The present invention relates to packaging, and more particularly to paperboard and plastic composite package structures intended for use in containing and displaying articles at the point of sale.
A wide variety of composite packages are used to contain and display articles at the point of sale. A conventional composite package includes a combination of paperboard and plastic components. There is a variety of types of composite packages in which the paperboard and plastic components are combined in different ways. For example, “book-style” composite packages are shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,775,512 to Hones and U.S. Pat. No. 4,724,957 to Burgschweiger. A conventional “book-style” composite package include an inner plastic clam shell that forms a compartment to contain the article(s) to be packaged and an outer paperboard cover that covers the clam shell. The clam shell and paperboard each include an integral “spine.” The spines are generally coextensive to allow the package to be opened and closed along one edge in a book-like manner. Book-style composite packages provide the benefits of being easily recloseable and relatively stable constructions, but they can be relatively expensive to manufacture. Further, the paperboard spine, which spans the thickness of the package, may be too flexible to provide confident registration between the clam shell portions, particularly after repeated opening and closing.
Another type of composite package is a blister package. Blister packages are used to package a wide range of articles. A conventional blister package includes a plastic component (or blister) having a peripheral flange that is face-sealed to a paperboard card or sandwiched between a pair of paperboard panels. In some cases, the two paperboard panels are a single piece of paperboard folded along an edge. In other cases, they are two separate panels. Various attempts have been made to provide recloseable blister packages. In one type of recloseable blister package, the blister is formed with an integral door. With this construction, the blister remains sealed to the paperboard and a door within the blister is opened. In another type of recloseable blister package, the blister is secured to the paperboard in a way that allow the blister to pivot away from the paperboard. For example, one edge of the blister may be permanently sealed to the paperboard and the other three edges may be joined only by a peelable adhesive. This allows the blister to open while remaining joined to the paperboard. In yet another example, the paperboard panel closing the blister may include a door, such as a perforated region that can be opened to gain access to the interior of the blister.
Although existing composite packages are suitable for many applications, there remains a desire for a stable and easily reclosable package that is less expensive to manufacture and provides a wide range of packaging options.
The present invention provides a composite package having a folded paperboard card and two plastic components shaped to interfit with one another when the package is closed. The plastic components define a space for containing one or more articles. The folded paperboard card may be a dual-panel card with two panels joined to one another along a fold line or other hinge. Each paperboard panel may include an opening to seat a plastic component. The openings are configured to bring the two plastic components into registration when the panels are folded together along the hinge.
In one embodiment, the plastic components are configured to releasably interlock with one another when the package is closed. One of the two plastic components may include a shoulder that is configured to be snap-fitted into the opening of the other plastic component. The opening may include a shelf shaped to closely receive the shoulder and provide a stop against which the shoulder abuts when the package is closed.
In one embodiment, the shoulder and opening include interfitting contours that provide a snap-fit. The configuration of the snap-fitting features may be set to provide the desired resistance to opening and closing.
In one embodiment, each of the plastic components includes a peripheral flange sealed to the corresponding panel. The flanges may be sealed to the inside surfaces of the panels so that the flanges are hidden from view when the package is closed. The flanges may be joined to one another along an integral hinge seated in the interior of the paperboard fold line.
The present invention provides an inexpensive and effective recloseable composite package. The use of interfitting plastic components provides a stable package with an extended life. The interfitting plastic components can be designed with contours that provide the desired amount of resistance to opening and closing. Further, the fold line provides substantially more stability than offered by the paperboard “spine” of book-style composite packages. The present invention may also be used to provide a package with the aesthetically pleasing appearance of a blister package. In those embodiments in which the plastic components are separate from one another, the paperboard hinge does not bind against an underlying plastic hinge and the amount of plastic used to manufacture the package is reduced.
These and other features of the invention will be more fully understood and appreciated by reference to the description of the embodiments and the drawings.
Before the embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein are for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. The use of “including” and “comprising” and variations thereof is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items and equivalents thereof.
A composite package in accordance with a first embodiment of the present invention is shown in
As noted above, the paper board portion 12 of the illustrated composite package 10 includes a pair of paperboard panels 16 and 18 that are joined along a fold line 20. The paperboard portion 12 of this embodiment is rectangular shape and includes a fold line 20 that divides the paperboard portion 12 into two essentially identical rectangular panels 16 and 18. The fold line 20 may be defined a score line, a partial cut line or a series of perforations, if desired, so that the cover 12 may be easily folded in a controlled manner when the package 10 is closed.
In the illustrated embodiment, the first panel 16 defines an opening or cut-out 21. As shown in
Shown in
Although the illustrated paperboard portion 12 is generally rectangular, the paperboard portion 12 may have essentially any shape that allows two panels to be folded into opposition. The illustrated panels 16 and 18 are joined along a fold line 20, but may alternatively be joined in other ways. For example, the panels may be separately manufactured and joined together by a material capable of functioning as a hinge, such as a strip of tape or other flexible adhesive material. The illustrated package 10 includes two panels, but the package may alternatively include more than two panels. For example, the package may include three panels with two panels that fold to cover different regions of the third panel. During manufacture, the paperboard portion 12 may be manufacture from a paperboard blank that is die cut or otherwise formed from paperboard stock of the desired type and thickness. If the paperboard portion 12 is formed as a single continuous piece of stock, a score line or perforations may be formed in the blank to facilitate folding along the desire fold line 20.
The plastic portion 14 may be constructed from a polymer such as polyvinyl chloride (PVC), Barex®, copolyester or any other plastic material that can be thermoformed or otherwise shaped to create the desired compartment for containing one or more articles. In the illustrated embodiment, the polymer is substantially transparent, but it may be translucent or opaque in other applications if desired. The unitary plastic portion 14 includes two plastic components 26 and 28, each of which is secured to a different panel 16 and 18, respectively. The front package component 26 and the rear package component 28 may be formed from a single sheet of plastic and may be joined by one or more segments of plastic. As perhaps best shown in
Referring again to
The flange 34 of the illustrated embodiment extends entirely around the periphery of the pocket 32 to provide a continuous section of material along which the front plastic component 26 may be joined to the panel 16. The flange 34 need not, however, be continuous, and it may alternatively be a single incomplete segment or it may be broken into multiple segments disposed at different locations around the periphery of the pocket 32. The flange 34 may be joined to the panel 16 in essentially any way. In the illustrated embodiment, the flange 34 is secured to the panel 16 by a heat-activated adhesive, but other types of adhesives may be used. An adhesive may be extend along any regions where the plastic component 14 and the paperboard portion 12 are in contact, but in the illustrated embodiment extends along the interface between the panel 16 and the flange 34. In the illustrated embodiment, the plastic component 14 is disposed with the flange 34 engaging the inside surface 30 of the panel 16 and the pocket 32 extending outwardly through the cut-out 21.
Although the front package component 26 and the rear package component 28 are shown as joined along a bridge or a hinge 25, the package components 26 and 28 may be separate components. In addition, the number of plastic components may vary from application to application. For example, each panel may have a plurality of cut-outs that are fitted with a plurality of plastic components. In some embodiments, each front and rear pair of plastic components can define a separate article containing space. In other embodiments, the plastic components are not arranged in unique pairs. For example, two or more components on one panel may be fitted into a single plastic component on an opposed panel.
In the illustrated embodiment, the front plastic component 26 and the rear plastic component 28 are configured to be interfitted with one another. In the package of
A composite package in accordance with a second embodiment of the present invention is shown in
The plastic portion 114 is generally similar to the previously described second plastic portion 14 with the exception that it defines a second raised portion or pocket 170 extending rearwardly with respect to a second flange 172. In addition, each flange 134, 172 is generally coextensive with the corresponding paperboard panel 116, 118. The paperboard portion 112 is generally similar to the previously described paperboard portion 12 with the exception that it defines a second opening or cut-out 174 shaped to receive the rearwardly extending pocket 170. As described above in connection with the first embodiment, the rearwardly extending pocket 170 may be shaped to loosely receive the article or articles. For example, the pocket 170 may be a rectangular pocket capable of containing a plurality of fasteners, such as nails or screws. In the illustrated embodiment, the outer dimensions of the pocket 170 at its conjunction with the flange 172 are substantially the same as the inner dimensions of the corresponding cut-out 174. Although the close fit between the pocket 170 and the cut-out 174 helps to register the rear plastic component 128 with respect to the rear panel 118, a close fit is not required and the rear pocket 170 need not correspond in shape with the cut out 174. For example, if the outer dimensions of the pocket 170 are substantially smaller than then inner dimensions of the cut-out 174, the flange 172 may bridge the space between the pocket 170 and the panel 118 surrounding the cut-out 176.
Like the front plastic component 126, the rear plastic component 128 is shown in
Once folded, the innermost panels 216 and 218 and outermost panel 217 and 219 may be joined in essentially any suitable manner, such as through the use of adhesives and cements. In the illustrated embodiment, the mating surfaces of the panels 216, 217, 218 and 219 are joined by a cohesive, such as a rubber-based or latex-based cohesive. More specifically, in this embodiment, the mating surfaces of the panels 216, 217, 218 and 219 are coated with a cohesive so that, once folded, panel 216 adhesively joins to panel 217 and panel 218 adhesively joins to panel 219.
The package 210 can then be opened and closed by bending along fold line 220 as shown by line F of
The extra panels provided in this embodiment can facilitate assembly of the package 212 because the plastic portion 212 can be secured in place without the use of expensive sealing equipment. Instead, the package 212 can be manually assembled simply by folding the outermost panels onto the innermost panels so that the cohesive secures them together. Further, the extra panels increase the strength/stiffness of the package 210. Also, because the extra panels are folded, they allow printing to appear on all visible sides of the package 210 even when printing is applied to only one side of the paperboard portion 212.
The above description is that of current embodiments of the invention. Various alterations and changes can be made without departing from the spirit and broader aspects of the invention as defined in the appended claims, which are to be interpreted in accordance with the principles of patent law including the doctrine of equivalents. Any reference to claim elements in the singular, for example, using the articles “a,” “an,” “the” or “said,” is not to be construed as limiting the element to the singular. It is to be understood that the invention disclosed and defined herein extends to all alternative combinations of two or more of the individual features mentioned or evident from the text and/or drawings. All of these different combinations constitute various alternative aspects of the present invention.
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