Not applicable.
The field of this disclosure is that of article carriers supported by an animate bearer, such as a human being.
Human beings have long carried articles by attaching them to belts worn around the waist or hips or to harnesses or slings supported at least in part by the shoulders. Such articles have included canteens, weapons, food, and the like. Carriers such as bags or pouches for receiving and supporting the articles may be supported by the belt, harness or sling.
Photographers often carry their photographic gear in carriers such as pouches or bags that are supported by a belt, harness or sling. Such photographic gear may include lenses and camera bodies with lenses attached.
The lenses that may be attached to a single lens reflex or medium format camera body are usually cylindrically shaped objects of varying lengths. Telephoto lenses and other lenses with a long focal length are typically longer along the major axis of the generally cylindrical lens than are shorter focal length lenses.
Carriers for lenses and for cameras with lenses attached preferably should have compartments shaped to receive these devices in order to securely contain them without excess movement of the lenses and the cameras with lenses inside the compartment.
Photographers frequently attach lens hoods to their lenses when taking pictures, in order to shield the lens from a source of bright light such as the sun. This will result in pictures that are not distorted or washed out by the bright light. The lens hood is attached to the front of the lens and projects from the lens in order to shelter the light-gathering element of the lens from the bright light. The lens hood may be removed from the lens, usually by rotating it so that it disengages from a ridge or other locking element on the front of the lens.
The lens hood adds to the length of the lens when it is attached to the lens in an operative position. Being longer, the lens and hood (or camera with lens having hood attached) will not be accommodated in a carrier shaped to fit the lens (or camera with lens) without the hood attached in the operative position, unless the compartment is oversized to begin with or the lens or camera with lens projects out of the compartment. Having an oversized compartment means that the carrier is oversized. This is usually not desirable in order to avoid excess movement and especially in carriers that are meant to be carried on the photographer's body by a belt, harness, sling or the like. On the other hand, allowing the lens or camera with lens to project out of the compartment exposes it to hazards such as rain and other moisture, dust, theft, and the chance of simply falling out of the compartment.
Usually the lens hood can be reversed on the lens so that it does not project beyond the light-gathering element of the lens. The lens will be wider where the hood surrounds it. A carrier with a compartment shaped to fairly closely fit the lens (or camera with lens) can usually accommodate the lens (or camera with lens) with a reversed hood.
Photographers such as sports and combat photojournalists must be ready to take pictures of short-lived and unpredictable events. They will prefer to keep their equipment as ready for use as possible. This may require leaving the lens hood in a deployed or operative position on the lens so that the photographer does not have to take the time to attach a lens hood to the lens or, if one is attached to the lens in a reversed position, to remove the reversed lens from the lens, turn it around, and reattach it.
A need exists, therefore, for a carrier for a lens or a camera with a lens that can accommodate the lens or the camera with a lens wherein the lens has no hood attached, has a hood is in a deployed position or has a hood reversed on the lens. The carrier should be able to accommodate the lens or a camera with lens in a fully enclosed or secure way in all of these conditions and it should do so without being permanently oversized.
The present disclosure provides, in one aspect, a carrier for carrying photographic gear, such as a lens or a camera with a lens, the carrier comprising a wall and a bottom joined by an expanding gusset region to define a variable-length compartment. The expanding gusset region may comprise a gusset and a device at least partially secured to or adjacent to each of the wall and the bottom for reversibly engaging the bottom adjacent the wall. The gusset may have a contracted configuration in which the wall is adjacent the bottom and an expanded configuration in which the wall is spaced from the bottom. The device may be a zipper. The wall may define an opening for access to the variable length compartment. The opening may be secured by a flap or a top.
Without limitation, it is an object and advantage of the present invention to provide a carrier for a lens or a camera having a lens that can securely accommodate the lens or the camera having a lens wherein a lens hood is in a deployed position, is reversed on the lens or no lens hood is on the lens at all.
Another object and advantage is to provide a carrier for a lens or a camera having a lens that can securely accommodate the lens or the camera having a lens wherein the lens is of different lengths.
The present invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings. The accompanying drawings, which constitute part of this specification, help to illustrate embodiments of the disclosure. In the drawings, like numerals are used to indicate like elements throughout. The drawings are described below.
For the purposes of this specification, unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing quantities of ingredients and so forth used in the specification are to be understood as being modified in all instances by the term “about.” Accordingly, unless indicated to the contrary, the numerical parameters set forth in the following specification are approximations that can vary depending upon the desired properties sought to be obtained by the present disclosure.
Notwithstanding that the numerical ranges and parameters setting forth the broad scope of the invention are approximations, the numerical values set forth in the specific examples are reported as precisely as possible. Any numerical value, however, inherently contains certain errors necessarily resulting from the standard deviation found in their respective testing measurements. Moreover, all ranges disclosed herein are to be understood to encompass any and all sub ranges subsumed therein, and every number between the end points. Additionally, any reference referred to as being “incorporated herein” is to be understood as being incorporated in its entirety.
It is further noted that, as used in this specification, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless expressly and unequivocally limited to one referent.
Referring now to the drawings,
The carrier 1 has a wall 10 attached by an expansion gusset region 50 to a bottom 20. The wall 10 and the bottom 20 together define a compartment 15 that has an opening 22 at the top 20.
The wall 10 and the bottom 30, as shown in the drawings, are each formed of two pieces of fabric that sandwich a foam sheet 12 and 32, respectively. The wall 10 and the bottom 30 are each sewn to the expansion gusset region 50 (described below). It will be understood by those of skill in the art how to make and join the wall 10 and the bottom 30 to the expansion gusset region, as well as the variations in the materials and manner of construction that may be employed.
The wall 10 in the embodiment shown in the drawings has two portions: a body contacting wall 14 and a non-body contacting wall 16 joined to each other. The body contacting wall 14 has attached to it a belt connection sleeve 40 that permits the user to connect the carrier 1 to a belt (not shown). A preferred form of a belt connection sleeve is shown in the co-pending PCT application no. PCT/US2005/034036 of one of the current inventors, Douglas H. Murdoch, for a “Carrier System,” published as WO/2006/034421, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein, to the extent permitted by law. A preferred form of a belt is shown in the co-pending PCT application no. PCT/US2006/061357 of the current inventors, Douglas H. Murdoch and Michael Sturm, for a “Carrier System,” the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein, to the extent permitted by law.
The non-body contacting wall 16 is shown with an elastic mesh panel 17 sewn thereon that forms a pocket for small articles such as lens caps, food bars, sun lotion containers, and the like.
The top 20 of the wall 10 is equipped with a cord 25 in a tunnel at the top 20. The cord 25 may be drawn tight and cinched in place by the toggle lock 26. Those of skill in the art will understand that other means of closing the opening 22 to secure the contents of the compartment 15 may be employed, such as a zippered lid and the like.
The construction of the carrier 1, as described to this point and excluding the expansion gusset region 50, is known. For example, Think Tank Photo offers a soft-sided lens carrier of the general construction described thus far (but excluding the expansion gusset region 50) under the name “Lens Changer [size number].” See, for example http://www.thinktankphoto.com/ttp_product_LnsChngr80.php (accessed Feb. 7, 2007).
Although a “soft” construction of the carrier 1 is described in this specification, it could have a “hard” construction, which means that the wall and bottom would be made of materials harder or more rigid than fabric and foam sheets sewn together. For example, the wall and bottom could be made of a thermoplastic material such as the hard-sided cases sold by Pelican products, Inc. and the like. A hard-sided carrier preferably may have a different closure than a cord and toggle lock closure, which is easier to accomplish with a soft-sided carrier 1.
As noted before, the expansion gusset region 50 joins the bottom 30 to the wall 10. A gusset 52, preferably comprised of fabric, is sewn to both the wall 10 and the bottom 30. The gusset 52 will keep the bottom 30 joined to the wall 20 when the expansion gusset region 50 is in the expanded configuration and will keep dust, water, and other undesired elements out of the compartment 15. The gusset 52 may be padded with foam sheeting or the like although this is not shown in the drawings.
The gusset preferably should have a vertical dimension sufficiently great to cause a vertical expansion of the compartment 15 that will permit the compartment 15 to completely accommodate the lens 2 with a lens hood 2A in the operative position as shown in
Alternatively, a single carrier 1 may accommodate securely lenses of different length as long as the circumference of the lens does not increase beyond the inner circumference of the compartment 15. This conveniently provides a single carrier that can fit more than one lens.
A zipper 54 having zipper halves 54A and 54B joined and separated by the movement of zipper slider 56 is arranged so as to contract the gusset 52 and move the bottom 30 against the wall 10 as shown in
It will be understood by those of skill in the art that other means for extending and contracting the gusset 52 may be employed. For example, hook-and-loop tape might be employed to secure the bottom 30 to the wall 10.
The carrier 100 has a wall 100 composed of a front wall 112 joined by a left wall 116 and a right wall 118 to a back wall 114. A top 120 is attached by hinge 123 to the front wall 112 and joined by a zipper 126 with zipper sliders 128 to the left wall 116, the right wall 118, the back wall 114, and portions of the front wall 112. A bottom 130 is connected by an expansion gusset region 150 to the wall 110.
The top 120, the wall 110, the expansion gusset region 150, and the bottom 130 define a compartment 115 that is accessed through the top opening 124 that is covered by the top 120 when the zipper 126 is closed.
The carrier 100 shown in the drawings is a soft-sided case designed to hold and protect photographic gear and it is therefore padded. The top 120 has a foam padding 121 in the form of a foam sheet sandwiched by fabric layers; the wall 110 has foam padding 111, and the bottom has foam padding 131. The general manner of construction of the carrier 100 out of fabric, foam sheeting, zippers, zipper sliders, strapping, D-rings, and the like sewn together will be known to those of skill in the art although the design will not. The wall 110, top 120, and the bottom 130 could be made of harder materials to provide a hard-sided case, if needed, as mentioned above in connection with the carrier 1 of the embodiment of
A belt connection sleeve 140 is provided on the back wall 114. The belt connection sleeve 140 may be the same as the one disclosed in connection with the carrier 1 and the same comments apply. The top 120 is provided with a handle 122 for holding the carrier 100 with the hand when the carrier 100 is not supported on a belt or by a shoulder strap (the belt and the shoulder strap are not shown in the drawings). The left wall 116 is shown with a sleeve or flap zippered thereon to form a left side zippered compartment 117. Those of skill in the art will be aware that many variations in the position, form, and structure of the belt connection sleeve 140, the handle 122, and the left side zippered compartment 117 are possible.
The expansion gusset region 150 has generally the same construction as the expansion gusset region 50 in the carrier 50 and provides a gusset 152 that can be contracted or expanded so as to displace the bottom 130 away from the wall 110 so as to accommodate variations in the length of the article or device enclosed in the compartment 115 of the carrier 100. In other words, the article or device may be enclosed in the compartment 115 with the top 120 zippered shut over the opening 124 even though the length of the article or device may change. In the drawings, one will see that the article is an SLR camera body 105 attached to a lens 107 (a telephoto lens in the drawings). The lens 107 changes its length when the lens hood 107A changes orientation from being reversed on the lens (
While illustrative embodiments of the carriers disclosed herein have been shown and described in the above description, numerous variations and alternative embodiments will occur to those skilled in the art and it should be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described. Such variations and alternative embodiments are contemplated, and can be made, without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/904,603, filed on Mar. 1, 2007 for a “Carrier for Photographic Equipment such as Cameras and Lenses,” by Douglas Harland Murdoch and Michael Sturm, and assigned to Think Tank Photo, Inc. The disclosure of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/904,603 is incorporated herein by reference to the extent permitted by law.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US08/55194 | 2/27/2008 | WO | 00 | 8/28/2009 |