This invention relates to an apparatus that allows an ordinary holster for a firearm or other device to be attached to a surface of another article.
A wide variety of holsters for carrying a handgun or other article at one's waistband are readily available and in common use. These include outside-the-waistband (“OWB”) holsters or sleeves having one or more passageways through which a belt is threaded to support the holster and article within the holster. Other types of holsters, which provide concealment of the handgun or other article, are known which are positioned inside-the-waistband (“IWB”) and include one or more attachment clips to suspend the holster along the waistband and/or belt.
There are other “holsters” and moveable pockets known which secure items inside an article of clothing or accessory article, such as a purse, briefcase, backpack, or book bag. The holsters designed to be worn on the user's waistband or belt, are not readily usable in or attachable to an article or pack.
The present invention provides an adapter for attaching a holster having at least one belt loop to a surface of another article. It includes a flexible sheet having first and second surfaces. The sheet also has a longitudinally extending central panel with opposite ends. The width of the central panel is sized to pass through a holster belt loop. There is an end panel at each end of the central panel. The end panels have a transverse width greater than the width of the central panel. There are fastener components on the second surface corresponding to a complementary fastener component on a surface of another article. At least one end panel is foldable to a width for passage through the belt loop and then unfolded such that the fastener components will secure the sheet and holster to the surface of the other article.
The fastener components on the second surface may include one component of a hook-and-loop fastener material and the second surface may be substantially covered with the fastener components. The first surface may include complementary components of a hook-and-loop fastener material.
The adapter may also include end panels with portions extending transversely outwardly from the ends of the central panel. The sheet may further include wing panels extending from the end panels longitudinally toward the opposite end of the central panel. The wing panels can have a length such that, when the adapter is assembled with a holster, end portions of opposite wing panels engage with one another.
The invention also includes a method of attaching a holster to a separate article. Other aspects, features, and benefits of the present invention will be apparent from a review of the following detailed description of one embodiment of the invention, the various figures of the drawing, and the claims, all of which comprise disclosure and description of the invention.
Like reference numerals are used to indicate like parts throughout the various figures of the drawing, wherein:
Referring first to
The illustrated holster 10 is of the type commonly known as an outside-the-waistband (“OWB”) or “pancake” type holster. Often these are formed from two or more layers of leather or similar material sewn together to form a pocket or sleeve for holding the handgun 12 or other article. In a pancake-type holster, as shown, there are a pair of belt loops 16 in the form of apertures through which a belt 14 may be threaded for suspending the holster 10 on the user's waistband. Other types of OWB holsters include a channel or passageway (not shown) formed between two layers of material through which a belt 14 may be threaded. Other types of holsters intended to carry a handgun 12 or other article at the user's waistband include inside-the-waistband (“IWB”) type which are carried inside the user's lower garment (pants or skirt) and have one or more loops or clips through which a belt 14 may be hooked or threaded. As used herein, all of these various structures through which a belt 14 may be threaded are referred to as “belt loops.” The adapter of the present invention may be used with any of these types of holsters to secure what is ordinarily a belt holster to the interior or exterior surface of another object, such as a backpack, brief case, purse, or article of clothing.
Referring now to
The adapter panel 18 may be formed, such as by cutting, from a sheet of flexible material. The adapter panel 18 has an outer surface (shown in
The adapter panel 18 includes a longitudinally extending central panel 26 with opposite ends. The width of this central panel 26 is sized to pass through the belt loops 16 of a holster 10. Generally, belt loops in a holster are sized to accommodate a belt in the range of 1.25 inches to 2.00 inches in width. At opposite ends of the central panel 26 are end panels 28 which have a width greater than that of the elongated central panel 26. The adapter 18 may also include wing panels 30, 32, 34, 36 which extend longitudinally from the respective end panels 28 toward the opposite end of the central panel 26. As shown in
Referring now to the series of illustrations shown in
Referring to
As shown in
Once the folded section is fully extended through the belt loops 16, the wing panels 30, 32 of the end panel 28 are unfolded, first one and then the other (
Alternatively, other types of fasteners, such as snaps or the like, may be provided on the reverse surface 24 of the adapter panel 18 and interior surface 20 of the article to which the holster 10 is to be attached. The use of hook-and-loop fastener material, however, allows the holster 10 to be repositionably attached to another article with a wide variety of placement adjustability.
While exemplary embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described in detail, it should be apparent that other modifications and variations thereto are possible, all of which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, the foregoing is intended only to be illustrative of the principles of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not intended to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described. Accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents may be included and considered to fall within the scope of the invention, which is defined by the following claim or claims.