Not applicable
Customary wallets are generally rectangular in shape, matching both the shape of folding money and the shape of a typical rear trouser pocket. It is known that carrying such a wallet in a rear pocket, especially while seated for prolonged periods, can be a cause of back pain, sciatica and spinal misalignment, and it is thus recommended that one carry the wallet not in the rear pocket.
Front pockets are often shaped differently from rear pockets, being tapered toward their closed end. The invention here is a wallet which, when folded, has a tapered end to better fit such a front pocket.
Referring to
The invention, in its preferred embodiment, is constructed primarily from natural or artificial leather, and sewn together using heavy-duty sewing thread. Individual panels are typically die cut to size and to include any slits, slots or other openings as may be needed in these panels. Similarly, panels of transparent or opaque plastic or other fabric may be cut to shape for adding to the construction.
Stitching or other means of fastening is used for fastening together pairs or multiple layers of panels. In a simple form of the preferred embodiment, a leather outer panel 14, an intermediate cloth fabric separator panel 34 and a leather inner panel 15 are matched superjacently and sewn together entirely along their longest edge 16, and thence sewn upward along their edges at each end 17 for a distance of 2-3 cm. This forms two money pockets 24, one between the outer panel 14 and the separator panel 34, and the other between the separator panel 34 and the inner panel 15, each of which may be used separately to contain folding money 26 and for other flexible thin materials such as receipts, notes or the like.
Transparent window pocket 23 is preassembled to the exposed surface of the inner panel 15, and is preferably constructed of a colorless, transparent panel 35 of flexible polymeric sheet material such as vinyl, polycarbonate or the like stitched inside a surrounding frame 36 of leather material which in turn is stitched along three of its edges to the exposed surface of the inner panel 15. The edge of frame 36 left unstitched is parallel and adjacent to the fold line 11 of the wallet 10, such that a photographic identification card may be inserted under transparent panel 35 when the wallet 10 is fully open, yet is protected from loss when the wallet 10 is folded closed. Under the transparent panel 35, the photograph is readily visible without removing the card from the transparent window pocket 23.
In the preferred embodiment there is also a series of overlapping pockets 21 preassembled on the hidden surface of the inner leather panel 15, facing the transparent window pocket 23 when wallet 10 is folded closed, for containing and protecting multiple additional financial cards 25 or the like. The entrance slots 37 to these pockets 21 are shown positioned such that the financial cards 25 are inserted and removed horizontally, although overlapping pockets 21 may alternatively be constructed rotated 90 degrees clockwise for conventional vertical loading.
Further in a more desired form of the preferred embodiment, four additional card pockets 38 are preassembled, two on each of two leather internal panels 39, for containing flat, rigid objects such as financial cards 25, calculators or the like. These additional card pockets 38 are sewn to the inner, exposed surfaces of internal panels 39 along three of each such pocket's four edges, leaving open the pocket's edge adjacent to the wallet's shorter edge 13 for insertion or removal of such objects. The hidden surfaces of internal panels 39 are then stitched around their entire perimeter to the hidden surfaces of outer panel 14 and of inner panel 15 along stitching line 31.
Additionally, in the preferred embodiment, there is a hidden pocket 22 under each of the transparent window pocket 23 and the set of overlapping pockets 21. The entrance slot 37 to each of these hidden pockets 22 is both parallel and adjacent to the fold line 11 of the wallet 10, such that thin flat items such as photographs, eyeglass prescriptions or business cards may be inserted into these hidden pockets 22 horizontally. A preferred method for inserting would be to preload a multitude of such items in a sleeve or envelope, constructed from a low-friction material such as polymeric plastic film, such that the items are protected from buckling damage during insertion and withdrawal.
And finally, in a preferred embodiment there is provided a key pocket 51, preferably accessible within the folding money pocket 24, for hidden storage of a key 52. Such a key pocket 51 may be formed by a separate panel 53 stitched to an exposed surface of internal panels 39 or to either surface of separator panel 34, or it alternatively may be provided as a simple slot 54 in one or more of internal panels 39.
Though the above description is of necessity specific, the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims rather than by any specific embodiments recited here.
Provisional Patent Application No. 60/430,209 filed Dec. 2, 2002
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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601922 | Wieland | Apr 1898 | A |
1972480 | Gomi | Sep 1934 | A |
2435032 | Campbell | Jan 1948 | A |
4209048 | Sandos | Jun 1980 | A |
4332338 | Christiansen | Jun 1982 | A |
4570688 | Williams | Feb 1986 | A |
4763821 | Powell | Aug 1988 | A |
4905881 | Graber | Mar 1990 | A |
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6223958 | Kohn | May 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20040108032 A1 | Jun 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60430209 | Dec 2002 | US |