1. Field of the Invention
The invention concerns a bottle especially adapted to dispense concentrated laundry detergents and fabric softeners.
2. The Related Art
Ordinarily liquid laundry detergent products are packaged in jugs.
This packaging features an aperture defining a handle area. A consumer inserts several fingers into the aperture to grip and manipulate the jug. Illustrative is U.S. patent application Ser. No. 2005/0139568 (Unilever) disclosing a jug with a shrink-sleeve covering extending over a full outer surface, except for the handle area. A spout is fitted within a dispensing opening and coverable by an overcap.
A significant amount of liquid product must be dispensed for each load of laundry. Relatively large size jugs are needed to accommodate some reasonable number of washes per package of product. The large sizes require apertured handles for lifting and manipulation.
A new generation of concentrated liquid laundry products are entering the marketplace. The same number of laundry loads can be washed with a much smaller volume of liquid. The often-unwieldy jugs can now be downsized to smaller bottles. Apertured handles are no longer necessary nor readily engineered into the smaller sizes.
Yet even in smaller sizes, a consumer must be able to securely grip the bottle packaging. Errant drops of the viscous concentrate liquid resultant from the pouring process can cling to the sides of the dispensing bottle. A good gripping surface is needed.
Another problem in downsizing is a need for orienting cues to achieve initial correct grippage. Apertured handles in large size jugs inherently cue the user to initially correctly grip the package. Without a handle there is no ready cue. The problem is significant where a non-handle bottle is fitted with a spout. Only in one direction can the spout properly pour liquid. An overcap hides the spout. An appropriate cue is therefore necessary to immediately grip in a direction allowing pouring without further grip manipulation.
A liquid laundry product dispensing bottle is provided without a through-apertured gripping handle including:
Further advantages and features of the present invention will become more readily understood through the following drawing in which:
Now there is provided a dispensing bottle particularly suitable for concentrated liquid laundry products. Uses of the bottle are not limited but are particularly focused on either concentrated laundry washing liquids or concentrated fabric softening liquids. By the present construction, a consumer can be assured of a correct grip on the over-capped bottle. Through the cue of an angled ledge and an asymmetric body, grip becomes intuitive. Removal of the cap with the non-gripping hand exposes a spout now properly oriented with a leading edge allowing pouring in a natural manner away from the user's body. Also the spout is oriented along a less protruding sidewall panel of the bottle body. Soilage of the body by errant drops is thereby minimized.
Therein is shown a bottle body 2 covered with a cap 4. The body features a closed end 6 and an open end 8. There are two major faces on the body which are the rear and front faces. These may have information applied through embossing a plastic wall of the bottle, through an adhesive label or through shrink-wrapping essentially the entire body from open to closed end. Shrink-wrapping is preferred. Information may include trademark designation, ingredients, advertising, manufacturer identity, UPC symbol and combinations thereof.
Plastics suitable for the manufacture of bottle bodies according to the present invention include but are not limited to high-density polyethylene, low-density polyethylene, metallocene catalyzed polyolefin, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate and combinations thereof. Bottle body walls may be formed of single or multiple layers. Particularly useful are multi-layer laminates which incorporate substantial amounts of recycled plastic resin in addition to virgin resin. Normally the bottle body is formed through an extrusion or molding process. Caps and spout fitments may be extruded or molded from any of the aforementioned plastics suitable for the body.
A spout fitment 14 is secured within the neck. Therein rising upwardly is a pour spout 16. Along an uppermost perimeter of the pour spout is a leading edge 18. Optimum pouring in one direction without errant drippage is achieved by dispensing the liquid through the spout over the leading edge 18.
The body features two major faces. The first is a rear major face 20 seen in
Ordinarily a trademark 50 identifying the laundry product is placed on one or both of the major front and rear faces. As an additional cue for properly gripping the bottle, the front major face 22 is shown to solely receive the trademark. If required to also be present on the rear major face 20, the trademark on the front major face 22 will be of a larger size.
The term “comprising” is meant not to be limiting to any subsequently stated elements but rather to encompass non-specified elements of major or minor functional importance. In other words the listed steps, elements or options need not be exhaustive. Whenever the words “including” or “having” are used, these terms are meant to be equivalent to “comprising” as defined above.