(not applicable.)
This invention has an application in garments for both women and men, especially for garments which use buttons to close dress shirts and in particular for persons or occasions which may require the use of cufflinks. Though the invention herein is developed with reference to the accessory's use in cuffs of blouses and shirts as a cufflink to adorn buttonholes, its application in any other part of the garment which has a button and buttonhole closing arrangement is envisioned.
The button and buttonhole closing arrangement is the one most widely used in shirts and other garments. It is easy and economical and it is a part of the garment. However, it is a common element which generally attracts no attention and whose only function is to provide closing, but does not serve as an ornament for the garment.
On the other hand, cufflinks have existed in the market for a long time. They can be viewed as adornments which perform the closing function, especially in cuffs, but which require the latter to have a special design with holes on both sides of the cuff and no buttons. Garments designed specifically for cufflinks are usually more formal and more expensive, since the use of adornments and accessories is not always appropriate for all occasions. Their cuffs are made with a second hole instead of a button and their ends converge to meet each other in such a way as to align the holes, unlike the button and buttonhole arrangement in which the end with the hole overlaps the end which bears the button in order to close the cuff.
In between these two closing and ornamentation systems, there is also the idea of disguising ordinary buttons with detachable elements designed to simulate cufflinks. Different kinds of these button covers have been designed, as is described in U.S. Pat. No. 3,342,250, which shows a button cover with a clip on the back to be hooked under a button previously passed through a buttonhole, or U.S. Pat. No. 4,539,731 and No. 4,817,249, for button covers whose back is comprised of a box or chest into which to insert the button that previously passed through the hole. In addition, U.S. Pat. No. 5,161,285 is related to a button cover which has a safety device to prevent its accidentally falling off and being lost.
Finally, U.S. Pat. No. 6,618,908 alludes to a cufflink for a sports shirt which is actually attached like a button cover. However, a button cover is not the same as a cufflink, nor does it perform the closing function—which is performed by the button. It is a simple adornment that is hooked onto the button once the union between the hole and the button has been made, concealing the button underneath the box or chest on which the adornment is hooked. In the aesthetic sphere as well, there are substantial differences between cufflinks and button covers, most importantly the fact that the former are more attractive because the adornment is almost at the height of the garment while button covers are inevitably raised by the height of the button.
This invention's purpose is to meet the functional needs of cuff closure and combine the economic advantages of buttons with the aesthetic and formal benefits of cufflinks in a practical and innovative way.
According to this invention, this as well as other objectives and advantages are achieved with a garment accessory that has a button and buttonhole and also has a decorative element resembling a cufflink, joined to an attacher element that passes through the buttonhole and is then anchored in the button, with the special feature that the button is not closed. This makes it possible to maintain the decorative element almost at the same height as the garment and to close the cuff while giving the appearance and impression of its being a cufflink, except if attention is paid to the fact that the cuff's ends do not converge face-to-face but overlap each other.
The form in which these and other objectives and advantages of the invention are achieved in practice is more clearly envisioned by making reference to the following detailed description, taking it as an example—which is in no way limiting—of the invention's preferred results, as well as to the drawings that accompany it, in which:
Given the nature of this invention, the drawings are effective to show many of the innovative features which come together and reinforce each other to confer true structural and functional relevance to the pseudo-cufflink accessory for shirt or blouse cuffs.
The wire material can be φ9 mm of any kind of metal with memory, such as gold, silver, bronze, copper, aluminum, etc., or of any alloy containing at least one of them, or of any plastic material which is strong and flexible.
The realization illustrated in
As in the other realizations, the pseudo-cufflink accessory (11C) has a tongue (13C) on which a decorative piece similar to a cufflink is mounted, a perpendicular section (17C) which will pass through the hole, and a fork (21C) designed to easily pass beneath the button (27) without getting caught in the thread with which the button is sewn onto the shirt or blouse.
Finally, the accessory comprising the invention can be manufactured with a textile or analogous material, such as thread, shoelace, elastic or mix, as is illustrated in
Some realizations thereof have been described for illustrative purposes, clearly showing the innovative combination of features such as the anchoring mechanism attached to the button, passing through the anchor of the buttonhole and not the button, which is unbuttoned, while the decorative element is sustained at the same height on the other side of the buttonhole as in a cufflink. That is the origin of the “pseudo-cufflink” or “similar to a cufflink” terminology used to describe the accessory comprising this invention. It is expected that experts in the field will be able to think of changes and variations in the forms described above without departing from the invention's spirit and scope.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
P050102593 | Jun 2005 | AR | national |