1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to a device for attaching buttons and more specifically to a button attachment awl which uses a plastic connector rather than thread to attach a button.
2. Background Information
For hundreds of years people have been dealing with problems relating reattaching buttons which come off of a garment. The traditional method of attaching a button is to use a needle and thread. A typical button has either two or four holes. Ordinarily, the thread is tied to the cloth. The needle it passed through one of the holes in the button back through a second hole in the button and back through the cloth. This process is repeated a dozen or so times until a coil of may turns of thread is formed binding the button to the cloth. If the button has more than two holes, the process is repeated for each pair of button holes. This process is difficult for untrained people and time consuming for nearly everyone.
A number of automatic button attachment devices have been invented over the years which attempt to make fastening a button onto a garment much easier than the traditional needle and thread method. An early patent for a button fastener was issued to Platt (U.S. Pat. No. 388,443; August 1888). The Platt device disclosed a deformable rivet which was pushed through a hole in the cloth and then had a hollow button forced onto the rivet which caused the rivet to flatten out such that it would not come off of the button. A much more recent patent to Modrey (U.S. Pat. No. 3,754,304; Aug. 28, 1973) discloses a hollow tube with a flexible needle affixed to one end. The needle includes, for example, a set of saw teeth along one edge. The needle could be passed through a garment and one hole of a button and then passed down through the second hole of the button and back through the cloth. The end of the needle was pushed through the hollow tube and was held in place by the saw teeth.
The button attachment awl of the instant invention is believed to solve, in a new and unique fashion, many problems relating to attaching a button onto a garment. The awl has a point at its forward end and a rearward angled notch rearward of the point. A plastic fastener fits into the notch and may be forced through the button and the cloth using the awl.
The ideal button attachment awl should be capable of being used to affix a button to a garment without the need for a needle and thread.
The ideal button attachment awl must also fast and easy to use.
The ideal button attachment awl should be capable of affixing a button to a garment sturdily.
The ideal button attachment awl should also be inexpensive and rugged.
These and other features of the invention will become apparent when taken in consideration with the following detailed description and the drawings.
The button attachment awl of the instant invention includes an awl portion and a connector portion. The awl has a point at its forward end and a handle at its rearward end. There is a notch just rearward of the point. The notch angles rearward such that the portion of the notch closest to the outer surface of the awl is forward of the portion of the notch toward the inner portion of the awl.
The connector is made of a sturdy, somewhat flexible plastic. The connector is symmetric with prongs on either end of a link. Each of the prongs includes a pair of fingers which protrude generally outward from the link. The link is made of a pair of strips such that it is open in its center.
The awl is introduced between the strips into the center of the connector. One of the prongs is pressed into the notch on the awl such that most of the connector is angled rearward along the awl and the two forward fingers protrude outward from the notch. The point of the awl is pushed through a hole in a button and through the cloth to which the button is to be attached. The forward prong with its two fingers is also forced through the button and the cloth. The awl is then pulled back out of the cloth and the button, but the two finger press against the side of the cloth away from the button and prevent the connector from being pulled through the cloth and the button.
The awl is then started through another hole in the button and the remaining prong is pressed into the notch. This prong is forced through the second button hole and the awl is removed. The fingers on the second prong prevent the prong from being pulled back through the cloth and the button hole. Thus the button is affixed to the cloth with the two prongs on the inside of the cloth and the center portion of the link on the outside of the button.
The button attachment awl of the instant invention is described above as being used to affixed a button with two button holes to a piece of cloth, but the device could be used with a four hole button by using two connectors. In addition, the device could be used to fasten a variety of other materials together.
One of the major objects of the present invention is to provide a button attachment awl capable of being used to affix a button to a garment without the need for a needle and thread.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a method for attaching buttons which is fast and easy to use.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a device capable of affixing a button to a garment sturdily.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a device which is inexpensive and rugged.
These and other features of the invention will become apparent when taken in consideration with the following detailed description and the drawings.
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In the preferred embodiments said awl 2 is made from steel, but other materials including plastic could be used provided the material was sufficiently strong and rigid. Said connector 10 is made from an elastomer known as Kraton made by Kraton Polymers U.S., LLC of Houston, Tex. The elastomer must be sufficiently flexible to allow said fingers 16 to be forced through said button hole 22 yet be rigid enough to prevent the inserted fingers 16 from pulling back through said button hole 22. Other materials having strength and flexibility similar to the Kraton elastomer could be used. The instant invention could also be used for stitching in medical or surgical applications and said connector 10 made from a material which would eventually dissolve.
While preferred embodiments of this invention have been shown and described above, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications may be made in these embodiments without departing from the spirit of the present invention.