1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the field of apparatus which is used to form decorative designs into poured concrete structures such as driveways, planter borders, and edges of walkways.
2. Description of the Prior Art
In general, there are many prior art appartatuses which have been used to form edges on poured concrete or masonry structures. The following Seventeen (17) patents are relevant to the field of the present invention.
The Walter Patent discloses a cornice tool and shows a plasterer's molding plate which is handheld and which has various designs on the edge of the plate. This inventions was a handheld invention which was used for plastering.
The Benninghofen Patent discloses a trowel which creates a rounded bullet-nosed side. Further, referring to
The Ferguson Patent discloses a trowel which relates to plastering tools and more particularly, to a trowel where a suitable design of plastic cornices or moldings may be readily and uniformly made on the walls and ceilings of a room.
The Johnson Patent discloses a trowel which is used for forming grooves or curved corners on cement floors as well as finishing walls and buildings. In this case, the design shows that the trowel has a rounded surface so that it can create a rounded form for a concave shape on the cement border or any other portion of the cement surface. This again has only one rounded design.
The Busch Patent discloses a trowel and also shows the concept of having a handle so that the trowel can be pulled or pushed. As illustrated in
The Baker Patent is a patent discloses a mason's trowel which is handheld. It is relevant because it shows a multiplicity of different shapes, round and primarily squared, in
The Hitzman Patent discloses a mortar spreader for spreading a shape onto a block 1 as best illustrated in
The Sanford Patent discloses an edger which is a form of trowel to finish cement work, with the edge attached to a pole.
The Cinotti Patent discloses a concrete edger and finishing tool. The object of this invention is to create a concrete edger in which the relative positioning of the parts, particularly of the handle and the blade, may be readily changed. The device is used only for flattening the concrete where the orientation of the handle 57 can be modified at different angles.
The Rawley Patent discloses a handheld forming tool for finishing both curved and flat surfaces.
The Perry Patent is a hand tool for finishing corners and the like. As disclosed in
The Cotugno Patent discloses a concrete slab surface finishing tool which is provided with a combination flat floor surface working area, a lip offset surface working area joined to the flat floor surface working area, a flat lip surface working area joined to lip offset working area, and an edge surface working area joined to the flat lip surface working area. The tool has the ability to form one rounded edge at the bottom.
The Neece Patent is a design patent which protects the design of a particular concrete trowel.
The '634 DeVitis Patent is a hand tool which has a portion for showing how to make a rounded edge but this is just one bullet-nosed edge on the concrete.
The '634 DeVitis Patent discloses a hand tool for forming the interior edge of a cementitious surface. Once again, this is shown for the rounding features 8 and 6 of the tool. However, this once again is just one rounded portion.
The Charland Patent discloses a design patent for a fire house section hauler which has a rounded member for hauling a fire hose.
Finally, the Williams Patent is a circular edging tool for concrete. This patent is designed to have a circular concrete edge so that it can form the interior circle of a manhole frame.
None of the prior art patents disclose an apparatus to efficiently and effectively form a multiplicity of various rounded shapes into an edge of poured concrete. There is a significant need for such an apparatus.
The present invention is a novel tool which enables a mason or concrete worker to form very beautiful decorative designs into the edge of poured concrete which is used for a driveway, walkway, border of a planter, or other concrete structure having at least a partially flat surface and at least one side edge where the decorative design is formed. Through use of the present invention, any one of a multiplicity of multi-arcuate designs are formed into at least one side edge or outside edge or inside edge of a poured concrete slab to thereby significant beautify a driveway, walkway, planter border, or any other poured concrete structure.
It has been discovered, according to the present invention, that if a trowel is formed with a traverse lip which is intended to abut a frame border of a poured concrete structure and thereafter the trowel has a multiplicity of unique arcuate forms therein which extend to a flat surface structure at the uppermost part of the trowel, and the trowel has a receiving member for receiving a pole or handle formed into a location where the multi-rounded forms are located, then the trowel can be used to form beautiful arcuate designs into an edge of the poured concrete structure by aligning the transverse tip with the border of the structure, pressing the arcuate designs into the poured wet concrete until the flat edge rests on the flat portion of the poured concrete and pulling or pushing the trowel into and through the poured concrete and discarding the concrete which rests above the trowel, thereby leaving the beautiful arcuate designs formed into the edge of the poured concrete structure.
It is therefore a primary object of the present invention to create a trowel which is formed with a traverse lip which is intended to abut a frame border of a poured concrete structure and thereafter the trowel has a multiplicity of unique arcuate forms therein which extend to a flat surface structure at the uppermost part of the trowel, and the trowel has a receiving member for receiving a pole or handle formed into a location where the multi-rounded forms are located, so that the trowel can be used to form beautiful arcuate designs into an edge of the poured concrete structure by aligning the transverse tip with the border of the structure, pressing the arcuate designs into the poured wet concrete until the flat edge rests on the flat portion of the poured concrete and pulling or pushing the trowel into and through the poured concrete and discarding the concrete which rests above the trowel, thereby leaving the beautiful arcuate designs formed into the edge of the poured concrete structure.
Further novel features and other objects of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description, discussion and the appended claims, taken in conjunction with the drawings.
Referring particularly to the drawings for the purpose of illustration only and not limitation, there is illustrated:
Although specific embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings, it should be understood that such embodiments are by way of example only and merely illustrative of but a small number of the many possible specific embodiments which can represent applications of the principles of the present invention. Various changes and modifications obvious to one skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains are deemed to be within the spirit, scope and contemplation of the present invention as further defined in the appended claims.
Referring to
The pole operated trowel 10 is shown in operation in
The present invention pole operated trowel 10 is used after the concrete 550 has been poured and the upper surface 552 smoothed and flattened and while the concrete 550 is still wet. The mason 600 stands (or can kneel) to one side of the driveway area 510 and can stand on the lawn 542 or on a portion of the lumber members 530. The mason 600 aligns the pole operated trowel 10 such that its transverse side edge 12 is adjacent the interior edge 531 of the 2×4 lumber members 530 and the mason pushes the pole operated trowel 10 into the concrete 550 so that outward transverse surface 18 rests against the interior surface 531 of lumber members 532. The pole operated trowel 10 is pushed into the wet concrete 550 until the bottom surface 78 of flat plate such 70 rests on the top surface 552 of the poured concrete 550. From the perspective view illustrated in
The mason pulls the pole operated trowel 10 through the wet concrete 550 in this manner from the first transverse edge 516 adjacent the garage door 520 to the second transverse edge 518 adjacent the street 500. The pole operated trowel 10 can also be pushed in the opposite direction to smooth over the arcuate design left underneath the pole operated trowel 10. The collar 62 and threaded bolt 56 permit the angle of the pole 84 relative to the mason 600 to be adjusted to any angle so that the pulling angle of the design formed into the wet concrete can be of any height and longitudinal angle relative to the ground. The key innovation of the present invention over prior art trowels is that the present invention enables the mason to create any number of variations of arcuate designs into the edge 560 of the driveway 570 as illustrated in
After one edge 560 is completed, the opposite edge of the driveway is embellished in the same manner while the concrete is still wet. The mason now stands (or can kneel) to the opposite side of the driveway area 510 and can stand on the lawn 544 or on a portion of the lumber members 532. The mason 600 aligns the pole operated trowel 10 such that its transverse side edge 12 is adjacent the interior edge 533 of the 2×4 lumber members 532 and pushes the pole operated trowel 10 into the concrete 550 so that outward transverse surface 18 rests against the interior surface 533 of lumber members 532. The pole operated trowel 10 is pushed into the wet concrete 550 until the bottom surface 78 of flat plate such 70 rests on the top surface 552 of the poured concrete. From the perspective view illustrated in
The mason pulls the pole operated trowel 10 through the wet concrete 550 in this manner from the first transverse edge 516 adjacent the garage door 520 to the second transverse edge 518 adjacent the street 500 or in the opposite direction from the street 500 to the location adjacent the garage door 520. The pole operated trowel 10 can also be pushed in the opposite direction to smooth over the arcuate design left underneath the pole operated trowel 10. The collar 62 and threaded bolt 56 permit the angle of the pole 84 relative to the mason 600 to be adjusted to any angle so that the pulling angle of the design formed into the wet concrete can be of any height and longitudinal angle relative to the ground.
The key innovation of the present invention over prior art trowels is that the present invention enables the mason to create any number of variations of arcuate designs into the opposite edge of the driveway 562 so that an infinite number of multi-rounded designs 580 of substantial aesthetic beauty can be formed into the side edge of the driveway 562. The competed designed 580 on both side edges 560 and 562 of the driveway 570 is illustrated in
The preferred embodiment of the present invention is to have the pole 84 as this provides the most leverage to enable the mason 600 to pull or push the trowel 10 through the heavy concrete and lift the concrete laden trowel 10 to discard the concrete which rests above the trowel as it is pulled through the driveway. In an alternative embodiment illustrated in
While the present invention has been illustrated to create a multiplicity of beautiful arcuate designs into a concrete driveway, it will be appreciated that it can be used to create beautiful a multi-arcuate design in a the border of a flowerbed or other concrete structure on the ground. The same principles apply. The structure is surrounded with a wooden border or border made of other suitable material which will not adhere to concrete and the outward transverse surface 18 of the transverse side edge or lip 12 rests against the interior surface border (the interior surface of the border is defined as the surface of the border facing the concrete) while the bottom surface 78 of flat plate section 70 rests on the upper interior level of the structure and the sections of the multi-rounded design shaped portion 20 are pushed into the edge of the concrete structure and pulled and pushed through it as was described above to create the beautiful multi-rounded arcuate design shape into the border of the concrete structure.
It will be appreciated that the multi-rounded design illustrated in
Referring to
In this variation of the pole operate trowel 110, attached at a location on the top surface 176 of the uppermost flat plate section 170 is an attachment means 150 which is rotatably connected to a pole receiving means 154. By of example only, the attachment means 150 can be a transverse plate which is attached at a location on the top surface 176 of the uppermost flat plate section 170. It will be appreciated that the attachment means can be on any upper surface of the pole operated trowel 110. By way of example only, the pole receiving means 154 is attached to the transverse plate 150 by having an opening 152 in the transverse plate 150 and a threaded bolt 156 extending through an opening 160 in a collar 162 at the lower end of the pole receiving means 154 which is aligned with the opening 152 in the transverse plate and the nut 158 threaded onto the threaded bolt 156. The pole receiving means has an opening 164 to receive a pole.
The pole operated trowel 110 is shown in operation in
The present invention pole operated trowel 110 is used after the concrete 650 has been poured and the upper surface 652 smoothed and flattened and while the concrete 650 is still wet. The mason 600 stands (or can kneel) to one side of the driveway area 610 and can stand on the lawn 642 or on a portion of the lumber members 630. The mason 600 aligns the pole operated trowel 110 such that its transverse side edge 112 is adjacent the interior edge 631 of the 2×4 lumber members 630 and pushes the pole operated trowel 110 into the concrete 650 so that outward transverse surface 118 rests against the interior surface 631 of lumber members 632. The pole operated trowel 110 is pushed into the wet concrete 650 until the bottom surface 178 of flat plate section 170 rests on the top surface 652 of the poured concrete 650. From the perspective view illustrated in
The mason pulls the pole operated trowel 110 through the wet concrete 650 in this manner from the first transverse edge 616 adjacent the garage door 620 to the second transverse edge 618 adjacent the street 605. The pole operated trowel 110 can also be pushed in the opposite direction to smooth over the arcuate design left underneath the pole operated trowel 110. The collar 162 and threaded bolt 156 permit the angle of the pole 184 relative to the mason 600 to be adjusted to any angle so that the pulling angle of the design formed into the wet concrete can be of any height and longitudinal angle relative to the ground. The key innovation of the present invention over prior art trowels is that the present invention enables the mason to create any number of variations of arcuate designs into the edge 660 of the driveway 670 as illustrated in
After one edge 660 is completed, the opposite edge of the driveway is embellished in the same manner while the concrete is still wet. The mason now stands (or can kneel) to the opposite side of the driveway area 610 and can stand on the lawn 644 or on a portion of the lumber members 632. The mason 600 aligns the pole operated trowel 110 such that its transverse side edge 112 is adjacent the interior edge 633 of the 2×4 lumber members 632 and pushes the pole operated trowel 110 into the concrete 650 so that outward transverse surface 118 rests against the interior surface 633 of lumber members 632. The pole operated trowel 110 is pushed into the wet concrete 650 until the bottom surface 178 of flat plate section 170 rests on the top surface 652 of the poured concrete. From the perspective view illustrated in
The mason pulls the pole operated trowel 110 through the wet concrete 650 in this manner from the first transverse edge 616 adjacent the garage door 620 to the second transverse edge 618 adjacent the street 605 or in the opposite direction from the street 605 to the location adjacent the garage door 620. The pole operated trowel 110 can also be pushed in the opposite direction to smooth over the arcuate design left underneath the pole operated trowel 110. The collar 162 and threaded bolt 156 permit the angle of the pole 184 relative to the mason 600 to be adjusted to any angle so that the pulling angle of the design formed into the wet concrete can be of any height and longitudinal angle relative to the ground.
The key innovation of the present invention over prior art trowels is that the present invention enables the mason to create any number of variations of arcuate designs into the opposite edge of the driveway 662 so that an infinite number of multi-rounded designs 680 of substantial aesthetic beauty can be formed into the side edge of the driveway 662. The competed designed 680 on both side edges 660 and 662 of the driveway 670 is illustrated in
The preferred embodiment of the present invention is to have the pole 184 as this provides the most leverage to enable the mason 600 to pull or push the trowel 110 through the heavy concrete and lift the concrete laden trowel 110 to discard the concrete which rests above the trowel as it is pulled through the driveway. In an alternative embodiment illustrated in
In an additional embellishment to the present invention, the bottom surface of the trowel 10 can have a decorative design formed into the bottom surface of the trowel 10. Therefore, after the operation is completed as illustrated in
It is also possible to use any variation of the present invention to create a multi-rounded edge on a poured concrete tabletop instead of a driveway. As illustrated in
Defined in detail, the present invention is a concrete trowel to form a design into at least one edge of a poured concrete structure with the poured concrete structure having an upper surface and at least one outward edge abutting a frame having a transverse side facing the at least one outward edge of the poured concrete structure, the concrete trowel comprising: (a) a transverse lip having a top edge and a transverse outer surface; (b) a multi-rounded design shaped portion having first and second arcuate surface sections, the first arcuate surface section having a first edge and an opposite second edge, a top rounded surface and a bottom rounded surface, the second arcuate surface section having a first edge and an opposite second edge, a top rounded surface and a bottom rounded surface, the first edge of the first arcuate surface section joined to the top edge of the transverse lip and the second edge of the first arcuate surface section joined to the first edge of the second arcuate surface section; (c) an uppermost flat plate section having a first edge, a top surface and a bottom surface, the first edge of the uppermost flat plate second joined to the second edge of the second arcuate surface section; and (d) means by which the trowel is held attached at a location on at least one upper surface of the first arcuate surface section or the second arcuate surface section or the uppermost flat plate section; (e) whereby, the concrete trowel is pressed into the wet poured concrete at the location of the outward edge such that the transverse outer surface of the transverse lip abuts the transverse side of the frame, the concrete trowel is pushed into the poured concrete to a depth such that the bottom surface of the uppermost flat plate rests on the upper surface of the poured concrete and the first arcuate surface section and section arcuate surface section lie within the poured concrete, the trowel pulled or pushed through the concrete such that the design of the first and second arcuate surface sections is formed into the wet concrete along the at least one outward edge and the concrete resting on the upper surfaces of the first and second arcuate surface sections is discarded, leaving the decorative design formed beneath the bottom surfaces of the first and second arcuate surface sections on the outward edge of the poured concrete structure.
Defined broadly, the present invention is a concrete trowel to form a design into at least one edge of a poured concrete structure with the poured concrete structure having an upper surface and at least one outward edge abutting a frame having a transverse side facing the at least one outward edge of the poured concrete structure, the concrete trowel comprising: (a) a transverse lip having a top edge and a transverse outer surface; (b) a multi-rounded design shaped portion having first, second and third arcuate surface sections, the first arcuate surface section having a first edge and an opposite second edge, a top rounded surface and a bottom rounded surface, the second arcuate surface section having a first edge and an opposite second edge, a top rounded surface and a bottom rounded surface, the third arcuate surface section having a first edge and an opposite second edge, a top rounded surface and a bottom rounded surface, the first edge of the first arcuate surface section joined to the top edge of the transverse lip, the second edge of the first arcuate surface section joined to the first edge of the second arcuate surface section, and the second edge of the second arcuate surface section joined to the first edge of third arcuate surface section; (c) an uppermost flat plate section having a first edge, a top surface and a bottom surface, the first edge of the uppermost flat plate second joined to the second edge of the third arcuate surface section; and (d) means by which the trowel is held attached at a location on at least one upper surface of the first arcuate surface section or the second arcuate surface section or the third arcuate surface section or the uppermost flat plate section; (e) whereby, the concrete trowel is pressed into the wet poured concrete at the location of the outward edge such that the transverse outer surface of the transverse lip abuts the transverse side of the frame, the concrete trowel is pushed into the poured concrete to a depth such that the bottom surface of the uppermost flat plate rests on the upper surface of the poured concrete and the first arcuate surface section, section arcuate surface section and third arcuate surface section lie within the poured concrete, the trowel pulled or pushed through the concrete such that the design of the first, second and third arcuate surface sections is formed into the wet concrete along the at least one outward edge and the concrete resting on the upper surfaces of the first, second and third arcuate surface sections is discarded, leaving the decorative design formed beneath the bottom surfaces of the first, second and third arcuate surface sections on the outward edge of the poured concrete structure.
Defined more broadly, the present invention is a concrete trowel to form a design into at least one edge of a poured concrete structure with the poured concrete structure having an upper surface and at least one outward edge abutting a frame having a transverse side facing the at least one outward edge of the poured concrete structure, the concrete trowel comprising: (a) a transverse lip having a transverse outer surface; (b) a multi-rounded design shaped portion having a multiplicity of aligned arcuate surface sections each having a top surface and a bottom surface and at least one area where one arcuate surface section is adjoined to an adjacent arcuate surface section, the arcuate surface sections combining to form a multi-rounded design, at least one arcuate surface section joined to the transverse lip; (c) an uppermost flat plate section having a top surface and a bottom surface, and joined to one of the arcuate surface sections at a location remote from where an arcuate surface section is joined to the transverse lip; and (d) means by which the trowel is held attached at a location on at least one upper surface of at least one arcuate surface section or on the uppermost flat plate section; (e) whereby, the concrete trowel is pressed into the wet poured concrete at the location of the outward edge such that the transverse outer surface of the transverse lip abuts the transverse side of the frame, the concrete trowel is pushed into the poured concrete to a depth such that the bottom surface of the uppermost flat plate rests on the upper surface of the poured concrete and the multiplicity of arcuate surface sections of the multi-rounded design shaped portion lie within the poured concrete, the trowel pulled or pushed through the concrete such that the design of the multiplicity of arcuate surface sections is formed into the wet concrete along the at least one outward edge and the concrete resting on the upper surfaces of the multiplicity of arcuate surface sections is discarded, leaving the decorative design formed beneath the bottom surfaces of the multiplicity of arcuate surface sections on the outward edge of the poured concrete structure.
Of course the present invention is not intended to be restricted to any particular form or arrangement, or any specific embodiment, or any specific use, disclosed herein, since the same may be modified in various particulars or relations without departing from the spirit or scope of the claimed invention hereinabove shown and described of which the apparatus or method shown is intended only for illustration and disclosure of an operative embodiment and not to show all of the various forms or modifications in which this invention might be embodied or operated.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
166666 | Walter | Aug 1875 | A |
706514 | Benninghofen | Aug 1902 | A |
774005 | Thies | Nov 1904 | A |
1144891 | Cannon | Jun 1915 | A |
1168643 | Johnson | Jan 1916 | A |
1179170 | Ferguson | Apr 1916 | A |
1564172 | Busch | Dec 1925 | A |
1744097 | Baker | Jan 1930 | A |
2097703 | Hitzman | Oct 1937 | A |
2419167 | Sanford | Apr 1947 | A |
3045271 | Cinotti | Jul 1962 | A |
3119138 | Davis | Jan 1964 | A |
3123947 | Rawley | Mar 1964 | A |
3274684 | Marks | Sep 1966 | A |
4449845 | Carrillo | May 1984 | A |
4669970 | Perry | Jun 1987 | A |
4737097 | Cotugno | Apr 1988 | A |
D296294 | Neece | Jun 1988 | S |
4766634 | DeVitis | Aug 1988 | A |
4766635 | DeVitis | Aug 1988 | A |
4892437 | Kraft | Jan 1990 | A |
D412817 | Charland | Aug 1999 | S |
6415472 | Williams | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6514067 | Suzuki et al. | Feb 2003 | B1 |
D485034 | Anderson et al. | Jan 2004 | S |
7121762 | Quenzi et al. | Oct 2006 | B2 |
7144193 | Bousfield | Dec 2006 | B1 |
20080265127 | Sladojevic et al. | Oct 2008 | A1 |