The invention broadly relates to devices for holding and displaying pictorial items, such as pictures, photographs, and the like.
Devices for holding and displaying pictures, photographs, and the like are well known. For example, picture frames and lockets are commonly used to hold and display pictures. Picture frames are generally effective at holding and displaying a wide assortment of pictures. However, picture frames suffer from the drawback that they generally are adapted to display pictures held therein in only one or two directions. Lockets, while effective at holding small pictures, suffer from the drawback that the pictures held therein are not easily viewable due to their small size.
Thus, there is a longfelt need for a device which is adapted to hold and display pictures in more than two directions. There is also a longfelt need for a device which is adapted to hold and display small pictures such that the pictures are easily viewable.
Broadly, the present invention is a photo display device comprising: a top portion; a bottom portion having an upper surface and a cuboid member extending upwardly from the upper surface; a middle portion comprising: a translucent material; a lateral outer surface having an elliptical curvature; a cuboid inner chamber defined by an inner surface and adapted to receive the cuboid member therein, wherein the top portion, the middle portion, and the bottom portion are adapted to be assembled as the photo display device such that the top portion rests upon the middle portion and the middle portion rests upon the bottom portion, and wherein the photo display device is adapted to hold at least one substantially planar item between the cuboid member and the inner surface, and the middle portion is adapted to magnify the at least one substantially planar item when held between the cuboid member and the inner surface.
Preferably, the photo display device is adapted to hold four substantially planar items between the cuboid member and the inner surface, and the middle portion is adapted to magnify each of the four substantially planar items when held between the cuboid member and the inner surface.
In one aspect of the invention, the photo display device produces a unique visual effect wherein pictorial items held between the cuboid member and the middle portion seem to appear and disappear as a user rotates the photo display device while viewing it. Such unique visual effect is produced by the cuboid arrangement of the lateral inner surfaces relative to the elliptical outer surface of the middle portion.
It is a general object of the present invention to provide a photo display device adapted to hold, display, and magnify four pictorial items in four different directions.
It is another object of the present invention to provide such a photo display device which produces a visual effect wherein each of the four pictorial items held and displayed seem to appear and disappear as a user rotates the photo display device while viewing it.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be readily appreciable from the following description of preferred embodiments of the invention and from the accompanying drawings and claims.
The nature and mode of operation of the present invention will now be more fully described in the following detailed description of the invention taken with the accompanying drawing figures of an exemplary embodiment thereof, in which:
At the outset, it should be appreciated that like drawing numbers on different drawing views identify identical, or functionally similar, structural elements of the invention. While the present invention is described with respect to what is presently considered to be the preferred aspects, it is to be understood that the invention as claimed is not limited to the disclosed aspects.
Furthermore, it is understood that this invention is not limited to the particular methodology, materials and modifications described and as such may, of course, vary. It is also understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular aspects only, and is not intended to limit the scope of the present invention, which is limited only by the appended claims.
Unless defined otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood to one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs. It should be appreciated that the term “spheroid” when used herein refers to a solid figure bounded by a quadric surface obtained by rotating an ellipse about one of its principal axes, a sphere being a spheroid generated by rotating a circle about its diameter. Accordingly, a spheroid may be: prolate (elongated) if the generating ellipse is rotated about its major axis; oblate (flattened) if the generating ellipse is rotated about its minor axis; or, spherical if the generating ellipse is a circle. Thus, it should be appreciated that, generally, the outer surface of any spheroid body has an elliptical curvature, the outer surface of a sphere having the curvature of a circle, i.e., an arcuate curvature.
It should also be appreciated that the term “spheroid cap” when used herein refers to a portion of a spheroid cut off by a plane passing through the spheroid perpendicularly to the axis about which the generating ellipse is rotated. Additionally, the term “spherical cap” when used herein refers to a portion of a sphere cut off by a plane passing through the sphere, and a spherical cap may be formed by a “small circle”, which is the circle constructed by a plane passing through the sphere at any location other than the center of the sphere.
Additionally, the term “cuboid” refers to a polyhedron comprising six faces (hexahedron), each of which is a rectangle, a cube being a cuboid wherein each rectangle is a square.
The term “total internal reflection” refers to an optical phenomenon which occurs when a ray of light strikes a medium boundary at an angle larger than the critical angle with respect to the normal to the surface. If the refractive index is lower on the other side of the boundary no light can pass through, so effectively all of the light is reflected. The term “critical angle” refers to the angle of incidence above which the total internal reflection occurs.
The terms “front”, “back”, “left”, and “right”, “top”, “bottom”, and “lateral”, when used herein, are relative terms meant to refer to the viewing perspective of the elements shown in the figures. For example, a “lateral surface” refers to a surface provided by a side of an object, as opposed to the top or bottom.
The present invention photo display device generally comprises a top portion, a bottom portion, and a middle portion. The top portion, middle portion, and bottom portion are adapted to be assembled as the photo display device, such that the top portion rests upon the middle portion, and the middle portion rests upon the bottom portion. The bottom portion includes an upper surface and a cuboid member extending upwardly from the upper surface. The middle portion comprises a translucent material, an outer surface having an elliptical curvature, and a cuboid inner chamber. The cuboid inner chamber is adapted to receive the cuboid member of the bottom portion. The photo display device is adapted to hold a substantially planar item, such as a pictorial item, between the cuboid member and the inner surface of the middle portion, and the middle portion is operatively arranged to magnify the substantially planar item. In one general embodiment of the invention, the photo display device is substantially spheroid having an elliptical outer surface. In a more particular embodiment, the photo display device is substantially spherical having an arcuate outer surface.
The following description is best understood in view of
As shown in
As shown in
Bottom portion 160 includes cuboid member 167 extending upwardly from upper surface 164. Cuboid member 167 is preferably hollow, to allow string 105 to pass through, and may include hollow column 169 therein. Column 169 includes bore 168 and its interior is accessible through aperture 163 arranged in lower surface 162. As shown in
Cuboid member 167 comprises first lateral face 167a, second lateral face 167b, third lateral face 167c, fourth lateral face 167d, and top edge 167e, and is adapted to be inserted within inner chamber 150 of middle portion 140, as described below.
Middle portion 140 comprises a translucent material, such as glass or acrylic, and includes top surface 141, bottom surface 139, lateral outer surface 142, and inner chamber 150. Top surface 141 preferably includes upper annular shoulder 143, upon which annular surface 125 of top portion 120 is adapted to rest. Top surface 141 may also include first aperture 146a, second aperture 146b, and third aperture 146c. As described above, first and second apertures, 146a and 146b, are adapted to received first and second members, 127a and 127b, respectively, such that first and second toothed ends, 129a and 129b, are disposed against top inner surface 147e of middle portion 140, thereby securing top portion 120 to middle portion 140, as shown in
Cuboid inner chamber 150 is defined by at least first inner lateral surface 147a, second inner lateral surface 147b, third inner lateral surface 147c, and fourth inner lateral surface 147d, and may be further defined by top inner surface 147e. Each of first, second, third, and fourth inner lateral surfaces, 147a, 147b, 147c, and 147d, may be substantially planar or slightly concave. Cuboid inner chamber is accessible via rectangular aperture 151 arranged in bottom surface 139, and is adapted to receive cuboid member 167 therein.
Cuboid member 167 and inner chamber 150 are adapted such that when cuboid member 167 is arranged within inner chamber 150, first lateral face 167a faces first inner lateral surface 147a, second lateral face 167b faces second inner lateral surface 147b, third lateral face 167c faces third inner lateral surface 147c, and fourth lateral face 167d faces fourth inner lateral surface 147d. Additionally, cuboid member 167 and inner chamber 150 are adapted to hold a substantially planar item between each lateral face facing an inner lateral surface. For example, as shown in
The middle portion of the present invention includes a lateral outer surface having an elliptical curvature. For example, middle portion 140 includes lateral outer surface 142 having an arcuate curvature. Since each of first, second, third, and fourth inner lateral surfaces, 147a, 147b, 147c, and 147d, may be substantially planar or slightly concave, and outer surface 142 has an elliptical curvature, each inner later surface forms a plano-convex lens or a positive meniscus lens with outer surface 142, depending on whether the inner lateral surface is substantially planar or slightly concave. Accordingly, middle portion 140 is adapted to magnify a pictorial item held between a lateral face facing an inner lateral surface, as shown in
The middle portion's arrangement of four inner lateral surfaces and elliptical outer surface also provides a novel visual effect involving the aforementioned magnification and the optical phenomenon of total internal reflection. Total internal reflection is an optical phenomenon that occurs when a ray of light strikes a medium boundary at an angle larger than the critical angle with respect to the normal to the surface. If the refractive index is lower on the other side of the boundary no light can pass through, so effectively all of the light is reflected. For example, total internal reflection will occur when passing from glass to air, but not when passing from air to glass. The critical angle is the angle of incidence above which the total internal reflection occurs.
The following description of the aforementioned novel visual effect is best understood in the views of
In
In particular,
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
It should be appreciated that the aforementioned obscuring of pictorial items held between the cuboid member and the middle portion by the total internal reflection provides a unique visual effect wherein images seem to appear and disappear as a user rotates the photo display device while viewing it. Such unique visual effect is produced by the cuboid arrangement of the lateral inner surfaces relative to the elliptical outer surface of the middle portion. It should also be appreciated that the aforementioned magnification and reflection is not demonstrated in
Thus, it is seen that the objects of the present invention are efficiently obtained, although modifications and changes to the invention should be readily apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art, which modifications are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention as claimed. It also is understood that the foregoing description is illustrative of the present invention and should not be considered as limiting. Therefore, other embodiments of the present invention are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention.
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