The invention together with the above and other objects and advantages will best be understood from the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment of the invention shown in the accompanying drawing, wherein:
The present invention discloses a bib/receptacle combination adapted to permit first, carrying and second, consumption of food while preventing spilled food from coming into contact with the eater or his surroundings. This bib/receptacle configuration comprises a receptacle such as a pouch, bag, or box that collects spilled food as well as means to channel spilled food from surfaces of a deployed bib into the receptacle.
When used as a carrying receptacle, the proposed bib/receptacle combination provides a convenient means for transporting food, drinks, napkins, eating implements and the like. In such a configuration, the bib, still undeployed, resides in the receptacle, with any food items also contained therein.
As noted supra, the device can take the form of a bag and thus can be constructed from a single material, and as such can be produced using blown film extrusion. Characteristics of blown film extrusion processes enable the bib to remain in static and frictional engagement with an inside surface of the receptacle and therefore out of the way of harried fast food restaurant workers filling the receptacle. To deploy the bib from the receptacle, the user simply peels the bib portion away from the inside surface of the receptacle.
Alternatively, the bib is reversibly attached to the receptacle via a tongue and groove arrangement, hook-and-pile arrangement, snaps, or the like. In another alternative embodiment an exterior or interior surface of the receptacle may define a separate compartment in which the bib can be stored until deployment. This arrangement minimizes contact between the bib and the food transported in the receptacle.
The resulting deployed configuration is depicted in
As depicted in
The invented device could be fabricated using any one of a variety of materials. Alternatively, several materials could be incorporated into a single device. Materials including, but not limited to, plastic (including polyolefins, ethylene copolymers, PVC, nylon, elastomers, nitrites, PETG and polycarbonates), thermally insulating materials, paper, cardboard, paper (or cardboard) coated with a liquid-proof layer, cardboard, can each be used singly or in combination. The receptacle 11 itself may be made of paper or cardboard and the bib 12 of plastic, with the two joined by an adhesive or otherwise. The receptacle 11 may be made waterproof.
The bib may be either detachable from the receptacle 11 or else integrally molded thereto. In the situation where the bib is detachable, a score line 18 extending laterally so as to be perpendicular to the longitudinal axis α of the device, and defining a depending edge 20 of the bib facilitates removal of the bib from the receptacle 12. Alternatively, the region defining the score line could instead define a region where the bib is reversibly attached to the receptacle using the various fastener means discussed supra.
In an alternative embodiment, the depending edge 20 of the bib defines a fold line at which point the bib is integrally molded and folded inside the receptacle before deployment. In this alternative configuration, the bib when unfolded extends beyond the score line and terminates approximately at the mid-thigh or knee region of the user.
Two elongated extending portions of the bib serve as the neck-encircling ties 76 and are attached to the bib at an edge distal from the first or bottom receptacle 14.
Exterior, outwardly facing surfaces 13 of the bib may be used as an advertising medium, indicating where the food was bought or bearing other information.
The receptacle 11 such as a pouch, bag, or box is constructed so as to define a first upwardly facing mouth 22.
There will be situations where the device is worn while the user is consuming particularly unwieldy food, like crumbling Danish, or loosely formed food, such as over-stuffed sandwiches (i.e. Italian Beef) or condiments-topped hot dogs. In such instances, the user wants maximum coverage of his or her lap and clothing.
To funnel falling food into the device, and to simultaneously maximize garment protection, the device further contains additional score lines as a means to expand the “footprint” of its protective covering by converting an upper portion 19 of the receptacle 11 into a broad garment protective cover.
Outwardly facing surfaces 16 of the receptacle 11 contain a second score line 24 to facilitate a lateral separation of the outwardly facing receptacle surface 16 along the device's medial line (i.e. along longitudinal axis α). This second score line 24, extending along the medial line of the first receptacle, terminates approximately halfway between the first mouth 22 of the receptacle 11 and a depending edge 28 or the bottom of the receptacle 11.
A third score line 26, having a first lateral end 29 and second lateral end 31 extends medially (i.e., towards the center line a of the device) so as to intersect the second score line at approximately a 90 degree angle β and at the termination point of the second score line. Alternatively, the third score line can intersect the second score line at an acute angle, or an obtuse angle. Flaps 30 are formed from outwardly facing surfaces of the first receptacle when the second score line 24 and third score line 26 are separated. These flaps can be folded out to cover the lap of the user, thereby providing a means for enhanced clothing protection from falling food. The flaps are configured so as to overlay regions of the pants or skirt of the user extending beyond the original lateral margins 38 of the receptacle. When the device is so deployed, the receptacle 11 is reduced to a bottom portion 14. The score lines 24 and 26 are such that the receptacle surfaces 16 may be separated to a variable degree.
The device provides even more clothing protection and food bit isolation when the score lines 24, 26 are utilized to form a second upwardly-facing mouth 27 using the bottom receptacle portion 14. Specifically, the flaps 30, when laid open, expose more of the interior of the bottom portion 14 of the receptacle 11 and create angled lips 32 each of which extend inwardly and downwardly to serve as a funnel to direct any food pieces to a newly formed larger opening 27 of the lower portion 14 of the receptacle 11. The lips 32 extend laterally toward the midline a of the device and downwardly from the sides of the device where the first mouth 22 of the receptacle 11 intersects the lateral margin 38 of the receptacle 11. A depending end of each of the lips terminate at the lateral ends of the third scored line 26.
In light of the foregoing, the device provides two mouths and, in effect, two receptacles. The first mouth 22 is located at the space between the bib edge 20 and the opposing receptacle edges 40a, 40b, with the score line 24 remaining closed (See
Alternatively, if the device user so chooses, the second mouth 27 (See
The first receptacle 11 formed from the first mouth 22, and/or the second receptacle formed from the bottom portion 14 of the receptacle 11 may be kept open by a variety of means. If the periphery of the receptacle defining its upwardly facing mouth is fabricated from sufficiently stiff paper, or paper and wire, or cardboard, the paper may be bent and creased so as to form the desired mouth.
If the device is fabricated from plastic, then heavy-paper or cardboard staves (not shown), or similar curve-shaped elongate flat substrates, may be positioned proximal to the mouth so as to conform a portion of the mouth of the receptacle as a convex protrusion from the plane formed from the bib. This protrusion serves as a means to keep the mouth open. For example, in one embodiment, regions of the periphery of the receptacle defining the mouth form laterally extending channels 41 which slidably receive the staves. The channels 41 are positioned so as to be in close spatial relation to the mouths of the receptacles and generally parallel to edges 40a and 40b of the receptacle 11 forming the first mouth 22 and/or the edges 26 of the receptacle forming the second mouth 27. Once inserted, the longitudinal sides of the staves, extend generally perpendicularly relative to the longitudinal axis α of the device, thereby conforming the mouth to the shape of the staves. The staves may be reversibly deformable, thereby providing a method for forming the top of the funnel to a shape with a defined periphery.
As noted supra, certain economies are achieved if the device is constructed of all one material so as to be homogenous in construction. However, the invented device also can be constructed with more than one type of material, so as to be heterogeneous in construction. In this heterogeneous situation, a pre-fabricated receptacle is either reversibly or permanently attached to a bib. Permanent attachment may be made via adhesive or IR welding.
An exemplary embodiment of a paper or cardboard box receptacle-plastic bib combination 49 is shown in
A substrate 55 resembling a web or sheet is attached to dorsal edges of the lateral side lips 61 and top and bottom edge 64 of the receptacle. The upwardly extending plastic substrate 66 is attached to the surface 53, is integrally molded with the substrate, and forms a bib portion 66 of the heterogeneously constructed device. The attachment of the plastic substrate to the receptacle 50 is such that a receptacle pocket 59 is formed between the wearer facing surface 53 of the receptacle 50 and the substrate 55, so as to house the upwardly extending bib portion 66 of the substrate when the device is not in use. Optionally, a strap 68 is attached to the upwardly extending portion 66 of the substrate to facilitate deployment of the bib from the receptacle pocket 59 by the user pulling on the strap 68. Also optionally, the receptacle 50 may comprise carrying handles 79 attached to or extending from the side lips 61.
The receptacle pocket 59 serves as a means for isolating the bib from food and liquids stored in the receptacle 50, as insurance in those instances where the fast food attendant inadvertently soils the receptacle with the food or liquid.
While the invention has been described in the foregoing with reference to details of the illustrated embodiment, these details are not intended to limit the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.