The elements of The GreetingsBook are as follows; 10-to-30 sheets of thick paper, 90 lb. or greater. 8½″ By 11″ or smaller. All pages, excluding the cover page, back cover page, pouch page and table of contents are perforated, so that these pages can be torn out neatly. These pages are also ‘scored’, so they can be folded in half and create a greeting card if the user decides to tear them out of the GreetingsBook. These 10 to 30 sheets of paper are then stacked together. An additional sheet of thick paper is now added and placed just ahead of the back cover page. This sheet has a pouch. Envelopes are placed in the pouch. The amount of envelopes ranges from 8 to 30, depending on the amount of perforated & scored pages within the GreetingsBook. After the additional sheet with pouch is added, all of the elements are spiral bound. Now we have a complete GreetingsBook. The perforated pages within the GreetingsBook have text at the bottom portion of the page below the scored section. The top of the page is blank. On the backside, the top of each page displays the artwork. Inside of the GreetingsBook, the artwork appears upside down. This way, when the perforated page is torn out and it is folded at the point where it is scored, it will be come a greeting card complete with art. The bottom portion of the backside of the page has company info, etc. . . .
This invention relates to the Greeting Card industry and the Spiral Bound Perforated Note Book industry. More particularly, this invention fulfills a need for the consumer to have the ability to purchase several greeting cards at once with a cohesive concept. It's an experience similar to buying an album from your favorite music artist. Instead of purchasing a ‘single’ (One Greeting Card), you can now buy the collection (8 to 28 cards). Each one will not be the same, and you can send them to others one-by-one until the there are no more perforated pages left to tear out and mail. The consumer, if he or she, chooses, can simply keep the GreetingsBook and cherish the pages, and be comforted by the poetry and pictures.
Every day millions of people purchase greeting cards. I am one of those people. One day, I said to myself, ‘there has to be more than just individual greeting cards out there’. There has to be a product that can be both greeting cards and a book.
Poetry books are too long. Greeting cards are too short. Hallmark makes greeting cards. MeadWestVaco makes spiral bound notebooks. Each company, along with one or two other competitors within their particular industries, controls 80% of the greeting card and spiral bound notebook markets respectively.
I'm a little guy. I saw a void. So I invented the GreetingsBook. Sure there are blank notebooks where the consumer can write his and her thoughts. There are spiral bound notebooks with lines and really thin perforated pages for middle school, high school and college students. And there are greeting cards in the traditional sense.
My product is the combination of the best of all worlds! It provides an outlet other than the traditional single greeting card. It's a stand alone product that won't get lost among hundreds of individual greeting cards.
Here's my 4 line poetic summarization.
What Prevails When All Else Fails?” Poetry Works . . . The GreetingsBook.
And that's what's missing in our lives. The poetry. This product gives people a chance to share the poetry of life. Simplistically.
I did some research and I found Greeting Card Class Code 283/117 and 446/147 contained no patent for a GreetingsBook with my specifications. Neither did Loose Leaf Ring Bound Class Codes D19/27.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60520552 | Nov 2003 | US |