The present invention is directed to an erasable writing system and, more particularly, to an erasable writing system having a marker with a marker portion and an eraser portion for erasing markings made by the marker portion.
Permanent markers are typically used in home, classroom or office environments for various marking purposes. Permanent markers allow a user to mark indicia on various substrates, including polymer and plastic based substrates, without the risk of the markings being smudged or accidentally erased. Permanent markers can also be used to mark on various items that cannot be written upon by other writing instruments. For example, plastic and polymer based substrates typically are not capable of being marked upon with nonpermanent markers.
Permanent markers may be advantageous in that the risk of smudging the markings is minimized once the ink has dried, thereby minimizing the risk of transference of ink to items and persons that come into contact with the markings. However, a disadvantage of permanent markers is that the markings cannot easily be erased.
Dry erase markers and the like are often used to provide an erasable marking system. Dry erase markers and the like are not permanent and their markings can easily be removed from a polymeric substrate by the application of frictional forces (i.e. by a hand or by an eraser). However, the easily erasable markings of dry erase markers can accidentally be erased and/or the markings can easily rub off on items or persons coming into contact with the markings.
Accordingly, there is a need for an erasable writing system for marking on a substrate, such as a polymer or plastic based substrate, without smudging, wherein the marking can be erased. There is also a need for a writing instrument which can write with permanent ink and which can also erase permanent ink.
The present invention is an apparatus and system for marking and erasing permanent ink from a substrate. In one embodiment, the invention is a system including a writing instrument having a body with a marking portion and an eraser portion, wherein the marking portion is configured to dispense a permanent ink and the eraser portion is configured to dispense a solvent which solubilizes the permanent ink, and a writing surface upon which the marking portion can dispense the permanent ink, wherein the writing surface is part of a school or office product.
In another embodiment, the invention is a system including a writing instrument having a body with a marking portion and an eraser portion, wherein the marking portion is configured to dispense a permanent ink and the eraser portion is configured to dispense a solvent which solubilizes the permanent ink, and a writing surface upon which the marking portion can dispense the permanent ink, wherein the writing surface is part of a school or office product, wherein the school or office product includes at least one flap pivotally attached to the product and movable between a closed position wherein the flap covers at least a portion of the writing surface and an open position wherein the flap does not cover the writing surface.
The invention can be understood with reference to the following drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Also, the components in the drawings are not necessarily to scale.
With reference to
The marker body 12 includes a first wick 22 generally closely received in the first opening 24 and extending into the first reservoir 14. The first wick 22 has an exposed portion 27 extending out of the first reservoir 14, with the exposed portion 27 having a writing tip 26. The marker body 12 includes a second wick 28 generally closely received in the second opening 30 and extending into the second reservoir 16. The second wick 28 has an exposed portion 29 extending out of the second reservoir 16, with the exposed portion 29 including a tip 34. The wicks 22, 28 may be made from a wide variety of materials, such as felt. Although the marker 10 is illustrated as having a tip 26, 34 at each end, the marker 10 may have a wide variety of other configurations for the tips 26, 34 and/or wicks 22, 28, including having the tips 26, 34, being oriented at various angles, being located in a side-by-side configuration, etc.
The first reservoir 14 may be filled with a permanent or indelible ink solution of any of a wide variety of colors. The permanent ink or permanent ink solution in the first reservoir 14 may be nearly any type of permanent ink or ink solution, such as a traditional organic solvent based permanent ink with a wide variety of pigments, dye, colorants or the like, or an aqueous type permanent ink as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,131,776, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference. The permanent ink may be an alcohol (i.e. n-propyl alcohol) based or other organic solvent based permanent ink. The permanent ink may be capable of marking on porous surfaces (e.g., paper, wood and the like) and nonporous surfaces (e.g., glass, metal, plastic and other polymer based surfaces). Further, the permanent ink may be resistent to smearing and re-wetting after application and may resist emulsification, dissolving or removal with soap and water.
The second reservoir 16 may be filled with a solvent that can dissolve the permanent ink or ink solution in the first reservoir 14. The solvent in the second reservoir 16 may be any solvent that is capable of solubilizing or dissolving permanent ink or a permanent ink solution that has been applied to a surface and allowed to dry. The solvent may be or include an ethyl alcohol, an n-propyl alcohol, or other organic based solvents.
For example, the solvent may be a dry-erase solution typically used in a dry-erase marker. Thus the solvent may also optionally include a colorant, dye or pigment and a binder resin such that the second portion 20 can operate as a dry-erase marker. In this case, when the dry-erase solution is applied to a polymeric or plastic type surface, the solvent evaporates and the binder resin and colorant remain behind as a friable discontinuous film.
The permanent ink solution in the first reservoir 14 may be soaked through the first wick 22, or permanent ink dispensing wick 22, and wicked through the permanent ink dispensing wick 22 until the permanent ink solution reaches the writing tip 26. In this manner, when the writing tip 26 contacts a substrate to be written upon, ink from the first reservoir 14 is deposited on the substrate. Similarly, the solvent in the second reservoir 16 soaks the second wick 28, or solvent dispensing wick 28, such that the solvent is wicked through the solvent dispensing wick 28 until it reaches the erasing tip 34. When the erasing tip 34 contacts the substrate, solvent from the second reservoir 16 is deposited onto the substrate and solubilizes (or dissolves) any ink deposited by the permanent ink dispending wick contacted by the solvent. Thus the marker 10 may be a double-ended felt-tip marker, although the marker 10 may include various other manners of dispensing the permanent ink and solvent, such as ball-point dispensers, gel-type dispensers, etc.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the marker 10 includes a cap 40 for covering either the erasing tip 34 (as shown in
As shown in
The writing surface 50 may be made of a typical plastic material such as polypropylene, polyethylene or the like that is capable of being marked upon using permanent ink, but not with typical water based inks. The writing surface 50 may have a glossy finish surface and/or a UV aqueous coating and/or other coatings. Further, the writing surface 50 may have a surface roughness sufficient to absorb or receive ink in the creases and recesses, but not exceedingly rough to make it overly difficult to remove the ink. In one embodiment, the writing surface 50 has an average surface roughness of between about 9-100 microns, or between about 50-1000 microns. The writing surface 50, permanent ink and solvent should be selected such that application of the permanent ink or solvent to the writing surface 50 does not significantly alter, destroy or marr the writing surface 50. Proper selection may allow the writing surface 50 to be used many times over for marking and erasing.
The writing surface 50 may be, include, or be part of various devices or products. For example, the writing surface 50 may be formed as part of a school or office product such as a binder 60 (
As shown in
The writing surface 50 is formed on or as part of the front cover 71 (as shown in
As shown in
The writing surface 50 is formed on or as part of the front cover 81 (and/or back cover 82) and the spine 83. The flap 84 is hingedly connected to the outer edge 85 of the front cover 81 and pivots from an open position, wherein the flap 84 is spaced away from the front cover 81 (see
As shown in
The writing surface 50 is formed on or as part of the front cover 91 and/or the back cover 92. Also, the front 98 (see
As shown in
As shown in
Rather than being part of a school or office product, the writing surface 50 may simply be a “stand-alone” board such that the writing surface 50 can operate as a bulletin board, and, for example, be coupled to a locker, wall, refrigerator or the like, or be loosely carrier. Thus the writing surface 50 may include magnets, patches of hook-and-loop fastening material (i.e. VELCRO®), hook or other fasteners located on a rear side thereof to aid in attaching the writing surface 50 to various other components. Further, the marker 10 (which may include the cap 40) may be packaged together with the writing surface 50 for sale such that the marker 10 and writing surface 50 are marketed and sold together.
Although the invention is shown and described with respect to certain embodiments, it is obvious that equivalents and modifications will occur to those skilled in the art upon reading and understanding the specification. The present invention includes all such equivalents and modifications and is limited only by the scope of the claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/828,073 filed on Apr. 20, 2004, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional App. Ser. No. 60/537,648 filed on Jan. 20, 2004. The entire contents of both of these applications are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60537648 | Jan 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10828073 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 10962724 | Oct 2004 | US |