Pens and pencils and like articles are usually kept in a container or in a pocket when they are not being used. Applicant's invention is intended to overcome the lack of orderliness of prior applications by making storage easy and allowing display of pens and pencils for easy selection of particular pens and pencils.
A thin strip of material, preferably plastic, to which pens and pencils may be attached by the clip. The invention is the use of thin strip of material in conjunction with a clip attached to pens and pencils. The strip is secured in a manner that pens and pencils will, when attached by use of the pen or pencil clip, hang from the strip.
Most applications rely on a cup where a jumble of pens and pencils reside, visible only by the top thereof, making it difficult to tell whether the selection desired is a pen or pencil.
The invention is a method of affixing pens and pencils by their clip to a thin strip of material, either plastic or metal. A pedestal has two poles, or one, inserted in a manner that they rise vertically from the pedestal. The strip is affixed to the poles, or pole, so it runs parallel to the pedestal, allowing pens and pencils to be attached by their clip, thereby hanging freely for transparent display and ease of selection for use.
I made the prototype by purchasing a shallow wooden dish. I drilled two quarter inch holes in the base of the dish and at each side of the dish. I cut a ¼″ dowel to a height of about 8″ and, using a hacksaw, cut slots in the ends of the dowels to a depth of about 1″ after which I set the uncut ends into the holes drilled in the dish. I then secured a thin plastic strip, a bookmark, into the slots, secured the strip with a dab of glue, all of which took no more than five minutes.
The invention takes advantage of the prior application of the clip attached to pens and pencils. The invention holds pens and pencils for the same purpose as the clip. The invention is distinguished by the method of holding pens and pencils. Prior applications focus on storage in a container whereas applicant's invention focuses on the same principle for which the clip was designed, namely to attach a pen or pencil to a shirt pocket. The applicant's invention expands the principle by allowing for storage in a manner that displays the pen or pencil on a desktop and further allows for storage of a large number of pens and pencils at one place.