This invention relates to bottle caps, in particular, bottle caps which may be articulated to one another
It is known to make divisions of space by geometric shapes, in particular, division of such a space to be covered with identical shapes. Such a division is usually referred to as a mosaic, tiling etc. Examples of such mosaic/tiling can be covering a defined space with hexagons, triangles and even more complex shapes.
In addition, it is known to make mosaic piece for the purpose of games, especially for children (e.g. jigsaw puzzles), in which a certain image or a shape is to be formed by adjoining specific mosaic pieces to one another.
According to the subject matter of the present application, there is provided a uniquely designed mosaic piece which is configured to be articulated to similar mosaic pieces. Specifically, the mosaic piece is configured for interlocking with similar mosaic pieces so that two such mosaic pieces can be securely held together without the aid of additional mosaic pieces or of an adhering mechanism.
According to a specific aspect of the subject matter of the present application, there is provided a mosaic piece having a body contour inscribed within a circle, and being formed with at least one projection having a projection contour, so that:
wherein said engagement portion is of corresponding shape and size to be fully contained within said locking recess.
The mosaic piece can be configured for attachment to other mosaic pieces, so that at least a portion of the projection of the mosaic piece is configured to be received within a locking recess of a second identical mosaic piece. In particular, when a projection of the mosaic piece is received within a locking recess of a second, identical mosaic piece, the body engagement contour of the mosaic piece and the projection engagement contour of the second mosaic piece can form together a contour at least partially corresponding to the contour defined between points P1 and P2 of the mosaic piece. Under this arrangement, a third mosaic piece is configured to fit within a remaining space defined by the contour between two neighboring mosaic pieces.
According to a specific example, said mosaic piece can be formed with a projection unit consisting of two symmetric projections which are mirror images of one another with respect to a line extending between point P2 and the center of the inner circle. Specifically, the point P2 can be a mutual point for the projection contours of the two symmetric projections.
Under a specific example of the mosaic piece, it can comprise at least two projection units, said projection units being arranged symmetrically along the mosaic piece with respect a line extending between point P3 and the center of the inner circle.
In particular:
The arrangement can be such that said body portion contour corresponds in shape and size to said unit contour.
According to a particular example, said mosaic piece can be formed with three projection units. The projection units can be equally spaced about the center of the inner circle, i.e. with a 120° angle therebetween.
In addition, said projection can be made of flexible material allowing to change the distance between points Pa of adjacent protection units thereby providing snap fitting between two identical mosaic pieces. The material of the projection and its shape can be such that the friction between two identical mosaic pieces, when attached to one another as suggested above, is sufficient for preventing movement thereof with respect to one another along a central axis of the inner circle.
Furthermore, the bottle caps can be made of a material which, once the mosaic pieces are constructed together, may be ironed to form a single unit.
Under a specific arrangement, the ratio between the diameter of the inner circle d and the diameter D of a circle inscribing the entire mosaic piece including the at least one projection is d/D can be about 0.9.
According to another aspect of the subject matter of the present application, there is provided a method for constructing the 2D shape of the above mosaic piece, said method including the following steps:
wherein for each major shape, a projection can be defined having a contour extending through points P2, P1 of the neighboring major shape, P and P1 of the same major shape.
According to the above method, the major shapes can serve as the basis for defining the shape of the body of the mosaic piece while the minor shapes can serve as the basis for defining the projection of the mosaic piece.
Under a particular example of the above method, each of the major shapes has a hexagonal symmetry, about six axes, equally spaced at 120° and coinciding at O, such as hexagons and even circles. It should be noted that for each variation of the major shape serving as the basis for mosaic piece, different contact points P2 can be chosen. For example, if the major shapes are circles, the points P2 can be tangency points between the circles, whereas if the major shapes are hexagons, the points P2 can be alternating apexes of the hexagon.
The contour of the minor shapes can be defined by curved lines only, by straight lines only or by a combination of the two. The minor shapes can be either closed-contour shapes of opened-contour shapes. In addition, the minor shapes can have a point of coincidence at P0, and can be designed so as not to intersect one another.
It should also be understood that said 2D shape of the mosaic piece can constitute the base for a 3D construction of a mosaic piece. In particular, said major shapes can be of a 3D tetrahedral configuration, in which each face of the 3D mosaic piece is of a triangular or hexagonal symmetry.
The mosaic piece of the present application can be formed with an inner cavity, configured for receiving therein an article of predetermined size and shape. According to one example, said inner cavity can be threaded, and can be shaped and sized so as to be configured for use as a bottle cap. Alternatively, according to another example, said cavity can be shaped and sized to hold therein an article of cylindrical shape such as a bottle, a can etc.
It should be noted that forming a bottle cap with the unique shape design of the above described mosaic piece provides for several advantages, some of which are as follows:
Furthermore, different bottle caps can have thereon a predetermined color, pattern or image, so that combining a plurality of bottle caps to one another allows forming a bigger picture. This can also be used for marketing purposes in which people will prefer buying more and more bottle in order to obtain the mosaic piece constituted by the bottle cap in order to complete a jigsaw puzzle and/or bigger picture.
In order to understand the invention and to see how it may be carried out in practice, embodiments will now be described, by way of non-limiting example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
With reference to
The body 10 is inscribed within a circle IC the center of which lies at O (the axis X passing through O). Each of the projection units 20 lies outside the inscribing circle IC, and has a right projection portion 20R and a left projection portion 20L.
It is noted that the mosaic piece 1 has an extension along the axis X, so that the body 10 has a top face 12A and bottom face 12B with side walls 14 extending therebetween. In particular, the body 10 has three such side walls 14 each being defined between two neighboring projection units 20. Similarly, each projection unit is also formed with a side wall 22 extending between the top face 12A and the bottom face 12B.
The arrangement is such, that between each two neighboring projection units 20, a recess 16 is formed having a right locking portion 16R and a left locking portion 16L. It should be noted that the terminology ‘left’ and ‘right’ is defined with respect to the center O of the inscribing circle IC, whereby the left locking portion 16L is immediately adjacent to the right projection portion 20R and the right locking portion 16R is immediately adjacent the left projection portion 20L.
Each projection unit has a projection unit 20 contour, and each recess 16 has a recess contour, the term ‘contour’ referring to the closest delimiting curve which forms the boundary of the projection/recess. For example, while the actual curve forming the shape of the projection unit 20 can be undulating, the contour will be considered to be the delimiting curve of forming the boundary for the undulating curve (see
With specific reference being made to
It is appreciated that even if each of the actual curves forming the shape of the recess 16 and the projection unit 20 are of an undulating configuration, the contours thereof can still match. For example, the actual contact between two mosaic pieces can take place at only several points along the curve, but the contours of the recess 16 and projection unit 20 match each other nonetheless.
Thus, two similar mosaic pieces 10 can be articulated to and engage one another by inserting the projection unit 20 of one mosaic piece 1 into the recess 16 of the other mosaic unit 1. In the engaged position as shown in the above figures, the right projection portion 20R is received within the left locking recess 16L of the adjacent mosaic portion and the left projection portion 20L of one mosaic piece is received within the right locking recess 16R of the adjacent mosaic piece.
It is noted that due to the unique design of the mosaic pieces, in the engaged position, the mosaic pieces 1 are interlocked with one another. In particular, it is observed that the greatest width of the projection unit 20 measured between points N (measured along a line perpendicular to a symmetry line dividing the projection unit 20 into a right and a left portion 20R, 20L) and denoted by line LN is slightly greater than the corresponding width measured between two neighboring projection units 20 of the other mosaic piece 1 between points M, denoted by line LM.
In this interlocked position, the mosaic pieces 1 cannot perform radial movement away from one another, i.e. a movement which increases the distance between the respective centers O thereof. However, it is also noted that if at least one of the mosaic pieces is formed of at least partially flexible material, the unique design yields a snap-fit arrangement, as shown in
With particular reference being made to
Turning now to
Further, a point P3 can be defined which is located on the inner circle IC and having the same angular distance from P1 as P2 (angle α is equal to the angle β), and a straight border line BL can be extended between point P3 and a point PA on the contour of the left projection portion 20L, such that all points on the contour of the left projection portion 20L are located on one side of the borderline BL. Thus, a recess portion is defined (hatched) the contour of which extends through points P3, P1 and PA being partially formed by a portion of the inner circle, a portion of the contour of the projection portion 20L and a portion of the borderline BL.
Similarly, a point P can be chosen along the contour of the left projection portion 20L, located between points P1 and PA, and a straight line can be extended between these two points to define a projection portion (hatched).
The arrangement is such that the projection portion is fully contained, in its shape and size, within the recess portion of the recess 16. It should be noted that the term ‘contained’ is used herein to define that not only is the area (specific value, e.g. 2 square cm) is smaller than the area of the recess portion, but rather that the shape and size are such that can be taken, as is, and fitted into the recess portion being fully contained therein.
In particular, it is observed that when the part of the left projection portion 20L is received within the portion of the recess 16 the point P2 coincides with the point P3 of the other mosaic unit, and the line P2 to P coincides with the line BL.
Particular reference is now made to
Step A: A major shape MJR is chosen having a hexagonal symmetry. In this particular example the major shape is a circle having a center at O, and it should be understood that circle has an n-symmetry which also covers hexagonal symmetry;
Step B: Three such major shapes MJR are used and disposed along a planar surface such that each two adjacent major shapes MJR have at least one contact point at P2. In this particular example, the point P2 is defined as the tangency point between each two circles, however, it will be evident from further examples of various mosaic pieces that the point P2 is not necessarily the tangency point and is chosen according to the major shape MJR used to construct the mosaic piece. It is noted that the three major shapes MJR defined therebetween an area A which has a center point P0, defined as the intersection point between the lines extending from the centers O of each major shape MJR and the point P2 of the other two major shapes MJR;
Step C: Three minor shapes MNR are chosen, and are disposed within the area A. In this particular example, circles are used as minor shapes MNR as well. However it will be evident from further examples of mosaic pieces that this is not necessarily the case. The minor shapes MNR are disposed within the area A such that the contour of each minor shape MNR has at least one contact point P1 with its respective major shape MJR and at least one contact point with the contour of each of the other two minor shapes MNR;
Step D: The contour of a left portion or right projection portion may now be defined in the following manner: the contour curve of such a projection portion will begin from point P1 following the contour of the minor shape MNR until its contact point with its adjacent minor shape MNR, then follow the contour of this adjacent minor shape MNR until its respective contact point P1 with the its major shape MJR and then follow the contour of that major shape MJR to point P2 thereby completing the contour. It is noted that such a contour always encompasses at least one minor shape MNR which does not share a common contact point with the major shape MJR to which this projection pertains.
It is further observed that for each major shape, a right projection portion 20R and a left projection portion 20L may be symmetrically defined as previously explained, constituting together the projection portion 20. The hexagonal symmetry of each major shape gives rise to forming the unique recess 16 formed between each two neighboring projection units 20. However, it should be noted that other examples of mosaic pieces will also be discussed in which such hexagonal symmetry is not required, and in which the locking recess has a slightly different configuration.
Attention is now being drawn to
Reference is now being made to
In order to understand what constitutes the difference between the mosaic pieces, attention is now drawn
It is noted that each such minor shape MNR, yields a different shape of the projection unit 20, and more specifically it dictates the shape of both the left and the right projection portions of the projection unit 20.
Turning now to
With attention being drawn to
With reference to
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Reference is now being made to
With reference to
Turning now to
Another example of a mosaic piece being generally designated 101′ is shown in
Attention is now being drawn to
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Attention is now being drawn to
In
According to a particular business concept, each such cap may be provided with a different color/print/picture/design on the top face thereof, so that collecting different bottle caps and arranging them together may form a bigger picture or print. For example, each such bottle cap may have on the top face thereof a portion of the famous Mona Lisa painting by Leonardo De Vinci, such that collecting enough bottle caps of the right print, may eventually allow constructing the painting on the Mona Lisa.
Such a business concept may allow the manufacturers of the bottle caps/beverages to increase their sales as people will tend to buy beverages/bottles of that company whose caps have a portion of the Mona Lisa print. In particular, such clients/customers will tend to look for those bottle caps which are still required for forming the overall picture/painting.
In addition, due to the unique design of the bottle cap, and in particular the side walls 22 of the projection units, it may be much more convenient to open the bottle having such a cap 200 in comparison with a completely round cap. In particular, the projection units 20 may provide a comfortable gripping area for a person's finger.
Furthermore, for such a bottle cap (and in fact any other bottle cap having a design similar to the designs of the mosaic pieces previously described) may allow using an opener having a recess matching the shape and size of the bottle cap, so that inserting the bottle cap into the recess and then gripping the bottle and rotating it in the right direction, may allow easy opening/closing of the bottle (screwing and unscrewing of the cap).
Turning now to
Once the cans are used and thrown out, the holder 200′ may still be used as mosaic pieces for the purpose of play and construction.
Turning now to
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/052986 | 6/13/2012 | WO | 00 | 12/11/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61496614 | Jun 2011 | US |