Collar stays are used in the art to keep collars of shirts, especially dress shirts, taut. Typically, a portal is sewn into the collar of the shirt, on either side, adapted for insertion of a collar stay there-in. A collar stay, for purposes of this disclosure, is defined as a rigid, elongated member adapted for insertion within a portal within a collar of a shirt. However, shirts come in different sizes, and even amongst shirts which are the same size, the size of the collar may vary. Still further, the size of the portal for insertion of a collar stay may vary. As such, one may find that collar stays are too short, too long, too wide, and/or too narrow for a portal within a collar.
What is needed in the art is a way to provide a method and mechanism for allowing collar stays to fit in any shirt. Currently, one must either hope that the collar stay will fit, and risk having it be swallowed up inside the collar, meaning that it is ineffective and hard to remove, or stick out of the end of the portal which is undesirable, especially since such stays are generally part of classier shirts and modes of dress. A stick extending from one's collar detracts greatly from a polished look. The other option is to have collar stays of many different sizes and learn, usually through trial and error, which collar stay fits within which shirt.
Therefore, it is an object of the disclosed technology to provide an adjustable length collar stay.
In a further embodiment of the disclosed technology a simple to use, durable collar stay is provided, which fits a variety of shirts with different size portals for a collar stay.
In an embodiment of the disclosed technology, an adjustable collar stay has an elongated housing with a hollow, elongated interior space. This hollow and elongated interior space has a portal at a front side of the device. A movable piece, a single piece having a head and elongated portion, is slidable within the interior space of the housing. More precisely, the elongated portion of the movable piece is adapted to move by sliding within a hollow interior track of the elongated housing, and has a plurality of pits (grooves cut into a side of the elongated housing) disposed on one side thereof. The elongated portion of the movable piece and the head of the movable piece are delineated by the greater width of the head, at the point of connection, with the elongated portion which has two generally parallel sides adapted to slide within a track having two corresponding parallel sides. While the head region may also have two parallel sides, these sides are, by definition, wider than the elongated portion and do not fit within the track of the housing. Or, the head region may have sides which are not parallel; however, an end of the head region is, by definition, wider than the elongated portion of the movable piece, thereby preventing movement of the head region into the housing of the device. A spring-loaded pin is rotatably fixed at a first end to the elongated housing. At a second end, the spring-loaded pin extends into a pit of the plurality of pits.
In embodiments of the disclosed technology, but for the spring-loaded pin extending into a pit of the plurality of pits (of the movable piece), the movable piece would be freely movable into and out of (slidable) within the portal at the front side of the device. Thus, the pin prevents movement. However, with an engaged pin into a pit, the movable piece is still movable in a direction transverse to the portal which is also defined as a direction other than parallel to the track of the elongated housing. Moving the movable piece in the direction transverse to the portal causes dislodging of the second end of the spring-loaded pin from a pit of the plurality of pits. Such moving causes, the movable piece to become slidable into and out of the portal, at least partially, if not fully, such as at least until the second end of the spring-loaded pin engages with a different pit of the plurality of pits. When the second end of the spring-loaded pin engages with a new pit of the plurality of pits, the kinetic forces/movement thereof may be discernible by one holding the device and, as such, the holder knows when to stop extending or contracting the device.
The head of the movable piece may be triangular with a base thereof having a width wider than the hollow interior track, and a tip, opposite the base, having a width narrower than the hollow interior track. The ‘base’ refers to the ‘base’ of the triangle and is adjacent to the elongated portion of the movable piece. The ‘width’ refers to the distance from one side of the base to the other, or a distance between two points parallel to this distance.
In a method of using an adjustable collar stay of embodiments of the disclosed technology, one grasps an elongated body and head of the adjustable collar stay, such as each with a different hand. The head is pushed in a direction transverse to a length of the elongated body (the longest direction of the body is defined as the “length” while the width is defined as above and/or is perpendicular to the length). This causes a spring-loaded pin, which is rotatably connected to the elongated body, to disengage from a first pit. The first pit is one of a plurality of pits cut into a movable piece, the movable piece, in turn, forming a unitary structure with the above-mentioned head. Once the pin has been dislodged from a pit, the head may be slid (moved closer to, or further away from, the elongated body in a generally perpendicular direction to the length of the body; ‘generally’ being defined as within a tolerance level accepted in the art at the time of use, such as within 5 degrees or 5%, where applicable). The sliding occurs until the spring-loaded pin rotates (lodges in) a second pit of the movable piece. Then, one places the adjustable collar stay into a portal of a collar adapted to receive this, or any other, collar stay.
The movable piece is movable in a direction transverse to the longest side of the elongated housing, irrespective of whether the end of the spring-loaded pin is in the first pit or the second pit, in an embodiment of the above-described method. The step of moving may be carried out until force associated with the spring-loaded pin entering into the second pit is felt. Still further, the first and second pits may not be next to each other, but may be spaced apart with pits in-between bypassed.
The head of the movable piece may be triangular with a base thereof having a greater width than the width of a hollow interior of the elongated body. A tip of the head, opposite the base, may have a width narrower than the width of the hollow interior of the elongated body.
In yet another embodiment, an adjustable length device may have a housing with a hollow elongated interior, a pin rotatably fixed to a protrusion extending into the hollow elongated interior, and a slidable member adapted to slide within the hollow elongated interior, in a manner such that the slidable member has a side parallel to at least one corresponding side of the hollow elongated interior in a resting position. A plurality of pits cut into the slidable member, each adapted to engage an end of the pin opposite the (rotatably) fixed side of the pin, is also part of the device. In an embodiment of the disclosed technology, in the resting position, if the pin is aligned with a pit of the plurality of pits, the pin rests within the pit. Further, when the slidable member is offset by a minimum number of degrees from parallel to at least one corresponding side of the hollow elongated interior of the housing (such as offset by 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, or 15 degrees), the pin is prevented from engaging with any pits of the plurality of pits. When a person feels the pin passing over a pit (which is detectable, in embodiments of the disclosed technology), the user may decide to stop sliding the slidable member with respect to the housing, letting the pin rest in the detected pit.
The present technology is directed to an adjustable length collar stay.
In an embodiment of the disclosed technology, an adjustable collar stay has an elongated housing with a hollow elongated interior space. This hollow and elongated interior space has a portal at a front side of the device. A movable piece, a single piece having a head and elongated portion, is slidable within the interior space of the housing. More precisely, the elongated portion of the movable piece is adapted to slidably move within a hollow interior track of the elongated housing, and has a plurality of pits disposed on one side thereof. The elongated portion of the movable piece and the head of the movable piece are delineated by the greater width of the head, at the point of connection, with the elongated portion, which has two generally parallel sides adapted to slide within a track having two corresponding parallel sides. While the head region may also have two parallel sides, these sides are, by definition, wider than the elongated portion and do not fit within the track of the housing. Or, the head region may have sides which are not parallel; however, an end of the head region is, by definition, wider than the elongated portion of the movable piece, thereby preventing movement of the head region into the housing of the device. A spring-loaded pin is rotatably fixed at a first end to the elongated housing. At a second end, the spring-loaded pin extends into a pit of the plurality of pits.
Embodiments of the disclosed technology will become clearer in view of the following description of the figures.
Referring now to the head 12, in the embodiment shown in the figures, the head is triangular, and is actually, an isosceles triangle. The triangle has a base 19 and tip 18. The base, for purposes of this disclosure, is the side which is unequal to the other two sides. Here, the tip 18 of the triangular head is narrower than the base 19. In other embodiments, the base and tip of the head may be of any size relative to one another, so long as the base is wider than a portal of entry into the housing adapted to receive the elongated portion 14.
The base 19, whether the head is a triangle or other shaped head 12, is further defined as a side adjacent to the elongated portion, and differentiated from the elongated portion in that the width of the side adjacent to the elongated portion is greater than that of the elongated portion and, further, greater than that of a track within the housing 20 and portal of entry there-to which the elongated portion 14 enters through. The portal (unnumbered) is the sole point of entry into the housing, which the elongated portion 14 of the movable piece 10 fits into, and is further slidably movable in and out of the housing via the portal, but for the pin's rotating second end 54 engaging with a pit of the elongated portion 14.
Referring now to the figures in general, and especially
While the disclosed technology has been taught with specific reference to the above embodiments, a person having ordinary skill in the art will recognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and the scope of the disclosed technology. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope. Combinations of any of the methods, systems, and devices described hereinabove are also contemplated and within the scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2545020 | Coffing | Mar 1951 | A |
2726400 | Ruane | Dec 1955 | A |
2799024 | Oscard | Jul 1957 | A |
4627421 | Symbas et al. | Dec 1986 | A |
4747395 | Brief | May 1988 | A |
5000163 | Ray et al. | Mar 1991 | A |
5967974 | Nicholas et al. | Oct 1999 | A |
6145407 | Rottmann | Nov 2000 | A |
7270632 | Santilli | Sep 2007 | B2 |
7409730 | Boos | Aug 2008 | B2 |
8108948 | Boos | Feb 2012 | B2 |
20120227163 | Schottenstein | Sep 2012 | A1 |