The present invention is a folded clothing clip holder, referred later as clip holder or holder, designed to maintain the folded status of fabric, underwear, socks or shirts. The clip holder, which is composed of a flexible material such as polyurethane, plastic, nylon, or metal, is applied to a folded shirt at the collar and the center of the fold or evenly at the shoulders using two holders to maintain the folded status of the cloth, underwear or garment. This clip holder has two horizontal parallel posts on one side that descend or curve down and then converge after the curve forming a single post which again curves horizontally in the same direction as the to posts above it, running almost parallel with the two posts. The narrower single post is also visibly centered between the two posts and is slightly longer as well. From the side view, the top posts and bottom post converge slightly to create a smaller spacing at the opening compared to the interior of the clip holder. The narrow spacing helps to secure the placement of the holder while maintaining the garment's folded state making the garment more neatly stackable and also maintaining the folded status if the stacked clothing or other items are knocked over or dropped.
In today's society when the production and acquisition of many goods and services occurs at very affordable rates, people often buy things for the variety or just because they are on sale. Even for those with exquisite tastes, who only buy high-end clothing, they almost all need help organizing or helping to maintain an organized appearance of the garments that they acquire. Whether it is a lot or a small amount, the clothing, particularly the folded garments, eventually reach a state of disarray for the normal common individual. The reach this state because people don't take the next garment or shirt on the top of the folded stack. Even if they attempted to do so, that shirt would not always coordinate with what the person is preparing to wear. Therefore they must move the garments around to get the one they want. In doing so, the stacked garments eventually become unfolded and inevitably unorganized.
This is the concept of the present invention. It is designed to help maintain the folded status of the fabric, garment or underwear on which it is applied. When applied to the folded garment, it lessens the likelihood of total disarray of the stack of folded garments by maintaining the folded state of each item. Even if the stack falls or is knocked over, the applied present invention maintains the folded state of the garment and allows it to be easily restacked without needing to be refolded. The present invention also makes the organization of the folded garments easier because of a feature that makes the garment more evenly stackable when it is applied in the same location on each folded garment.
U.S. Pat. App. Pub to Blitstein et al. U.S. 2005/0125960 A1 is a baby blanket clip designed to keep the blanket attached to the carriage. However, although the components of the design were only slightly similar this invention was designed to hold fabric in place on an apparatus and not a stand-alone application. There were no other designs to do what the present invention is designed to do.
The present invention is a clip holder that can be applied to fabric or clothing, specifically shirts or underwear, designed to aid in maintaining the folded status of the garment. The holder has two horizontal, parallel posts with space between them on one side, which descend or curve down on the same end and then converge to form a single post in the center, which then turns horizontally in the same direction as the two posts above and is almost parallel to the two posts. From a side view, the shape of the holder appears as a āUā shape, which narrows at the opening compared to the interior of the holder. It is this narrowing that enhances the gripping ability of the holder on the folded garment. The narrower single post also fits between the top posts when two folded garments with the present invention applied are stacked one on top of the other.
The present invention and complete understanding thereof will become more apparent as the description is given of the drawings.
This present invention is an improvement over any existing ideas of organization of garments to help maintain the folded status of fabric, garments, or underwear. There are modifications that may be made thereunto the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4055874 | Brown | Nov 1977 | A |
| 20080189919 | Keefer et al. | Aug 2008 | A1 |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20150157098 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |