Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to trays for use in packaging products. One specific embodiment relates to a multi-row tray. Further embodiments relate to foldable trays made from paperboard material.
Consumer products are often packaged in trays having multiple rows for placement of items. For example, food articles (such as cookies, crackers, biscotti, snacks, confections, or other individual food items to be stacked and separated) may often be packaged in a multi-row tray, with the tray wrapped or otherwise enclosed in a cellophane wrap or other package wrap for shelving. Currently, multi-row trays are traditionally formed of plastic, which have a number of drawbacks. For example, the manufacture of plastic trays uses petroleum, a non-renewable resource, whose costs is volatile. Another drawback to the use of plastic trays is their pre-formed nature, which requires that they be shipped to the client nested together in corrugated shipping containers. Plastic trays are also not typically recyclable.
Further, plastic trays are limited in their ability to be personalized using promotional printing and other branding methods on the surface of the tray. For example, if a consumer purchases cookies that have been packaged in a plastic tray, it is unlikely that the consumer will present the cookies on a buffet table in the original plastic tray, but will instead position the cookies on a more attractive platter and throw the plastic tray away. This is wasteful and presents a lost opportunity for advertising or other marketing. There is this a need for a more eco-friendly packaging option that can also present printing and/or marketing opportunities that are also aesthetically pleasing, if desired.
Embodiments of the invention described herein thus provide a foldable tray that is formed of a paper-type material such as paperboard, and in a specific embodiment, the tray is formed from a single piece of paperboard that has been cut and designed with pre-formed folds or creases. The nature of the tray allows for shipping the tray to the consumer in a collapsed or flat position, which simplifies shipping and lowers shipping costs due to the lower volume occupied. The use of paperboard is advantageous over the current plastic trays being used because paperboard uses a renewable resource, is more environmentally friendly, and offers opportunities for promotional printing directly on the tray.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a foldable tray that can be used to contain food or other items that are preferably sold or stored in stacked and divided configurations. The most common usage for such a tray is to contain cookies, crackers, or confectionary items that are housed in an inner container that is covered by a separate outer wrap. However, it should be understood that divided trays can provide any number of uses, for example, housing items to be stacked on a store shelf, on countertops at the point of sale, to provide an organizational function for desktops and other surfaces, for easy household storage of items, such as paperclips and pushpins (and on a larger scale, for drawer organization for lingerie items, socks, and so forth), as an easy and disposable way to store items during travel and packing, or any number of uses that may lend themselves to a divided, multi-row tray.
Embodiments of the trays described herein provide an easy way to design and assemble a multi-row tray. Certain specific embodiments provide a two-row tray and others provide a three-row tray. It should be understood, however, that the concepts disclosed herein can be scaled to provide trays with more than three rows in the tray, such as four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten rows, or even more rows. These options are limited only by re-tooling considerations and expenses for increasing the scalability of the trays. It should also be understood that if trays having more rows are needed, it is possible to position or secure two or more multi-row trays together so that the equipment does not need to be completely re-tooled in order to provide trays having more rows. For example, if a six-row tray is desired, it is possible to position, glue, or otherwise secure two three-row trays together. It should also be understood that although the embodiments of the trays are typically sized to be about the size of a cookie container on a store shelf, they may be enlarged substantially to hold larger items (e.g., shirts at the point of sale or for packing and storage), or they may be made on a smaller scale to hold smaller items (e.g., paperclips, rubber band, hair care items, make-up or any other appropriate item for sale or storage).
The above-described panels may all be similarly sized or the bottom panels may be slightly wider than the other panels. Exemplary sizes may be about 0.5 inches wide or less, up to about 3 or 4 inches wide, about 6 inches wide, or even wider, depending upon the ultimate use of the tray. In a specific embodiment, the bottom panels may be slightly wider than the other panels in order to provide a larger base for the tray. Regarding panel length, the panels may be about 7 inches long of less, up to about 12 inches long, about 16 inches long, or even longer, depending upon the ultimate use of the tray. One specific example of dimensions for the panels may be inner panels and outer side panels being about 1.5 inches wide, the bottom panels being about 1.75 inches wide, and all of these panels being about 10.5 inches long. The end walls (described below) may be about 1.75 inches by about 1.75 inches (e.g., square) and the glue flaps may be about 1.5 inches wide by about one inch long. These dimensions are particularly useful for a tray designed to hold cookies or other food items in a wrapper and to be placed on a store shelf.
Another specific example of dimensions for the panels may be inner panels and outer side panels being about 3 inches wide, the bottom panels being about 3.5 inches wide, and all of these panels being about 16 inches long. The end walls may be about 3.5 inches by about 3.5 inches (e.g., square) and the glue flaps may be about 3.5 inches wide by about two inches long.
Further, the bottom panels need not all be the same size. It may be desirable to provide a tray having a larger middle portion than the other portions, so that the middle bottom panel with be larger than the other bottom panels. Any other options may be provided.
The blank 10 has a front end 30 and a back end 32. Along the front end 30 of each bottom panel 12, 14, 16 is a first end wall 35, 36, 38; and along the back end 32 of the each bottom panel 12, 14, 16 is a second end wall 42, 44, 46. In other words, each bottom panel has an end wall at its front end and another end wall at its back end. The first end walls 34, 36, 38 fold up in use to form the front wall 40 of the tray, and the second end walls 42, 44, 46 fold up in use to form the back wall 48 of the tray. In the embodiment shown in
Referring back to
Each of the above-described panels are made distinct from one another by a dividing line 62, which may be a pre-folded line, a pre-formed crease line or fold, a line of weakness, or any other division or demarcation between panels that eases folding on-site, at the point of use, or elsewhere, during assembly of the tray. As shown in
In short, the method for forming the tray may include providing the blank 10, which has nine panels separated from one another by pre-formed crease lines 62, with one or more of the panels have extending end walls or glue flaps. The panels are folded along the pre-formed crease lines 62 to form two separate 2-ply inner walls 64, 66, three bottom walls 12, 16, 18 (which collectively form the tray base 68), and two side walls of the tray 26, 28. The end walls are the folded up to create a front and back wall of the tray. Next, wrapping and securing glue flaps confines the tray in its assembled position.
Once all panels and flaps are folded into place, glue may be applied to the glue flaps and to the extended features in order to secure all panels and flaps in place. Additionally or alternatively, one or more of the end walls may have a slit or opening therein that is intended to received the extended features and the glue flaps. This allows assembly of the tray without the use of glue or other adhesive on the glue flaps or extended features. Instead, these portions are slid or tucked into slits on the end walls for securement.
The tray blank may be provided as a sheet of paperboard. It may be bleached board with a smooth or relatively smooth print surface. The paperboard is typically has a white-all-the-way through appearance, although it may be any color desired. It preferably has a consistent roll-to-roll quality. In certain embodiments, the paperboard has a grease resistant coating, or other food-safe, FDA-compliant coating that has been accepted for direct food contact applied thereto.
A further embodiment may provide a tray that has discrete cavities provided within one or more of the rows. For example, one or more cross dividers may be positioned cross ways within one or more of the rows in order to divide the row(s) into two or more compartments. In one embodiment, a separate partition may be positioned in the row. The partition may be positioned via a slit created in one of the inner panels that may receive a partition element tab. Alternatively, the partition may be glued into place. In a further embodiment, a partition flap may be formed via perforations on one or more of the inner panels, which may be punched out of place and bent or hinged across the row space in order to create a divider.
Trays that have one or more rows divided into one or more compartments may provide useful marketing and packaging options. For example, a cookie manufacturer may wish to sell its cookies undecorated, but provide frosting, sprinkles, and/or colored icing in the compartments for decoration by the consumer.
The formed tray is the three-row tray 100 shown in
Because of the scalable nature of the invention, a design for blanks for trays having four, five six, or any number of additional rows would be apparent based on the descriptions provided herein and one could determine how to add additional inner panels and bottom panels in order to create many additional rows in a single tray. Changes and modifications, additions and deletions may be made to the structures and methods recited above and shown in the drawings without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention and the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/354,044, filed Jun. 11, 2010, titled “Paperboard Tray”, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61354044 | Jun 2010 | US |