The present invention is directed to a notebook, and more particularly, to a notebook having tabs received along a bound edge or corner adjacent a bound edge.
Tabs may be used to identify and locate sections of a notebook, binder, or the like. Such tabs may be placed upon sheets or pages, or upon dividers, positioned within a notebook or binder. The tabs may extend beyond the periphery of the dividers or pages, to be more accessible to the user. However, this may expose the tabs to wear and tear, and increase the overall size of the notebook or binder.
Bound notebooks that currently exist and provide sectional dividers with tabs, do so on non-bound edges, and typically protrude beyond the edge of the sheet portion of a content item. In addition, and to point this out specifically, these tabs protrude beyond the edge of the content so they can be seen such that they provide a visible means of identification for the location and purpose of that particular location. (For example, in a 5 subject notebook, the tabs are typically used for identification of different subjects or sections within the notebook, and to provide the benefit of locating and turning to a desired section). As these tabs are protruding, they are exposed to various aspects of abuse or damage resulting from normal use, such as pushing into a backpack, storage locker, briefcase, etc. In some cases, the front and/or rear covers of the notebook are extended to provide some measure of protection for the tabs, but extended covers also partially obstruct the user's view and increase the overall size of the product. Alternately, in some books many of the pages themselves may have cut away portions to reveal divider pages, as in the case of old style dictionaries, where small portions of pages arc cut away to reveal letters (“A”, “B”, “C” etc) on divider pages or on the first page of each letter section of the dictionary.
Many notebooks (for example, school notebooks) contain a content sheet of a given size, and some notebooks contain a sheet that can be removed along a pre-perforated line parallel and near the bound edge, and this sheet can be required to be a given size. Because of this, any tab functionality is required to exist beyond the size of the sheet, so as not to interrupt the contiguous size of the sheet. In the dictionary example mentioned above, the cutouts do interrupt the contiguous size of the sheet.
Thus, it may be desired to provide tabs, which are accessible to the user without greatly increasing the overall size of the notebook or binder, and which are better protected from wear and tear.
The notebook disclosed herein provides several advantages. A sectional tab functionality exists within the bounds of the notebook while still providing visibility to the tabs, and full functional benefit of locating and turning to the desired section. The front cover and sheet contents, not the rear cover necessarily, are cut away to provide visibility and functional access to tabs that protrude in this cutaway area. In notebooks that have removable sheet functionality, the removed sheet typically is required to be, or desired to be, of a standard or relevant size, and the sheet as-bound into the notebook is extended along the bound edge to provide space for the binding itself. The feature of this invention exists within the ‘as-bound-in’ sheet size, but outside the ‘removed sheet’ size.
The present disclosure in one aspect provides a notebook or binder with a tab or set of tabs located near a corner of and along a bound edge of the notebook or binder.
In one embodiment, a bound assembly of sheets includes a plurality of sheets each having a bound edge extending in a first direction and at least one hole proximate to the bound edge with a binding at the bound edge, the binding passing through at least one hole in each sheet and a first one of the sheets having a tab portion along the bound edge that extends further outward than the perimeter of a second one of the sheets.
In some embodiments, the binding does not extend entirely across the tab portion. In some embodiments, the tab portion may be manipulated to open the bound assembly to the first sheet.
In some embodiments, the bound assembly has an upper corner and a lower corner at opposed ends of the bound edge, and the tab portion is located at the upper corner or lower corner. In some embodiments, the tab portion is located along the bound edge at a position apart from the upper and lower corners.
In some embodiments, a first sheet comprises a plurality of unbound edges, at least one of the unbound edges comprising an identifying feature associated with the tab portion. In some embodiments the identifying feature is at least one of a color, a pattern, a shape or printed indicia. In some embodiments, the identifying feature is a portion of the first sheet that is outward-extending along an edge other than the bound edge.
In some embodiments, the binding is one of a spiral wire, a twin wire, sewing, staples, adhesive, or at least one ring that passes through or binds at least a portion of the length of the sheets at a bound edge, but not passing through or binding at least a second portion of the sheet length at the bound edge.
The present disclosure in a second aspect provides tabs to use with a bound-edge-tabbed notebook or binder.
In one embodiment of this aspect, a divider tab has a body portion to overly sheets in a notebook or binder, a spine portion extending within a volume defined at least partly by the binding, and at least one aperture or slit to receive a ring of the binding.
In some embodiments, the divider tab may be adapted to receive at least one ring of a spiral wire binding.
In some embodiments, the divider tab may be adapted to receive at least one ring of a twin wire binding.
In some embodiments, the divider tab may be adapted to receive at least one ring of a ring binder.
In some embodiments, the divider tab may be removable from a ring to which it attaches.
In other embodiments the divider tab may not be removable from a ring to which it attaches.
In some embodiments, the divider tab may include a flag portion extending outward beyond sheets in a notebook, and outside the volume of the binding.
A set of dividers is also disclosed, including at least a first divider and a second divider, where the distance between the spine and flag portion of the first divider is different than the distance between the spine and flag portion of the second divider.
The length LS of the binding sleeve 32 may be less than the length LB of the notebook, for example by stopping the binding sleeve 32 short of the top end (as shown), bottom end, or both ends of the notebook. Also, the binding sleeve may be discontinuous, for example present at top and bottom ends of the notebook, but not present at an intermediate region between the top and bottom ends. A cover access cutaway 16 may be provided in the front cover 10 as shown, or in the rear cover 20, or in both the front and back covers.
The completed divider 72 may be closed along one side by fold line 75 and along the opposing side by the binding 30 being wound through holes 71. The bottom of pocket 82 may be closed by a glued, welded, or other type of attachment 73 along its lower edge. In the example shown in
It will be noted that the cover access cutaway 16 provides visual and tactile access to divider corner tabs 77. When the notebook is assembled, these corner tabs 77 are accessible to the user but do not necessarily extend beyond the general outline of the notebook. In this example the corner tabs 77 reside within a space that might otherwise be occupied by the binding 30 and/or binding sleeve 32, if the binding and binding sleeve were provided along the full length of the bound edge or the bound-in portion 66 of a sheet.
With reference now to
It will be noted that the cover access cutaway 16 provides visual and tactile access to divider corner tabs 77. When the notebook is assembled, these corner tabs 77 are accessible to the user but do not necessarily extend beyond the general outline of the notebook. In this example the corner tabs 77 resides within a space that might otherwise be occupied by the binding 30, if the binding was provided along the full length of the bound edge.
One method for use of tab 177 is shown in
The length of the removable tab may be varied, for example the distance between spine portion 92 and flag portion 94 may be varied so that spine portion 92 of different tabs is located at different points along the bound edge. This may make the spine portion 92 visible and distinct as compared with other tabs. Furthermore, the flag portion 94 may be located close to the bound edge as shown in
The different styles of removable tabs 90A, 90B, and 90C (or other styles) may be used in combination if desired. For example removable tab 90A may be used with removable tab 90B, since their individual spine portions 92 occupy different positions along the binding 30 while yet having their individual flag portions 94 extending to the end of the notebook. Removable tab 90C may be used alone, or with tab 90A and/or tab 90C. Removable tab 90C may provide a particular convenience insofar as it may be located anywhere along binding 30 since it has no flag portion.
The removable tabs 90A, 90B, and 90C (or other styles) may be removably attached as shown in
Alternately, the tabs may be installed by the notebook manufacturer, but still be removable by the user for customization of the notebook. As another alternative, the tabs may be installed by the notebook manufacturer but not be removable.
The spine portion of tab 90A slides into the binding, then two or more spiral rings snap into apertures in the tab to stabilize the tab. Tab 90D is similar but has a larger area. Small tab 90C allows quick insertion into a spiral ring binding.
Tabs 90B, 90E, and 90F are relatively narrow and extend for different lengths along the binding. Each has a prominent flag portion at the upper end. Since the spine portion and flag portion may be spaced apart from one another, a property such as color or pattern may be used on the divider to help associate the spine and flag portions to one another.
Tabs 90G and 90H may incorporate a cutaway relief throat that helps prevent stresses on the flag portion (for example in opening to the divider) from pulling the apertures and/or slits off the binding. The relief cutaway also provides clearance for a binding ring, for example when the notebook is kept in a ring binder.
Tabs 90I, 90J, and 90K provide for a three-point attachment into a spiral binding, for example across a portion of the spiral binding where the portion of the binding may be the full length of the binding, or less than the full length of the binding
Certain elements of the tabs may be modified as desired. For example, tab 90I is shown with closed holes for attachment into a ring binder. Thus the rings of the ring binder must be opened in order to install tab 90I. However, tab 90J is provided with open (slitted) holes for attachment into a ring binder without opening the rings of the ring binder. The binder hole slits in tab 90J allow the tab to be removed from the notebook when the notebook is being stored in a ring binder. Another alternative is shown with tab 90K, where all the holes are closed (whether for spiral wire or ring binding). A tab like 90K could be installed into a notebook by the manufacturer, and then not moveable by the user.
In most of the tab examples shown in
It can be seen from the above description that the bound edge tab may provide a divider function that can be positioned within the existing size of a bound notebook, and also without affecting the general size of any tear-out sheet. Variations on the tab design may extend outside of the notebook boundaries for better visibility or access. If the tabs were to be positioned along an unbound edge of the notebook, for example along the top edge, bottom edge, or the edge opposite the bound edge, then tabs that are situated within the existing size of the notebook and did not extend beyond the edge of the tear-out sheets, would require a cutaway in the sheets through which the tabs would be visible. However with the tabs along the bound edge, any cutaway region of the sheet can be made along the bound edge of the sheet, outside of the tear-out dimension.
The bound edge tabs may be provided at or near one or both ends of the bound edge of a notebook, and within the existing boundaries of the product. Variations may extend outside of the notebook boundaries for better visibility and more easy access to the tabs. Divider tabs located at the corner along the bound edge of the notebook may occupy space normally occupied by the binding system. This provides for the user the desirable functionality of tabbing (for location, identification, and/or turning to a particular section) but within the size and confines of the content sheet size.
The bound edge tabs may be provided with portions extending within the volume of the product generally enclosed by the binding, for example, the approximately cylindrical volume defined by the spiral or other binding, including an extended portion of that volume which may project beyond the ends of the binding, or through an interrupted part of the binding. Such a “cylindrical” volume is meant to include “cylinder” shapes with perimeters that are circular, oval, rectangular, square, and other shapes.
The bound edge tabs of the above embodiments can be used in nearly all binders, notebooks, portfolios, planners, date books, and the like. The bound edge tabs provide an assembly that can be quickly and easily manufactured, yet provide an easy and convenient indexing function due to their unique location. The tabs may be used at corners of the bound assembly or at intermediate points along its bound edge. The binding may include spiral wire, twin wire, a ring or rings, and other suitable bindings that bind pages together.
Having described the invention in detail and by reference to the various embodiments, it should be understood that modifications and variations thereof are possible without departing from the scope of the claims of the present application.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/788,441, filed Feb. 12, 2020, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 11,027,569, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/265,886, filed Oct. 24, 2011, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 10,596,845, which is a U.S. national phase application filed under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/US2011/038294, filed May 27, 2011, designating the United States, which claims the benefit of priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 61/349,549 filed on May 28, 2010 which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 16788441 | Feb 2020 | US |
Child | 17236579 | US | |
Parent | 13265886 | US | |
Child | 16788441 | US |