People are required to manage many pieces of information in the course of a typical day, relating to appointments, errands, projects and responsibilities. In addition, a person has goals and other personal matters which need to be incorporated into the planning of one's day in order for them to be realized. Besides the recurring and/or ordinary pieces of information an individual must track and record (which can clutter a person's mind or workplace), it is necessary to make note of new and important ideas lest they be forgotten. In general, having to remember a great many pieces of information tends to make a person feel overwhelmed and therefore, less productive and creative.
Wire bound or spiral bound notebooks have been on the market for many years. Conventionally, the wire bound notebook includes a pair of separate cover members which include wire receiving holes or perforations along their inner edges and along the inner edges of loose leaf sheets bound into the notebook. The wire is wound helically through the registered perforations of the discrete cover members and those of the pad of paper. Similarly, three-ring binders have been available for years that have a number of binding jaws that open and close to secure loose leaf paper. Both styles of binders require that the document being held must be perforated in order to have the wire or binding jaws engage the document.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,704,006 teaches a ring binder that contains an expandable pocket. Documents may be held in the slits provided in the expandable pocket. The expandable pocket is held in place and restrained by the binder covers and the zip able skirt.
The inventors have realized a number of new binder configurations that substantially increase storage of documents that must not be perforated and which allow increased efficiency in organizing all types of documents and related samples.
The inventors have realized that many business and scholastic activities require the organization of both structural information, which has a fixed sequence and a unstructured information which does not have a fixed sequence. A binder is a good tool to keep structured information while a file folder is a good tool to keep unstructured information. According to certain aspects of the present invention, the invention enables the storage and organization of structured and unstructured information securely together in one place.
According to a first embodiment, the invention pertains to an organizing binder that includes a first planar cover member and a second planar cover member. The first and second planar cover members each include an outer surface, an inner surface, a proximal edge, a distal edge, a top edge and a bottom edge. The embodiment also includes a bridge member that has a planar bridge body portion. The body portion includes a bridge inner surface, a bridge outer surface, a first bridge outer edge and a second bridge outer edge. The first bridge outer edge associates with the first planar cover member proximal edge and the second bridge outer edge associates with the second planar member proximal edge. The term “associate(s)”, or forms thereof, with respect to different elements of an inventive embodiment includes a direct or indirect engagement or integration amongst the elements. The embodiment also includes a binding mechanism associated with the bridge inner surface. The binding mechanism includes a plurality of binding members that move from a released state to binding state. The embodiment also includes an outwardly expanding compartment associated with the first planar cover member outer surface. The expandable compartment includes a first wall portion, a second wall portion, and an optional third wall portion spanning between an compartment outer cover and the first planar cover member outer surface. The first, second, or third wall portions, or a combination thereof, have excess material that enables expansion of the compartment outer cover away from the first planar cover member outer surface.
In a more specific embodiment, the aforementioned first, second or third wall portions, or combination thereof include a series of folds. In an even more specific embodiment, the expandable compartment includes two or more separate slits into which material may be separately stored.
With reference to other specific embodiments that have an expandable compartment, the binder further includes a compartment flap that moves from an open position, where material in the expandable compartment may be accessed, to a closed position, where material in said expandable compartment is inaccessible. According to one example, the compartment flap includes a compartment flap first end that is associated with the bridge member and a compartment flap second end that is secured to the compartment outer cover. According to another example, the compartment flap includes a compartment flap first end that is associated with the compartment outer cover and a compartment flap second end that is secured to the second planar member outer surface. In yet another example, the compartment flap includes a compartment flap first end that is associated with the first planar outer surface and a compartment flap second end that is secured to the compartment outer cover.
According to another embodiment, the binder includes a latching means for securing a compartment flap. The latching means may take several forms and configurations, that will be apparent to those skilled in the art equipped with the teachings herein. In no way intended to be limiting, examples of latching means, include but art not limited to, hook and loop fabric adhered to the compartment flap, a catching member that grabs a stretchable cord, a snap, a button/slit configuration, a clip, a zipper, or a magnet. Depending on the version or example of the inventive binder embodiment, a portion of the latching means will typically be associated with the compartment flap that interacts with another portion of the latching mechanism that is associated with the binder at a separate location.
According to another embodiment, the invention pertains to a binder that includes an outwardly expanding compartment along with retractable hanging members. The retractable hanging members will support and carry the binder on a support frame, such as those typically found in filing cabinets. The retractable hanging members may include a first set of hanging members that are configured to extend in a first end direction and a second set of hanging members that extend in a second end direction. When the retractable hanging members are in a closed state, they are generally unexposed from the binder and when in an open state, they are exposed and ready for supporting the binder.
The hanging members can be placed at different selected locations of the binder. For example, one hanging member may be placed on the first planar cover member and another hanging member placed on the second planar cover member, or compartment outer cover. Typically, a set of two or more hanging members are arranged at a first end of the binder and a set of two or more hanging members are arranged at a second end of the binder. In a specific embodiment, the set of hanging members extend out the end of the binder in a parallel fashion. In a specific embodiment, the hanging member includes an elongated body portion, a distal end, a tab at the distal end, and an indention defined at the distal end. The indentation and the tab assist in retaining the binder on a support device.
Turning now to the drawings,
Returning to
Documents are typically stored on a shelf or in a hanging file folder cabinet. File folder cabinets typically include rails onto which hanging files can be hung. Embodiments of the present invention accommodate both a shelf or in a hanging file folder cabinet. In addition, if a device of the present invention is stored in a file folder cabinet, it can be stored fully closed or with the expandable compartment section open. To achieve this, the hangers are operably attached to a binder embodiment in a fashion that it enables the organizer to stored with the expandable compartment section in either an open position or in a closed position without interfering with the hanging function of the hanging members. The hanging members are configured such that they are secured in a lateral direction on rails of a file folder cabinet.
An embodiment of a binder 6 presented in
According to one example, the compartment flap 37 includes a compartment flap first end 37a that is associated with an outer cover bridge member 38 and secured to the compartment outer cover 35 via the outer cover bridge member 38. When the binder 6 is in a closed position, the outer cover bridge member 38 is situated over the opening of the expandable compartment 30.
The compartment flap 37 comprises a compartment flap fold 37c of the compartment flap 37 near a compartment flap second end 37b. The distance between the compartment flap second end 37b and the compartment flap fold 37c may vary based on the size of the binder 6. There may be more than one fold provided in the compartment flap. A portion of or the entire area of the compartment flap 37 between the compartment flap fold 37c and the compartment flap second end 37b may include a latching means such as Velcro, magnet, snap enclosure, a button/slit configuration, a clip or a zipper, for example, as described above such that it can be removably secured to the compartment bridge portion 31 when the binder is in a closed position as in
In an embodiment, the compartment bridge portion 31 may also be equipped with a complementary latching means such that when the binder is in a closed position, the portion of the compartment flap 37 between the compartment flap fold 37c and the compartment flap second end 37b will be removably secured to and superimposed over the compartment bridge portion 31, and the expandable compartment 30 will be inaccessible.
The binder also includes a binding mechanism 50 as in some specific embodiments described above complete with binder members 52 which are opened and closed by manipulating actuators 54. However, in contrast to the embodiments disclosed above, in the binder 6 embodiment, the binding mechanism 50 is disposed on an outer side of the compartment inner cover 36. In a particular embodiment, the binding mechanism 50 is disposed along a second end 36b of the compartment inner cover, such that when the binder 6 is in a closed position as in
The term adjacent as used herein refers to placement directly on or near by in space or position, it also includes adjoining with or without intervening space. Adjacent also includes being contiguous with or having a common boundary.
The term superimposes, as used herein, includes where for example, a first material is placed or laid over a second material, and includes where the first material completely or partially covers the second material. An embodiment of a binder 8 presented in
While the invention has been described in connection with what are presently considered to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments, but on the contrary, is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the invention. Also, the various embodiments described above may be implemented in conjunction with other embodiments, e.g., aspects of one embodiment may be combined with aspects of another embodiment to realize yet other embodiments.
Further, each independent feature or component of any given assembly may constitute an additional embodiment. Furthermore, each individual component of any given assembly, one or more portions of an individual component of any given assembly, and various combinations of components from one or more embodiments may include one or more ornamental design features.
This application claims priority to and is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/877,966, filed Sep. 8, 2010, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12877966 | Sep 2010 | US |
Child | 13568514 | US |