The present invention relates to packaging of goods.
Consumer goods or samples are often displayed on shelves or racks in stores for customer viewing. In the past, some packages have been configured with openings that allow direct visual and/or tactile contact of a product held therein. See, e.g., FR2583721, 5,622,258, 5,622,258, 6,401,932, 6,126,008, D450,578 and D430,016.
Nonetheless, there remains a need to provide alternate packaging configurations that allow customer tactile interaction while also retaining the product therein.
Embodiments of the invention are directed to packages with a corner cutout that allows a potential consumer to have direct visual and/or tactile access to a relatively large expanse of product while safely retaining the product in the package. The package may be configured as a resilient bag.
In particular embodiments, the corner cutout may have portions with a curvilinear boundary shape and the packages may be particularly suitable for holding folded soft fabric products such as shower curtains, liners, window coverings, and the like.
Certain embodiments of the present invention are directed to packages for holding a product therein. The package can have a generally rectangular resilient shape with opposing primary front and rear walls, opposing first and second sidewalls extending therebetween, and top and bottom portions attached to portions of the front and rear walls. The package includes a corner cutout portion that exposes a portion of a product held in the package, thereby allowing direct visual and/or tactile access by potential customers.
In some embodiments, the corner cutout portion is a top corner cutout portion that extends over three-dimensions of the package, from a generally medial top portion of the package down to a lower location at an outer portion of both the front and rear walls and across the first sidewall therebetween. In particular embodiments, the front wall can have a curvilinear perimeter portion that defines a front portion of the cutout.
The package can hold a shower curtain that is folded in a generally rectangular shape having a first area associated therewith. The package can also hold a folded liner having a generally rectangular folded shape with a second area associated therewith. The second area can be smaller than the first area. The liner can be held in the package inside a closed edge of a longitudinal fold of the shower curtain proximate the cutout portion of the package, thereby trapping the liner in the package while allowing direct tactile and visual contact with the shower curtain
Other embodiments are directed to packages with a folded-material product held therein. The filled packages include: (a) a resilient package having opposing primary front and rear walls, opposing first and second sidewalls extending therebetween, and top and bottom portions attached to portions of the front and rear walls, wherein the package comprises a top corner cutout portion; and (b) a folded product held in the package so that at least a top edge portion of the product is exposed by the corner cutout portion of the package, thereby allowing direct visual and/or tactile access by potential customers.
The folded product can be a folded soft fabric product in a generally rectangular shape with a plurality of horizontal and vertical folds. The folded fabric is held in the package so that it has a contiguous exposure corner region that includes an upper portion of the horizontal folds, a medial to lower portion of front and rear surfaces therebelow, and an upper portion of one side of the vertical folds.
Still other embodiments are directed to methods of packaging a folded material product. The methods include: (a) folding a target material into a generally rectangular shape; (b) providing a resilient generally rectangular bag with a corner cutout portion, the bag having front and rear walls with an open side having a flap portion and an opposing generally closed side therebetween; (c) providing a paper insert in the bag so that visual indicia thereon is visible at least through the front and rear walls of the bag; (d) inserting the folded material into the open side of the bag so that a three-dimensional corner edge portion thereof is externally accessible for direct visual and tactile interaction; and (e) closing the flap over the open side of the bag to secure the folded material in the bag.
The method may also include inserting a hanger through an upper fold of the material so that the package and material can be suspended for display. The folding step can include folding a shower curtain soft fabric material into a first generally rectangular shape; and folding a shower liner into a generally rectangular shape that is smaller than that of the shower curtain. The method can include placing the liner inside the bounds of the folded shower curtain so that one vertical side portion is held trapped within a vertical fold of the shower curtain so that, in position in the package, the liner is held within the folded shower curtain under the exposed corner edge portion thereof.
The foregoing and other objects and aspects of the present invention are explained in detail herein.
The present invention will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying figures, in which embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout. In the drawings, layers, regions, or components may be exaggerated for clarity. In the figures, broken lines indicate optional features unless described otherwise. In the claims and/or figures, operations are not limited to the order recited unless stated otherwise.
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In some embodiments, the package 10 can have a generally rectangular resilient body with opposing primary front and rear walls 15f, 15r, respectively, opposing first and second sidewalls 16s1, 16s2 extending therebetween, and top and bottom portions 16t, 16b extending between portions of the front and rear walls 15f, 15r. The package body 15 thus defines an enclosure space for holding a desired product therein. The package 10 has the corner cutout portion 15c that exposes a portion of a product 20 held in the package 10, thereby allowing direct visual and/or tactile access by potential customers.
As shown, the package 10 can include at least one folded product 20 held therein. The folded product 20 can be an elastomeric and/or soft fabric material. The term “soft fabric” refers to fabrics that are not self-supporting and yields to pressure or weight and may include fabrics ranging in texture and density from fine to relatively stiff. However, the package 10 may be useful for holding and displaying other home-improvement items, such as, but not limited to, bedding, sheets, tablecloths, table placemats, towels, fabric or other material samples, and the like. The package 10 may be particularly suitable for holding a folded shower curtain of standard and/or custom size. In some embodiments, as shown in
In some embodiments, the corner cutout 15c may be substantially two-dimensional and extend primarily, if not entirely, on the front wall 15f of the package body 15b. In other embodiments, as shown in
As shown, the boundary or perimeter of the cutout 15b can be curvilinear. In particular embodiments, the cutout perimeter or boundary 15b has a generally arcuate shape, typically generally a quarter circle shape, on both the front and rear walls 15f, 15r of the package 10. Although shown as located on a top right-hand side of the package 10, the corner cutout 15c may be positioned about other corner locations, although typically on at least one front top corner. In certain embodiments, the cutout 15c is positioned in the reverse of that shown, with the cutout 15c on the top left-hand side of the package 10 extending about the front and rear walls 15f, 15r (not shown).
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In certain particular embodiments, the cutout 15c extends from a generally medial location on an upper or top 16t of the package body 15 and extends below a medial portion of a first sidewall 16s1 of the package 10 so that the cutout 15c exposes between about 15-40% of the primary front and rear surfaces 20f, 20r of the product, with greater than a major portion of the first sidewall 16s1 portion of the package 10 being absent thereby exposing a relatively large expanse of the product for consumer direct tactile and visual perusal while retaining the product 20 in the package 10. The remaining top portion of the package 16t (away from the cutout 15c) and bottom 16b can be substantially closed, as can the second side of the package 16s2 positioned opposite the cutout 15c. In the illustrated embodiment, the package 10 is configured so that the cutout 15c exposes at least about 20% of the front and rear surface areas 20f, 20r of the folded product 20.
The package 10 may also include an insert 18 that generally follows the contours of the boundary 15b of the cutout 15c. The insert 18 may be a paper insert that includes labeling 18l and/or images 18u of the product 20 in an exemplary use environment. The insert 18 may be sized to be flush with, extend a distance beyond (as shown), or reside inside the package (and not into) the cutout 15c. If the insert extends into the cutout 15c, its boundary may be sized to be adjacent that of the perimeter of the cutout 15b so that the tactile interaction area is not blocked by the insert 18. The labeling 18l and/or images 18u may be in color. The package 10 can be visually transmissive so that the image/labeling on the insert 18 can be seen by a consumer through the package wall(s). As such, the package body 15 may be transparent or translucent.
The package 10 may include a hanger 30 that can suspend the packaged product form a display rack. The hanger 30 can be integral with the package body 15 or may be a separate component as shown. Other hanger configurations may also be used.
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The hanger 30 can be attached to the package 10. As noted above, the hanger 30 may be permanently attached to and/or integral to the package body (not shown). In the embodiment shown in
In some embodiments, the package 10 is sized between about 8-12 inches tall and 4-10 inches wide, and about 0.5-2 inches thick.
The foregoing is illustrative of the present invention and is not to be construed as limiting thereof. Although a few exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that many modifications are possible in the exemplary embodiments without materially departing from the novel teachings and advantages of this invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention as defined in the claims. In the claims, means-plus-function clauses, where used, are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents but also equivalent structures. Therefore, it is to be understood that the foregoing is illustrative of the present invention and is not to be construed as limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications to the disclosed embodiments, as well as other embodiments, are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims. The invention is defined by the following claims, with equivalents of the claims to be included therein.