1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to an apparatus for storing, organizing, displaying and dispensing pairs of socks or other small garments and more particularly to a hanging, telescoping garment organizer featuring an incorporated hanging system.
Typically, socks are scattered in a dresser drawer in the bedroom while clothing is usually hung in the closet. It is then often difficult to mach the socks to the clothing to wear, when the socks are kept in a different area. The clothes need then to be brought from the closet to the bedroom, or vice versa, to perform the clothes/socks match operation.
It is with respect to these considerations and others that the present invention has been conceived, by providing the capability of storing and organizing socks and other small garments in the closet area, where commonly most of the clothes are hanged. This novel garment organizer comprises an imbedded hooking system to allow the organizer to be hanged to the closet's hanging bar or to be hung on a wall.
This invention allows keeping socks and other small garments organized, yet visible, while neatly rolled one inside the other and stored inside the organizer, which also separately store in evidence, single “stray” socks, until their lost matches are found. To accomplish this, a plurality of optional sock clips can be mounted on the outside walls of the organizer to temporarily clip in view unmatched socks.
The organizer comprises an upper, tubular container and a lower, tubular container which are telescoping one inside the other to decrease the volume of the organizer facilitating shipping, packaging and minimizing the storage space when the organizer is not in use. The lower container can in fact be totally contained inside the upper container.
Rolled pairs of socks or other small garments can be inserted, displayed and retrieved through the front side vertical openings of both the upper and lower containers.
2. Brief Description of the Prior Art
Numerous containers are available to store and organize a variety of items, but organizers and similar devices, specifically designed to store and organize socks are not abundant as socks are considered, generally, a low-attention garment.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,126,021 defines an Article Storage System capable of being suspended, having two vertical rows of compartments with side access openings to store a variety of items. The apparatus is collapsible to ease transportation and storage when not hanging, However, this apparatus is completely different in all aspects from the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,972,094 “Device for Securing and Storing Paired Socks” describes a compartmentalized box to store pairs of socks using clips. Although this device neatly separates pair of socks form one another, after being matched with their respected partners socks pairs do not actually need to separate from other pairs, therefore, the compartmentalized containers are superfluous. As in the present invention, one sufficiently large container, consisting of an upper and lower container, is more effective for storage and selection of paired, rolled socks.
The sock storage and dispenser of U.S. Pat. No. 5,740,944 depicts a multiple parallel slots to provide capacity storage. In the present invention, the capacity storage is provided by one upper container whose volume is doubled when the lower container is telescopically extended out of the upper container. This represents the significant novelty of the present invention.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,147,119 shows a vertical container for storing pairs of socks having its capacity limited by its size. Additionally, the vertical container is not designed to be hanged. The biggest drawback of this device is that the only retrievable pair of sock is the one on the bottom of the stack, which it could not be the one desired.
Chinese patent CN 201175229 Y shows an ineffective, hanging sock-shape container with multiple, yet limited, number of divisions to store few small garments.
Canadian patent application 2 654 075 A1 shows a hanging, collapsible garment organizer comprising multiple, independent containers each with an individual access panel that can be opened to insert the garment. Unless the little doors are made of transparent material, the garments stored will not be visible. This design is completely different from the present invention.
In accordance with the present invention, the above-described limitations and problems for effectively storing and organizing pairs of socks or other small garments are resolved by the present invention.
In the present invention, the storage capacity is provided by one tubular upper container whose capacity is basically doubled when the lower container of equivalent size of the upper container is telescopically extended out of the upper container.
The upper and lower containers of the present invention have usually a square section, but they could also have a variety of sections, including a tube-like, circular section. Their section size is specifically dimensioned to allow a rolled pair of socks or other small garments to be held inside either the upper or lower container by the friction of the rolled socks against the three enclosing walls. Additionally, rolled socks are prevented from falling out through the front wall openings by the added left and right socks retaining hedges.
To allow an easy insertion and retrieval of the rolled socks or other small garments, the front walls of both the upper and lower container have vertical openings, for easy insertion, extraction and partial view of the rolled pairs of socks or other small garments. The two sides retaining edges are carefully dimensioned to prevent the rolled pairs of socks from falling out of the upper or lower container.
The upper and lower containers are preferably made of clear plastic or similar material, but not necessarily made of transparent material, as the stored socks or other garments are partially visible through the front wall openings from which they are inserted inside the organizer.
Depending on the thickness of their fabric and size, the rolled pair of socks or other garments may or may not be descending by gravity to the bottom of the lower container, but they may be moved up or down manually, if needed, throughout the front walls openings of both the upper and lower container.
Because of the elasticity and compressibility of the rolled pair of socks or other small garments, some will stay put wherever they have been inserted, as each pair of socks can be inserted at any point of the front opening of both the upper or lower container, wherever there is space available inside the organizer.
The imbedded hanging system of the upper container consists of a horizontal slot opening on the back side of the upper container to allow the organizer to be positioned over the closet's hanging bar and remain securely in place. Alternatively, the organizer can be attached to a wall's protruding nail, hook or screw, using a hanging hole and related retaining lip present on the upper container's back side wall.
The apparatus is relatively inexpensive, easy to use and resolves the common problem of socks' storage in the most satisfactory manner.
These and various other features, as well as advantages, which characterize the present invention, will be apparent from a reading of the following detailed description and a review of the associated drawings.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate an embodiment of the invention, and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention, wherein:
A preferred embodiment of the present invention will be described hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As illustrated on
The lower container 2 is securely connected to the upper container 1 so that when the entire unit is hanged, or the lower container 2 is manually extracted from the upper container 1, the lower container 2 is prevented to be separated from the upper container 1, by a plurality of snap hooks 12.
As illustrated on
The lower container has a plurality of snap hooks 12 that are attached or incorporated to the inside top edges of its three walls 5. This plurality of snap hooks 12 snap locked with the corresponding locking edges 3 of the upper container 1, whenever the lower container 2 is inserted, usually by the manufacturer, inside the bottom part of the upper container 1. This plurality of snap hooks 12 prevent the lower container 2 to become disconnected from the upper container 1 whenever the lower container 2 is sliding out the upper container 1.
The detail of
As illustrated on
As illustrated on
Alternatively, the organizer can also be attached to a wall by way of positioning it over a protruding nail, hook or screw, which can penetrate inside the hanging hole and under the related retaining lip 16, present on the upper container back side wall 11, as illustrated on
It is also possible to use the organizer not hanged, but standing on a flat surface on its lower container bottom side.
As illustrated on
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1184525 | Hammond | May 1916 | A |
2235473 | Blinstrub | Mar 1941 | A |
2683953 | Hopkins | Jul 1954 | A |
3175853 | Gilbertson | Mar 1965 | A |
3451612 | Sinoto | Jun 1969 | A |
3514008 | Dorn | May 1970 | A |
3599830 | Gilchrist et al. | Aug 1971 | A |
3972094 | Fuller | Aug 1976 | A |
4261461 | Kizlauskas | Apr 1981 | A |
5147119 | Harris | Sep 1992 | A |
5472052 | Head | Dec 1995 | A |
5740944 | Crawford | Apr 1998 | A |
6126021 | Wilhite | Oct 2000 | A |
6588626 | Sauer et al. | Jul 2003 | B2 |
D560383 | Woods | Jan 2008 | S |
7484620 | Miller et al. | Feb 2009 | B2 |
20060000681 | Barker et al. | Jan 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20110247948 A1 | Oct 2011 | US |