to facili-tate bending of the tongue into conformity with a hand which grips it in use. At its opposite end, the tongue 5 is provided with a head S having, at its proximal side, a pair of shoulders 9 of a width substantially greater than the slender intermediate part of tongue 5. Where the handle plate is provided in a container wherein the contents, such as can C, are disposed so as to interfere (as shown in FIGURE 5) with downward movement of head 3 relative to the body of plate 4, the plate 4- is cut out adjacent shoulders 9 to provide an opening lll of Width no less than shoulders 9, and extending toward the root end 6 for a distance suicient to permit movement of head 8 in the plane of plate 4 until it clears the crest of can C and can move downwardly into the space between adjacent cans into the posiltion shown in dotted lines in FIGURE 5. The plate 4 is further cut out adjacent the intermediate portion of tongue 5 to leave open spaces 11 for a purpose later to be described.
As will be observed from FIGURES 2 and 6, the hole 3 in panel 2 of the carton blank is provided with arcuate enlargements 12 at the center thereof. The arcuate enlargements l2 correspond in size and configuration to the open spaces il in plate 4, and are intended to be aligned with each other when the handle plate is applied to the carton or carton blank. When thus aligned, the open spaces lll, together with the arcuate enlargements l2, provide access from the exterior for fingers to grip the 3 tongue 5 and draw it outwardly int-o the arched condition shown clearly in FIGURE 1, and shown in dotted lines in FIGURES 4 and 5.
Given a carton blank provided with a hole, such as 3, in a position where it is desired to apply a handle and of size suihcient to accommodate the passage therethrough of the slender intermediate portion of tongue 5, the plate 4 -can readily be applied to the underside of the panel, such as 2. In so applying it, the openings 11 and 12 are aligned with each other as aforesaid, so that the head 8 of tongue 5 extends outwardly beyond the nearest terminus of hole 3, and the root end 6 is adjacent the opposite terminus of hole 3 as shown clearly in FIGURE 5. The plate 4 may, if desired, be connected to panel 2 by adhesive, stapling, or otherwise, provided no part of tongue 5 (including head 8 and root end 6) be so secured. In many instances, however, it is unnecessary to positively connect plate 4 to panel 2, or any other .portion of the carton, as the contained merchandise will serve to hold it in position where the intermediate portion of tongue 5 is accessible for gripping through openings 12 from the exterior; and the construction is such that, particularly when plate 4 is of dimension substantially corresponding to the dimensions of the panel to which it is applied, no positive connection between the two is necessary because the strains imparted by the load yof the contents are sustained by the plate 4. In any event, the tongue 5 must be of sufficient strength to sustain such load, and consequently any tendency to tear occurs within the plate 4, and not within panel 2 of the carton. Adequate strength for such purpose can readily be built into plate 4, as, for example, with a carton of the character and for the purpose described, plate 4 may be made of three plies of ninety-pound Kraft Liner laminated together, with the grain of at least the two outer plies running in the direction indicated by the arrow in FIGURE 7. As clearly shown by the dotted lines in FIGURE 5, when the handle is in operative position, the load is sustained at one end of tongue 5 by engagement between shoulders 9 and the underside of plate 4 at the proxima-l end of openings 10. At the other end of tongue 5, the load is transmitted to the body of plate 4 through the root end of the tongue, and any tendency to tear at this position is alleviated by the provision of slits 13 flaring outwardly at an angle of about 45. Such slits relieve excessive concentrations of stress at the junction between the root end 6 and the body of plate 4, and thereby minimize the tendency to tear.
When, as shown in FIGURE 2, the panel opposite panel 2 is equipped for ripping, more or less in line with a vertical center plane through the completed package shown in FIGURE 1, and it is desired that .panel 2 act as a hinge, and for this purpose is provided with discontinuous slits 14 in its end ilaps, the handle plate 4 may be provided with longitudinally extending, `centrally disposed, siits 15 and 16. When the plate 4 is applied to the carton or its blanks, slits 15 and 16 maybe aligned with discontinuous slits 14, and thus panel 2 is permitted readily to fold along a line extending generally between opposite slits 14 and thereby act as a hinge in the process of opening the package. In practice, the slits 15 and 16, if terminated a quarter to a half-inch away from the root end 6 and the head 8 of tongue 5, do not substantially impair the load-carrying capacity of the handle; and the plate 4 does not prevent folding of panel 2, as above described, in the process of opening.
While, in the embodiment described, plate 4 is made entirely separate from the blank of the carton or container, it is to be understood that, under many circumstances and conditions, it may be desirable to form the plate as a ap adjacent the panel in which the handle is desired. This may be done by folding the flap back beneath the panel provided with the hole to accommodate tongue 5, and then providing the manufacturers joint of the carton or container at the corner where the flap constituting plate 4 was infolded.
From the foregoing description, those skilled in th art should readily understand that the invention accom plishes its objects and provides a universally applicable handle which may be applied with great facility to any package having a hole of size and configuration such as to accommodate the passage of the intermediate section of tongue 5, and without necessitating complicated or expensive operations either in the initial manufacture of the container blank or in the process of its assemblyl While the foregoing disclosure illustrates one forrn in which the invention may be applied to a typical carton or container, it is not to be understood that the invention is limited to the form of package, or the form of handle plate, shown in the drawings and heretofore described in detail. On the contrary, it is to be distinctly understood that the invention is applicable at large to cartons, containers, and other packages wherein a hole is, or can be, provided to accommodate the passage of the slender portion of a tongue, such as 5, from the interior to the exterior. Many modifications, adaptations and variations of the form shown in the accompanying drawings will inevitably present themselves to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of this invention, and consequently it is to be distinctly understood that the invention is not limited to the details of the foregoing disclosure.
Having thus described the invention, what is claimed and desired to be secured by Letters Patent is:
1. The combination with a container for cans ai'A ranged in a row parallel with a side of the container, of a plate interposed between the interior of said side and the exterior of the cans in the nearest row, said plate having a tongue integral therewith at its root end but severed therefrom at the opposite end, said opposite end being of substantially greater width than the intermediate portion of the tongue, being substantially tangent with one of the cans and terminating proximally in shoulders extending substantially parallel with the axes of said cans, said plate being cut out adjacent said shoulders to permit movement of said opposite end toward said root end for a distance sufficient to permit said opposite end to move out of the plane of said plate and into the space between cans in said row.
2. The combination with a container packed with cans arranged in rows with their axes parallel with a con fining side of the container, of a plate interposed between the interior of said side and the exterior of the cans in the nearest row, said plate having a tongue caged in the plane thereof and integral therewith at at least one point but severed from said plate for the major portion of its periphery, said tongue having at least one terminal portion of substantially greater width than the central portion thereof, said terminal portion:
(a) being substantially tangent with one of the cans when said central portion is caged in the plane of said plate;
(b) terminating proximate said central portion in shoulders extending substantially parallel with the axes of said cans;
said plate being cut out proximally adjacent said shoulders to permit movement of said terminal portion while caged in the plane of said plate for a distance sufficient to remove it from tangence with said can and bring it into position above a space between cans in which latter position said terminal portion is free to rock:
(i) out of caged relation in the plane of said plate, (ii) into the space between cans in said nearest roW,.
and
(iii) into position where said shoulders transmit force to said plate in a direction substantially normal tol the plane of said plate at the proximal Quid, of said cut-out.
3. For use with a carton having confining walls one of which has an opening, a flat handle plate of paper-like material dirnensioned to underlie said one confining Wall, said plate and provide a handle engageable through said opening, said plate having a tongue encaged in the plane thereof, said tongue being severed from the substance of said plate throughout the major portion of the periphery of said tongue but said tongue being Connected to the substance of said plate at at least one point, said tongue having a slender central portion and at least Ione terminal portion of substantially greater Width than said central portion; and said plate being cut out adjacent the proxirnal side of said tongue terminal portion to provide space into which said terminal portion may move a substantial distance While caged in the plane of said plate, and said cut-out terminating proximally in a shoulder parallel with said tongue shoulder but of substantially less extent than said tongue shoulder.
4. The handle plate of claim 3 having but one of said terminal portions, and wherein said point is included in a force-transmitting root connection at the end of said tongue remote from said terminal portion.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,365,887 12/44 Lind 229--52 2,640,645 6/53 Brown 229-52 2,645,407 7/ 53 Bergotein 229-52 FOREIGN PATENTS 1,071,783 3/54 France.
FRANKLIN T. GARRETT, Primary Examiner.
Claims (1)
1. THE COMBINATION WITH A CONTAINER FOR CANS ARRANGED IN A ROW PARALLEL WITH A SIDE OF THE CONTAINER, OF A PLATE INTERPOSED BETWEEN THE INTERIOR OF SAID SIDE AND THE EXTERIOR OF THE CANS IN THE NEAREST ROW, SAID PLATE HAVING A TONGUE INTEGRAL THEREWITH AT ITS ROOF AND END BUT SEVERED THEREFROM AT THE OPPOSITE END, SAID OPPOSITE END BEING OF SUBSTANTIALLY GREATER WIDTH THAN THE INTERMEDIATE PORTION OF THE TONGUE, BEING SUBSTANTIALLY TANGENT WITH ONE OF THE CANS AND TERMINATING PROXIMALLY IN SHOULDERS
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US337802A US3216645A (en) | 1964-01-15 | 1964-01-15 | Packaging |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US337802A US3216645A (en) | 1964-01-15 | 1964-01-15 | Packaging |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US3216645A true US3216645A (en) | 1965-11-09 |
Family
ID=23322082
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US337802A Expired - Lifetime US3216645A (en) | 1964-01-15 | 1964-01-15 | Packaging |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
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US (1) | US3216645A (en) |
Cited By (9)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3794239A (en) * | 1972-04-24 | 1974-02-26 | Alton Box Board Co | Convenience handle means for carton |
US4166570A (en) * | 1977-02-22 | 1979-09-04 | Colgate-Palmolive Company | Package with handle |
US4779731A (en) * | 1983-11-25 | 1988-10-25 | Masaaki Fujio | Cluster package construction with reinforcing and tear structure |
US20070199837A1 (en) * | 2005-06-01 | 2007-08-30 | Justice Timothy J | Easy-opening carton for shipping and storing cut paper |
US20080048015A1 (en) * | 2006-08-28 | 2008-02-28 | Benq Corporation | Paper-box handle structure |
US20080067223A1 (en) * | 2004-06-11 | 2008-03-20 | Fabien Jego | Carton and Carton Blank With Strap Handle |
US20080237070A1 (en) * | 2005-06-01 | 2008-10-02 | Justice Timothy J | Lidded container with a tear strip |
US20190144183A1 (en) * | 2013-04-23 | 2019-05-16 | Westrock Packaging Systems, Llc | Carton and carton blank |
US11224260B2 (en) * | 2018-11-20 | 2022-01-18 | Russ Inouye | Removable (and optionally washable) hat insert for absorbing perspiration |
Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2365887A (en) * | 1942-09-07 | 1944-12-26 | Theodore F Lind | Box |
US2640645A (en) * | 1949-01-17 | 1953-06-02 | Brown Abner Elmore | Handle construction for cartons and the like |
US2645407A (en) * | 1948-09-01 | 1953-07-14 | Robert M Bergstein | Box with carrying handle |
FR1071783A (en) * | 1952-09-05 | 1954-09-06 | Handle-closure |
-
1964
- 1964-01-15 US US337802A patent/US3216645A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2365887A (en) * | 1942-09-07 | 1944-12-26 | Theodore F Lind | Box |
US2645407A (en) * | 1948-09-01 | 1953-07-14 | Robert M Bergstein | Box with carrying handle |
US2640645A (en) * | 1949-01-17 | 1953-06-02 | Brown Abner Elmore | Handle construction for cartons and the like |
FR1071783A (en) * | 1952-09-05 | 1954-09-06 | Handle-closure |
Cited By (12)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3794239A (en) * | 1972-04-24 | 1974-02-26 | Alton Box Board Co | Convenience handle means for carton |
US4166570A (en) * | 1977-02-22 | 1979-09-04 | Colgate-Palmolive Company | Package with handle |
US4779731A (en) * | 1983-11-25 | 1988-10-25 | Masaaki Fujio | Cluster package construction with reinforcing and tear structure |
US20080067223A1 (en) * | 2004-06-11 | 2008-03-20 | Fabien Jego | Carton and Carton Blank With Strap Handle |
US20070199837A1 (en) * | 2005-06-01 | 2007-08-30 | Justice Timothy J | Easy-opening carton for shipping and storing cut paper |
US20080237070A1 (en) * | 2005-06-01 | 2008-10-02 | Justice Timothy J | Lidded container with a tear strip |
US8413801B2 (en) | 2005-06-01 | 2013-04-09 | International Paper Company | Lidded container with a tear strip |
US8459449B2 (en) * | 2005-06-01 | 2013-06-11 | International Paper Company | Easy-opening carton for shipping and storing cut paper |
US20080048015A1 (en) * | 2006-08-28 | 2008-02-28 | Benq Corporation | Paper-box handle structure |
US20190144183A1 (en) * | 2013-04-23 | 2019-05-16 | Westrock Packaging Systems, Llc | Carton and carton blank |
US10730675B2 (en) * | 2013-04-23 | 2020-08-04 | Westrock Packaging Systems, Llc | Carton and carton blank |
US11224260B2 (en) * | 2018-11-20 | 2022-01-18 | Russ Inouye | Removable (and optionally washable) hat insert for absorbing perspiration |
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US3146937A (en) | Extendable handle carton | |
US2611527A (en) | Portable display carton | |
US2681143A (en) | Dome top carrier carton | |
US2797856A (en) | Handled cartons | |
US4757938A (en) | Blank forming a partition strengthening a box | |
US3019959A (en) | Carton | |
GB1501714A (en) | Container and blank therefor | |
US2662684A (en) | Carton structure | |
US3291372A (en) | Laminated and reclosable carton | |
US3253770A (en) | Protective carton structure | |
MY130934A (en) | Handle reinforcement for a carton. | |
US2094054A (en) | Container | |
US3216645A (en) | Packaging | |
US3929271A (en) | Carton and blank therefor | |
US2598051A (en) | Carrier package | |
US2747767A (en) | Reinforced single row carrier | |
US2702155A (en) | Shipping package | |
US3168974A (en) | Covered carton | |
US3011677A (en) | Carrier carton | |
US3023945A (en) | Tamper proof carton lock | |
US2703197A (en) | Carton handhole reinforcement | |
US4117925A (en) | Article carrier and blank therefor |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
AS | Assignment |
Owner name: ALTON PACKAGING CORPORATION Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:ALTON BOX BOARD COMPANY;REEL/FRAME:004008/0668 Effective date: 19810121 |