This invention relates to a hand printing stamp device having adjacent multiple stamp receiving surfaces such that a plurality of text messages or common annotations may be carried on one device, and the user may thus utilize the same device to print a number of messages on the receiving surface without the necessity of multiple stamp devices.
One prior art device that accomplishes some of these objectives is shown by U.S. Pat. No. 2,176,160 to Uhl, Jr. issued Oct. 17, 1939. Such structure shows a base 1 and a manipulating handle 2 of conventional design for such stamps. In manipulating such handle 2, the human user normally grasps the handle in his or her clenched fist with the handle top either resting in the palm of the hand when the fist is clenched downwardly or with the handle sidewalls engaged with the palm of the user's hand when the fist is clenched in an upright position. Either of these positions is satisfactory when the bottom stamp surface is being utilized; however when the alternate stamp surfaces are utilized, it is difficult to bend one's wrist to manipulate the alternate angular stamp receiving surfaces to a downward printing position on the receiving surface especially the rearward bending necessary to properly align the “B” stamp printing surface. The forward downward bending motion of the wrist is called flexion while the rearward upward motion is called extension. Thus, the motion shown in
It should also be pointed out that these prior art devices of the Uhl, Jr. type are not ergonomically sound and their repeated clenched fist movement could cause overuse injuries such as carpel tunnel syndrome. These prior art devices are also more difficult for older people or those with arthritic hands and younger or handicapped children and adults to use as the grip is awkward and unnatural.
Accordingly, one of the objects of the present invention is to provide a stamping device which can be easily grasped and used by a wide variety of people including young, old and handicapped and which is of an ergonomically sound design so as to reduce the possibility of repeated use injuries.
Accordingly, another of the main objectives of the present invention is to present a device which overcomes these unwieldy grasping motions yet provides a hand printing stamp with alternate adjacent multiple stamp receiving surfaces such that more than one and preferably three print messages may be borne on the same device. This is especially practical for home/business offices, e.g., where documents may be either received or sent and their disposition recorded such as “Filed”, “Received”, “Paid”, “Forwarded”, “Faxed” and the like as of a certain date.
These and other objectives of the present invention are accomplished by a hand printing stamp device having adjacent multiple stamp receiving surfaces and a body constructed such that the device may be conveniently grasped by the hand of the user and manipulated to place each of said stamp receiving surfaces in printing contact with a receiving surface without modifying the grasping position of the user comprising a vertically-oriented body having opposed generally parallel upstanding sidewalls, said body including an upper hand graspable portion and a lower stamp receiving portion including a generally flat laterally extending bottom stamp receiving surface having opposed spaced distal and proximal edges, and at least one adjacent stamp receiving surface upwardly outwardly extending from one of said bottom surface edges.
Other objects, features and advantages of the invention shall become apparent as the description thereof proceeds when considered in connection with the accompanying illustrative drawings.
In the drawings which illustrate the best mode presently contemplated for carrying out the present invention:
Turning now to the drawings and more particularly to
The stamp-receiving portion 18 includes a lower generally flat primary stamp receiving surface 22 which laterally extends and terminates in spaced proximal and distal edges 24 and 26 respectively. At least one and preferably two secondary stamp receiving surfaces are present. One such surface 28 upwardly outwardly extends from the distal edge 26 while the other such surface 30 upwardly outwardly laterally extends from the proximal edge 24 and thus may form a pair of outwardly extending wings 31 as part of the body of the device. Alternate forms of the handle area 16 wherein such winged configuration is less prominent may be utilized, e.g., this area may be scallop-shaped (see
The upper handle portion 16 rounded at its top surface 32 is further defined by the pair of downwardly extending parallel sides 14 where the arcuate configuration of the upper surface 32 enhances the manner in which the device may be snuggly engaged in the palm of the user's hand while the thumb rests on one sidewall and the fingers are disposed on the opposite sidewall. To accommodate such positioning, the height of the handle area may be approximately 2–3 inches such that the thumb and fingers may be disposed in a downward pointing spaced generally parallel relation for grasping the sides 14 while the top surface 32 contacts and in turn rests in the user's palm. Smaller versions of the device for children or more adapted for opposed thumb and finger grasping without palm supporting contact with the upper surface 32 can also be provided. In this preferential position of grasping the handle, e.g. with the right hand, the user can simply slightly rotate his/her wrist either right of left (pronation or supination) such that the distal stamping surface is positioned in a parallel mode to the receiving surface and rotated slightly either right or left (supination or pronation) so as to place the proximal stamping surface in the same stamping position. Thus, it should be apparent that this grasping position avoids the normally clenched fist position of the prior art and enables rapid and easy stamp manipulation in a quick and simple manner.
This preferred grasping position is illustrated in
The lower 22 and alternate stamp receiving surfaces 28, 30 are provided with some means by which the actual printing surface bearing the desired indicia is mounted. Such may include the channel system as shown by the previously discussed patent Uhl, Jr. which is hereby incorporated in the present specification by specific reference thereto or by other means such as a longitudinally extending undercut recess 42 or boss on each of such stamp receiving surfaces such that the stamp indicia can be incorporated on a separate element or block having a cooperatively shaped boss 44 or recess. Such attachment is shown in
Generally, the device is constructed in one piece from molded plastic resin, but alternatively could be carved in wood. Also as shown in
While there is shown and described herein certain specific structure embodying this invention, it will be manifest to those skilled in the art that various modifications and rearrangements of the parts may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the underlying inventive concept and that the same is not limited to the particular forms herein shown and described except insofar as indicated by the scope of the appended claims.
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2176160 | Uhr, Jr. | Oct 1939 | A |
| 2195994 | Morse | Apr 1940 | A |
| 2899895 | Tannery | Aug 1959 | A |
| 3494040 | Goodwin | Feb 1970 | A |
| 4187772 | Hollenbeck | Feb 1980 | A |
| 4452142 | Eckels | Jun 1984 | A |
| 4924773 | Gwilliam | May 1990 | A |
| 5048414 | Hoshino | Sep 1991 | A |
| 5228387 | Siculan | Jul 1993 | A |
| 5829352 | Taira et al. | Nov 1998 | A |
| 6324977 | Hadden | Dec 2001 | B1 |
| 6892637 | Petersen | May 2005 | B1 |