This invention relates generally, but not exclusively, to a holder for markers and writing instruments including pens and pencils. Embodiments according to this disclosure are related more particularly to a novel pen and pencil holder that may be attached to many different surfaces by selecting from a variety of base plates.
Reference is made to Disclosure Document No. 539110 filed on Sep. 24, 2003, which evidences conception of the invention disclosed and claimed herein.
Many workers find that pens, pencils, or other marking instruments are required tools in their occupations. Other individuals need to use specific marking tools at certain locations from time to time. Although many people carry pens, pencils, or the like, upon their persons, in briefcases, purses, backpacks, others do not. It is more practical to locate a pen or pencil at some locations, such as at cashier locations, at bank courtesy desks, by telephones, close to lists, schedules, and near bulletin boards. In other situations, specialized marking tools may be required to properly carry out certain tasks. Some marking tools, special purpose markers, for example, may be very costly, or of little usefulness for tasks other than the procedures for which the instrument was designed. The marking tasks calling for a welder's soapstone, for instance, can seldom be carried out by other types of markers; a soapstone is rarely a good choice for any marking tasks other than those for which it was designed, marking work pieces undergoing metal fabrication.
Drafting pens and pencils may be needed at each drafting table, for example, and nowhere else. Drawing or drafting tables typically consist of a large slanted surface having few if any places to store or place the pens, pencils or other drawing tools. Because drawing or drafting tables are typically slanted, placing a pen, pencil or other implement on the table itself is impractical because the implement will frequently roll or slide off. Individuals often have accustomed themselves to particular arrangements of their drafting tables which makes it desirable to provide that a pen or pencil holder be easy to relocate. Some drawing tool organizers have been introduced, but with only limited acceptance that has developed into limited marketplace success.
Awards presentations are often made of handsome and desirable pen and pencil holders that are suited for decorative display. In other instances, they may be derived from the utmost of utilitarian origins with little or no regard paid to aesthetic considerations. In still other examples, the holder is intended to protect marking instruments from damage resulting from improper storage in addition to presenting the marker conveniently when an individual desires to put the particular object to use.
It may be of particular importance to have a certain type of marking product available at selected locations. Specific highlighter colors may be used to code interoffice mail or other documents. It may be useful to have a specific marking tool at certain locations because products that appear to be similar simply do not work. Marks made on stainless steel using a Sanford® permanent black chisel marker, for example, can remain easily discernable when exposed to temperatures exceeding 500 deg. F.; the marks (after cooling) may be removed using acetone. Many other brands of marker do not have that same combination of characteristics. When it is useful to have that (or any other special-purpose) type of marking tool easily available at the location, efficiency may be improved by providing workers with the particular devices required to apply marks having those characteristics. Doing so can reduce both worker frustration and the amount of time spent searching for the correct marking implement. Furthermore, the amount of rework may also be reduced in those instances where certain marking products are specified based on essential requirements learned through experience with other products which have been shown to be unsuitable.
One of the most common types of pen and pencil holders is a free-standing desk-type holder that is and has a slightly inclined opening into which the point of a pen or pencil may be inserted to hold the pen or pencil in readiness during periods of non-use. Ordinary desk-type pen and pencil holders require a flat horizontal surface upon which to rest. Another type of pen or pencil holder is designed for mounting only upon vertical surfaces. Still another type of pen or pencil holder has a cord to allow the holder to be suspended or hung around a user's neck.
Other workers have developed trays and receptacles adapted for resting on flat, horizontal surfaces such as desk and tabletops. Such devices may be unstable, especially if lightweight or inconveniently over-sized. In addition, they are prone to detachment from the support surface.
Likewise, organizer pouches designed for attachment to vertical surfaces such as walls have been introduced. Workers in the field have not been completely successful in the incorporation of features that yield pen and pencil holders that are both easy to relocate and also mount securely when installed at a desired location.
None of the above-mentioned pen or pencil holders is designed for ready mounting upon a wide variety of surfaces that includes most of the surfaces that are normally found in the working areas of the persons who use pens, pencils, scribes, styluses, crayons, chalk, soapstone, or other types of hand-held elongated markers. For the sake of convenience, the term “marker” will be used hereinafter to refer generally, and not by way of limitation, to marking instruments, pens, pencils, scribes, styluses, crayons, chalk, soapstone, liquid ink markers, and other examples of elongated hand-held devices for making marks.
A device that is simple to use, is of a low cost, is self-storing, requires a minimum amount of time to install, requires a minimum amount of time to remove and effectively holds a pen or pencil regardless of the orientation of the holder would be of considerable value to all individuals who use pens, pencils, or other marking instruments in their within their habitations, workplaces, and in other locations where they carry out their activities.
The multipurpose pen and pencil holder comprises a trumpet shaped cup, having a male snap-on element and a resilient insert. The trumpet shaped cup is open at the flared end of the cup and receives the resilient insert inside the cup. The resilient insert has a circular opening that is slightly smaller than the diameter of a standard pen or pencil to create an interference fit with the pen or pencil, when the pen or pencil is inserted into the holder, to hold onto the pen or pencil. The first connector portion is permanently attached to the side of the cup, half-way between the top and the bottom of the cup. The preferred embodiment of the base plate is a thin sheet of rectangular shaped material bent to form a J-shaped base plate. Resilient material is attached to the inside of the base plate to allow the base plate to be attached to a clipboard or other thin items. The base plate has a female snap-on element that is centered on the smaller of the two parts that make up the J-shaped base plate and is sized to allow it to receive the first connector portion to connect the multipurpose pen and pencil holder to the base plate.
It is the object of the invention to provide a pen and pencil holder that is effective and simple to use. Another object of the invention is to provide a pen and pencil holder that is easy to manufacture and can be manufactured at a low cost. Another object of the invention is provide a pen and pencil holder that can be attached to a variety of surfaces and effectively holds the pen or pencil regardless of the orientation of the holder. It is yet another object of the invention to provide a pen and pencil holder that can be made in a variety of colors and materials.
Still, another object of the invention is to provide a new and improved pen and pencil holder which provides some of the advantages found in the apparatuses and methods of the prior art thereof, while simultaneously overcoming some of the disadvantages normally associated therewith.
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with respect to the following description and accompanying drawings where:
Referring to the figures of the drawings, wherein like numbers of reference designate like elements throughout the several views, particularly to
The first connector portion 38 can be made from plastic, wood or metal or other materials. In such a configuration, the second connector portion would be a female element adapted to retain the first connector portion 38. It is to be understood that there is no practical difference whether the connector portion, male portion, connector receiving portion, female portion, mating element, components are mounted on the support surface or on the cup 32. It is further to be understood that some mating connectors are designed so that all connector linking and mating assembly portions are identical; new connector pairs and assemblies are introduced into the marketplace regularly. Accordingly, the connector element attached to the cup 32 will be referred to as a first connector portion or the male connector portion, and the connector portion that mates with it will be denominated the second connector portion or the female connector portion.
It is anticipated that one ordinarily desirable method of manufacturing the base plate 48 will be to form it from a _″ thick sheet of rectangle of the selected material, such as plastic or metal, that is formed into the shape of a “J”. Vacuum forming, injection molding, and extrusion may be suitable techniques for making the base plate 48 from various polymer compounds. Brake press, extrusion, roll forming, or die-casting may be useful in making the base plate 48 from metals. Sonic welding of polymer resin sheet stock and spot, resistance, e-beam, or any of the other commercially available procedures for welding or joining metal and other sheet stock materials may be employed to make the apparatus 30 by assembly of discrete components that may have differing thickness, resiliency, or other properties. It is probable that practical fabrication using metal stock would require use of material substantially thinner than _″.
The base plate 48 has a base plate top 50, a base plate bottom 52, a second connector portion (female snap-on element) 54 positioned on the base plate top 50. An optional anti-skid layer 55 may be affixed to the inner faces of the base plate top 50 and bottom 52. The base plate 48 may be described as having the shape of a “J” channel in cross-section which has a throat 56 for receiving a generally planar mounting surface at the location where it is desired to install, or mount, 1 the multiple purpose pen and pencil holder 30. A first leg 57 of the “J” bend may be shorter, longer, or equal to the length of the opposite leg of the “J” channel that forms the body of the base plate 48. Embodiments having both legs of equal length, the cross-section would have the shape of a “C” channel. It is equivalent, however for the anti-skid layer to be applied to neither, one, or both legs of the channel. It may also be possible to make the base plate 48 or portions of it from resilient materials or from materials having properties that render an anti-skid layer 55 unnecessary.
The dimensions given above and elsewhere in this disclosure are provided only to facilitate understanding of the making of what is believed to be practical and elegant embodiment and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the claims. It is to be understood that larger or smaller pen and pencil holders 30 may be made from this disclosure whenever desired for applications such as holding larger pens and pencils, holding a multiplicity of markers, or for holding smaller marking instruments.
The bottom of the J shape where the base plate top 50 is connected to the base plate bottom 52 may be ½ long. As shown in
As indicated above, the female snap-on element 34 receives the male snap-on element 16 to connect the base plate to the cup 12. The base plate top 30 and the base plate bottom 32 are attached to a bias element 40, such as a spring, such that the bias element 40 cause one end of the base plate top 30 to come in contact with one end of the base plate bottom 32 to create a clothespin type clip. This embodiment of the base plate 28 attaches the holder to large variety of surfaces by clipping the base plate 28 to the surfaces. This embodiment of the base plate 28 can also include a base plate resilient element 36, not shown, to help prevent this base plate 28 from slipping off the surface.
The biasing element 72 may readily comprised of a torsion coil spring or a leaf spring. The base plate 68 may be affixed to a support surface by positioning the support surface between the base plate bottom 52 and the clamp leg 76 and releasing the clamp handle 74.
This holder 30 is secured in position on the mounting surface by a spring clamp 70, affixed to the base plate 68. Unlike the standard base plate 48, this embodiment is readily mounted on thick surfaces or at a position removed from the edge of the mounting surface. Such an alternative embodiment modifying the standard style of base plate 48 could readily attach the holder 30 to an extensive variety of surfaces including drafting tables, desks, and the like. Such an embodiment of the base plate 68 can also include a base plate anti-skid gripping layer, coating, film, foam, gel, to reduce any propensity of the assembly to slip.
Another specific equivalent technique for securing the base plate 48 to a support surface may be implemented by affixing one part of a hook-and-loop fastener such as Velcro® to the base plate bottom 52, and affixing the corresponding component of the hook-and-loop fastener to the selected support surface. This method is convenient because hook and loop fasteners are commercially available with pressure sensitive adhesive for use in such a configuration.
Other provisions for securing the base plate 48 to a support surface may be implemented without departing from the scope of the disclosure. For example, adhesives, mechanical fasteners such as nails, screws, and rivets, spring clamps, screw clamps, and other commercially available fasteners, and their equivalents may be used to support, mount, secure, or affix a base plate that is similar to the base plate 48. By being adapted for accepting any such particular fastener or other means for affixing the base plate, such base plate embodiments are equivalent to those described in greater detail in this disclosure.
Referring now to
Changes and modifications in the specifically described embodiments can be carried out without departing from the scope of the invention, which is intended to be limited only by the scope of the appended claims.
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