BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a wallet folder with a unitary/integral top tab attached;
FIG. 2 is a plan view of a wallet with integral tab attached, in an open inside layout;
FIG. 3 is a view like FIG. 2 showing an additional insert member,
FIG. 4 is a view like FIG. 1 except shown at a different perspective;
FIG. 5 is a perspective view of a protective shield for the tab;
FIG. 6 is a view like FIG. 1 except with a three dimensional tab;
FIG. 6
a is a schematic view of tab 300 in FIG. 6;
FIG. 7 is an alternative embodiment in the form of a file folder in perspective;
FIG. 7a is an alternative embodiment to the folder in FIG. 7;
FIG. 8 is a side plan view of the subject matter in FIG. 7;
FIG. 9 is a front plan view of the subject matter in FIG. 7; and
FIG. 10 is an alternate embodiment from that in FIG. 7, except as a pocket folder, in perspective.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is directed to an integrated tab system for a folder. The tabs may be 2 or 3 dimensional. The term folder, wallet or wallet type folder, is intended to encompass a range of office requisites, such as binders, folios, classification folders, expanding files and similar items, which could benefit from an integral tab for receiving marking/indicia and which hereto for, have not had such an integral feature. Integral or unitary is meant to mean that the tab is part of the wallet or folder and that the tab does not have to be user-attached. It can also mean that the tab is formed directly in the existing material, and does not require an attachment, but that is only the preferred embodiment.
A typical wallet like folder, such as the expanding file 10 is shown in FIG. 1. In this embodiment, it has front and rear faces 12, 14 with top and bottom ends. The expanding folder 10 shown, has a cover flap 14 which extends from the edge of the rear flap (in fact it is a continuous web in the preferred embodiment, so the term “extending from” includes a continuous or discontinuous web of material) which overlies the front face at least in part and a optional rope or elastic fastener 16. The front and rear faces are joined by sidewalls 18 and bottom 20 (shown best in FIG. 3a). In the preferred embodiment, the side and bottom walls are a unitary piece folder twice and have an accordion fold/pleat for expansion. Elastic materials, such as latex could also be used for the expansion section, and of course, it does not have to provide expansion at all.
In the preferred embodiment, a tab 30 is formed by making a separable portion such as by cutting into the flap 14 at its crown portion. The separable portion is may be the die cut as shown, perforations, scoring or any other releasable mechanism which guides the user as to where the break away will occur. In this embodiment, the crown is curved to allow for expansion, but it could be a mere fold at the apex. In such embodiment, a cut 40 is made in the flap 14 in the shape of a tab. The cut shown of FIGS. 1-4 is a right side tab, but the cut can be made anywhere (center, right, or left). In the case of a wallet with an over-flap 14, the cut should be distant from the edge 42 so that a region 44 of structural material remains to support that end of the flap. With stronger material, the tab can be closer to the edge. Alternatively, a reinforcement (such as a wire or plastic strip) can be embedded into region 44 so that it can be made narrow, i.e. the tab being nearly adjacent to the edge 42, with the imposition of the reinforcement providing edge protection.
As can be seen in FIGS. 3 and 4 tab 30 is effectively a cut out from the over-flap material 14.
The flat 30 can also be reinforced by providing a double ply of material in region 32 preferably on the inside surface thereof (see FIG. 3) or by applying a reinforcement, such as a tape, on the inner and/or outer surface. The reinforcement should preferably have a writable surface.
It is also possible to make such a wallet with an open top and still use the present integral tab feature. Flap 14 would be trimmed or non-existent.
Further reinforcement of the tab 30 can be achieve by a slip over translucent shield 50, which has a front and back surface 52, 54 and a gap 60 therebetween. The front and back surfaces would be resiliently biased toward each other by the top edge portion 66 and thus the tab 30 would be captured between the surfaces by the gap.
A pair of extensions 56, 58 on either or both surfaces 52, 54 would provide engagement elements to further maintain the shield in place. The extensions and/or the surfaces 52, 54 would be sufficiently bendable and resilient to allow the extensions to engage the portion 70 of the apex region (see FIGS. 1 and 4), thus maintaining a mechanical engagement with the cut out region. The preferred location to cut is at or near the apex
Manufacturing of this invention can be made according to means already known for making wallet like folders, usually on a continuous web machine which later attachment of the gusset material 18-20 (FIG. 3a). A die cut (see element 40) is made in the web process to cut the pattern for the tab 30 and the tab may then also be reinforced as indicated above.
FIGS. 6-6
a illustrate a modification of the prior structure and method of manufacture. A three dimensional tab 300 is shown. The three dimensions allow the tab to be viewed from the top or sides. The top view may be highly advantageous for use in a brief case where only the top is viewable.
Tab 300 has a top wall 310, side walls 320 and 322 and preferably attachment portion 330 and 340. A preferred way to create the 3-d tab 300 is to use the portion of the flap (or leaf, as in the embodiment below) and score it into three sections with preferably, parallel scores. The three sections 322, 210 and 320 are folded into a triangle and portion 320 is affixed by 322 by adhesive or similar means. An adhesive strip can be supplied integrally or separately. Section 310 may be rigidified by attachment of additional material such as a plastic strip or chemically by applying a solution to that portion or all portions. It is also possible to attach a separate multi-folded strip 301 tab 300 (or 30 as in FIG. 1). The multi-fold strip is preferably as wide as the tab 30 and has portions 340 (affixation point), top 310, front side 320, and a lower affixation portion 330, together forming a triangle with the base tab 300.
When folded as shown in FIG. 6, a three dimensional tab is constructed. Notice that side portion 320 capable of being positioned for side viewing at various angles determined by the point at which portion 330 is attached to tab 300. It may create a top portion 310 which is generally L shaped with respect to tab 300. The exact angle depends on user preference, the length of the various panels or the affixation point of portion 330. The further down the length of tab 300, the more acute the angle of the portion 310 and 320 will be. An obtuse angle for portion 310 panel is likewise achievable by opposite placement. Further, by selective affixation of the various portions the angle of the label can be adjusted to any angle desired from 0-180 degrees. Perpendicular is most common, but a 45 degree angle could be useful for top viewing from a file drawer. Portion 320 will often be shorter than what is shown in FIG. 6a because it is preferably taken from the cut out and since a portion of the tab is used to form the surface 310, the remainder 320 which is affixed to 322 is a truncated hypotenuse. The affixation of portion 322 on 300 also provides significant reinforcement to the entire tab as does the triangular shape.
The preferred method of construction involves an additional step to affixing strip 310 by adhesive as indicated.
This strip can be further reinforced by a rigidifying strip (not shown but described in co-pending application 60/835373 filed Aug. 3, 2006 and of common ownership, which is hereby incorporated by reference). Such strip is formed by scoring the strip with two parallel scores, the space between the scores constituting one face of the tab and rigidifying the space between said scores with a reinforcement, like plastic.
It is also to be understood, that in all embodiments, reinforcement materials such as tape, films, tyvek® products, etc can be applied to stiffen the tab and against use and abuse. The file would be applied preferably by a discontinuous application in the areas needed. The preferred embodiment would use a film which can be written on so that indicia may be handwritten or printed directly on the film.
FIGS. 7-9 illustrate an alternate embodiment, but built according to the present invention, where there is shown a folder 500 having two leaves/panels 510, 520, which are connected or joined at 530, where there may be a joint or just a score in a continuous material. In this embodiment there is further, a reinforcement material 540 applied preferably to a narrow strip on either side of the score/joint. Like in the first embodiment above, the tab 560 is created by cutting into one (or both for multi tab units) of the two leaves to free a portion of the leaf panel which is then flattened to form an edge tab. The tab formed from a portion of one of the leaves, and has its base 555 generally along said fold line, with the free portion of the tab extending away from the leaf from which it was formed, leaving an aperture 565 in that leaf from where the tab was removed.
The cut is preferably with sloping sides as shown. It is possible to perforate at tab outline where the cut line 580 would be to allow the user to elect to “liberate” a tab as needed. Thus the folder could have multiple tab perforations along the joint/score line 590 allowing the user to elect which tab position to use. In FIG. 7a, there is shown a configuration where a single folder can be used to achieve multiple efficiencies: 1) no extra material is required in the formation of the tab, either flat or 3d, and 2) the manufacturer can stock only one type of file no matter how many “tab cuts” are desired. The user can select to open any or all of the tab cuts (perforation) 560a, b, or c. Note that the term “perforation” is meant to be a broad term to include other forms of user selectable breakaway tabs, including but not limited to scoring, slashing, precut lines with only the stiffness of the tab keeping it folded (out of use) or a temporary tacking adhesive, such as rubber cement, or any similar system to accomplish the above stated objective. It will be understood that this user selectable tab system described for FIGS. 7 and 7a is applicable to all embodiments herein.
The embodiment shown in FIG. 10 is similar to that in FIGS. 7-9 except that this folder 600 is a pocket folder having pockets 610, 620. The tab cut out is the same as that for the previous embodiment and may likewise use optional perforations and multiple tabs in a single unit as explained above. In this embodiment a pair of semi-circular concentric arcs 640 and 650 are cut into the pocket 620. These accommodate disks and similar objects with the larger width/circumferential extend of the disk residing under cut 650 and the small arc 640 overlies the disk, thereby holding it in place.
The description of the invention including its applications and advantages as set forth herein is illustrative and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention, which is set forth in the claims. Variations and modifications of the embodiments disclosed herein are possible and practical alternatives to and equivalents of the various elements of the embodiments would be understood to those of ordinary skill in the art upon study of this patent document. These and other variations and modifications of the embodiments disclosed herein may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.