This document relates to cards, such as greeting cards, capable of retaining items therein.
Cards may be used to retain items therein. For example, greeting cards are commonly used to deliver messages to the intended recipients. Such greeting cards may bear messages of sorrow, grief, sympathy, emotions, joy, well wishes, celebration of events, humor, or various other communications. A greeting card may also be used to deliver a gift item to the recipient. For example, a gift item such as paper currency may be inserted into a greeting card, and the card (when in a folded condition) may be delivered to the recipient. After the greeting card is opened, the paper currency is revealed to the recipient. Another example of a gift item that may be included in a greeting card is a transaction card. Such transaction cards are typically similar in size and shape to standard credit cards and may be used, for example, as a gift certificate or a prepaid merchandise credit toward a purchase at a retail establishment.
A traditional greeting card—where one panel is folded over another panel—is not necessarily conducive to retaining gift items such as paper currency or transaction cards. If the folded greeting card is held or manipulated without proper care, the gift item inside the greeting card may unintentionally release from the greeting card, and the gift item may be lost before the recipient is able to receive it.
Some cards, such as greeting cards, are formed with pockets or cut lines in the card, which may be used to retain a gift item in the card. For example, a greeting card may have a pocket or an envelope formed thereon so that a gift item may be held in the card until the recipient receives it. Because a gift item such as paper currency is usually not the same size as a gift item such as a transaction card, separate cards typically are used to deliver different types of gift items. As such, a retail consumer typically decides at the time of purchasing a card whether the intended gift item to be included in the card should be in the form of paper currency or in the form of a transaction card.
A card may include a generally planar panel and a plurality of opposing retaining members disposed on the panel. The plurality of opposing retaining members may be arranged to retain a substantially rectangular transaction card having a first longitudinal axis in a first orientation with respect to the panel and to retain a substantially rectangular paper gift having a second longitudinal axis in a second orientation with respect to the panel, so that the orientation of the first longitudinal axis is substantially transverse to the second orientation of the second longitudinal axis. The paper gift may be, for example, paper monetary currency, a paper bank check, or a paper gift certificate. The transaction card may be, for example, a debit card, a credit card, a gift card, a prepaid phone card, a card containing a merchandise credit usable at a retail establishment.
A method of using a card comprising a panel and a plurality of opposing retaining members disposed on the panel may include removably retaining a substantially rectangular transaction card by the plurality of opposing retaining members and removably retaining a substantially rectangular paper gift by the plurality of opposing retaining members. The transaction card may have a first longitudinal axis in a first orientation with respect to the panel and the paper gift may have a second longitudinal axis in a second orientation with respect to the panel, wherein the first orientation of the first longitudinal axis is substantially transverse to the second orientation of the second longitudinal axis.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
Referring to
Referring to
Opposing retaining members 40 and 41 are disposed on rear panel 20. As shown in
Referring to
Transaction card 50 may be releasably retained by opposing retaining members 40 and 41 so that a portion of transaction card 50 is exposed when greeting card 10 is adjusted to an opened condition (as shown in
When transaction card 50 is being retained, minor edges 56 and 57 of the transaction card 50 are covered by opposing flaps 40 and 41 while a portion of major edges 58 and 59 extend between the flaps 40 and 41. Optionally, a magnetic strip 52 is included on the rear face 54 of the transaction card 50, which stores data associated with the transaction card 50. The transaction card 50 may be, for example, a debit card, a credit card, a gift card, a prepaid phone card, a card containing a merchandise credit usable at a retail establishment, or another similar device. The front face 55 of the transaction card 50 may include a logo or other phrase 53 that identifies the particular establishment at which the transaction card is redeemable. In such cases, the opposing flaps 40 and 41 may be positioned such that logo or phrase 53 is exposed to the recipient when the greeting card 10 is opened.
Referring to
In the embodiment shown in
As shown in
In an embodiment, major edges 58 and 59 of transaction card 50 are shorter in length than major edges 68 and 69 of paper currency 60 and longer in length than minor edges 66 and 67 of paper currency 60. In addition, minor edges 56 and 57 of transaction card 50 may be shorter in length than minor edges 66 and 67 and major edges 68 and 69 of paper currency 60. For example, major edges 58 and 59 of transaction card 50 may measure approximately 3.375 inches in length and minor edges 56 and 57 of transaction card 50 may measure approximately 2.125 inches in length. Meanwhile, major edges 68 and 69 of paper currency 60 can have a length of approximately 6.0 to 6.5 inches and minor edges 66 and 67 of paper currency can have a length of approximately 2.5 to 3.0 inches. Despite these size differences between transaction card 50 and paper currency 60, retaining members 40 and 41 can be advantageously configured to retain either transaction card 50 or paper currency 60 without the need for redundant retaining members.
In operation, flaps 40 and 41 work in conjunction with panels 20 or 30 of the greeting card 10 in which the cut lines 42 and 44 are formed. Referring to the embodiments shown in
Referring to
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A number of embodiments of the invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the greeting card may have a design other than a vertical fold line with front and rear panels. Instead, the greeting card may have a horizontal fold line, multiple fold lines, or no fold lines. Moreover one or more faces of the greeting card may be blank so that the user may write personalized message. In addition, the flaps may have a shape other than an convex arc shape. For instance, the cut lines may have one or more corners so that the flaps have a triangular, rectangular, or trapezoidal shape. Furthermore, the greeting card may be capable of simultaneously retaining more than one gift item at a time. As such, the greeting card may be operated to retain both a transaction card and a paper gift at the same time. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
This application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/684,422, filed on Mar. 9, 2007 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,827,710, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/653,040, filed on Aug. 29, 2003 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,204,048, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100251582 A1 | Oct 2010 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11684422 | Mar 2007 | US |
Child | 12820437 | US | |
Parent | 10653040 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11684422 | US |