The present invention relates generally to consumer packaging, and more particularly to consumer packaging that includes a zip release that allows access to the packaging's interior to allow inaccessible and unused product to be extracted from the packaging.
There are many examples of consumer packaging where it is accepted that all of the material in the packaging cannot be used. Toothpaste, for example, comes in tubes where the tube only allows about 90-95% of the toothpaste to be extracted before the tube is discarded. This unused toothpaste is product that the consumer has paid for but is not used due to the limitations of the packaging. With each purchase, the consumer pays for one hundred percent of the product but only enjoys ninety to ninety-five percent of the product for which he or she has paid. This happens with almost all viscous products, such as lotions, shampoos, pastes, gels, soaps, and the like. Both suppliers and customers acknowledge this problem, but toothpaste continues to be sold in tubes, lotion bottles continue to prevent access to the interior space, and soap dispensers continue to be sold so that not all of the product can be used by the patron.
The present invention addresses this problem by fabricating the consumer packaging so that a zip release allows the consumer to open the packaging when the contents are almost exhausted, exposing the interior of the packaging and allowing the last five to ten percent of the product to be accessed and acquired.
The present invention is a modified consumer packaging for a viscous personal care product that can be opened preferably along a longitudinal edge or circumferential section to bypass its traditional delivery port and allow a consumer to access and collect product that otherwise would be discarded. A first example of this concept is an otherwise conventional toothpaste tube that includes a pull tab to open the tube along a longitudinal edge. The pull tab and the longitudinal seam (which can include perforations or reduced thickness) can be covered with a protective tape or film, and accessed only when the tube is substantially evacuated. Removing the protective tape or film, the pull tab can be activated to separate the adjoined edges of the tube along a longitudinal strip or seam. Once separated, toothpaste that remained in the crannies and nooks of the tube can be accessed by the consumer, resulting in many additional uses before the tube is fully exhausted. This saves the consumer money, saves the environment from unnecessary packaging waste, and benefits suppliers with greater customer satisfaction. The concept can be expanded to bottles of lotion, shampoo, soaps, etc., allowing consumers better value for their purchases. These and other features of the present invention will best be understood with reference to the detailed description of the invention below, along with the accompanying Figures.
The present invention modifies the traditional tube by including a way to access the tube's interior in the form of a zip tie device. The zip tie device includes a pull tab 20 that is connected to a thin strip 22 defined by perforations 24a, 24b (or weakened material) along a longitudinal side of the tube 10. The thin strip 22 can be covered by a protective tape 32 film, or other covering that can be removed by the user prior to activating the pull tab 20. After the tube 10 has been substantially depleted of its contents by squeezing, the user removes the tape 32 and pulls the pull tab 20 down the length of the longitudinal side of the tube and across the bottom edge, causing the thin strip 22 to separate from the tube along the perforations 24a, 24b. The thin strip 22 can continue along a lower edge of the tube along perforation 28 to allow the tube to open along this newly formed slit down the tube and across the bottom edge. The pull tab 20 preferably opens the seam formed by the removal of the strip 22 all the way to the flat seam 12 of the tube, and preferably along the perforation 28 as well.
The concept can be applied to other personal product packaging such as lotion bottles, as shown in
Although two embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, the concept can be easily extended to other personal care packaging where viscous materials are enclosed in packaging that does not readily allow access to the interior of the container. Thus, the invention should not be deemed to cover only these embodiments, but rather the invention is intended to cover a variety of packaging in shapes and sizes other than that depicted in the drawings.