1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of exercise accessories and gym equipment, and more particularly to a cover or towel that persons may use during gym exercise.
2. General Background and State of the Art
Towels are a common sight in gyms. People sit or lie on them when using exercise benches or mats, or they may use towels to prevent other body parts from touching exercise equipment. Likewise, people use towels to wipe off perspiration during or after vigorous exercise. Gym etiquette and hygiene requires such towel use.
A person may wrap a towel around his or her waist instead of carrying the towel in one's hands. When a person with a towel around his or her waist sits on equipment, a bench or a mat, the towel, if properly positioned, allows one to sit or lie on a bench or mat without much of the person's skin touching the bench or mat. Unfortunately, using conventional towels in such ways creates problems and difficulties. Though wrapping a towel around one's waist (or chest for women) secure the towel in the shower or locker room, it will not stay in place and falls off during exercise.
Persons wearing standard shorts find the shorts riding up their legs when exercising on a bench. That can lead to exposing the crotch. In addition, if a person uses a towel when working on one piece of equipment, he or she may leave the towel on that equipment when going to the other equipment. The next person using the first piece will find someone else's towel, and the first person will need a new towel. If the towel belongs to the gym, forgetting one's towel on a piece of equipment leads to inconvenience. The gym will eventually wash and reuse the towel. If, however, the gym does not provide towels and people bring their own, leaving a towel on equipment can cause it to be lost. Though someone may return the towel to a lost and found, that may not happen.
Many gym users want to carry items such as keys, wallets, identification cards, credit cards, cell phones (if allowed in the gym), radios, MP3 players or the like in the gym. Some exercise clothes lack pockets to carry these items. Although one can wear a “fanny” pack or similar carrier, it is an extra piece of apparel to wear. Conventional gym towels do not have pockets or pouches for holding personal items. Even if towels had pockets or pouches, the towels do not necessarily stay attached to the user as discussed above. Therefore, conventional towel are not good for carrying such items.
Therefore, it is an object of the present invention to provide a gym or exercising towel or cover that solves these problems. Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a gym or exercising towel or cover that attaches to a user without falling off, that is of a material and texture for absorbing moisture, that can hold personal items and that blocks the view of the user's crotch when the user performs particular exercises.
Accordingly, the above problems and difficulties are avoided by providing a gym or exercising towel that has a rectangular length of material or other shape to cover the user's abdomen and buttocks. One side of the material is relatively smooth and the opposite side includes a moisture absorbing material. One end of the towel includes a pair of ties that can be tied together to hold the towel to the user.
The free ends of the ties include enlarged ends that, when tied together, form a drape in front of the wearer when in a sitting or lying position to block the view of the user's crotch. The towel portion or one or both ties may have a pocket or pouch for carrying personal items. In one exemplary embodiment, the ties attach permanently to the towel portion, but in another embodiment, the tie is one piece that attaches to the towel portion with Velcro® or other fasteners. That allows the ties to stay around the user's waist or hips while the user removes the towel for wiping his or her face or other body part.
Therefore, it is among the primary objects of the present invention to provide a novel gym or exercise towel that includes ties that can be wrapped about the girth of the user and releasably knotted to provide a sight barrier.
The upper end of the body 11 includes a pair of ties or straps 12 and 13 (
Extensions 16 and 17 attach to the upper part of the towel portion 11. They are triangular in the
Ties 12 and 13 are long enough to extend about the waist or hips of a user. Again, the ties may be sized for different people. They are long enough so that the distal or free ends of the respective ties can be tied together. See
The free end of each respective tie 12, 13 includes an enlarged end such 14, 15.
Each extension holds a pocket 18 and 20 for holding personal items. In the exemplary embodiment, the pockets are on extensions 16 and 17. The pockets can hold personal items such as keys, wallets, identification cards, credit cards, cell phones, radios, MP3 players or the like. In the exemplary embodiments, the pockets are formed of fabric, but other material may be acceptable. The pockets may have an enclosed or open bottom. Compare pockets 18 and 20. Moreover, instead of a pocket, the present invention could have a bar or ring for attaching keys or similar items. The pocket attaches to the extensions in the
Towel portion 11 may have two separate materials for its faces. One side 21 is relatively smooth and can slide on equipment. The other side 22 is terry cloth or other moisture absorbent material. Though applicant refers to element 11 as a “towel portion,” the material is not necessarily towel material. Applicant anticipates that the user would position the towel portion covering the buttocks with surface 21 facing outward and surface 22 facing the user. The towel portion 11 is sized such that pockets 18 and 20 are positioned on the side or near the front of the user.
The free ends of ties 12 and 13 tie together in a knot 23.
Towel or cover 30 in the
With the
The previous description of the invention and the exemplary embodiments is illustrative only. Further, many modifications and changes will occur readily to those skilled in the art. Therefore, applicants do not intend to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described.
The present application claims priority U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/837,926, filed Aug. 15, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60837926 | Aug 2006 | US |