This invention relates to sheeted cleaning media (such as facial tissues, napkins and wipes) and a dispenser therefore; and in particular, individually packaged sheeted cleaning media, preferably pocket sized.
This invention relates to sheeted cleaning media using the broadest classifications for such. Such media includes facial tissues, napkins and all types of wipes—for general purposes and specific purposes. The media can be dry, moist or wet; and it can be made of natural, synthetic or compositions of natural and synthetic materials. The invention is anticipated to have wide use as pocket facial tissues, wipes, moist wipes, and wet wipes; and embodiments of these will be described in more detail. The word “tissue” will be used to mean a sheeted cleaning medium, using the broadest classifications for such, unless it is further described (for example, “facial tissue”), or used in the context of what is being described.
Generally, sheeted cleaning media have been packaged in multi-packs, partially for a manufacturer's practicality and economics. The only known exceptions to this are individually packaged wet wipes and medical gauze. The handkerchief is a single sheeted cleaning medium, and had been widely used prior to the appearance of facial tissues. The handkerchief is usually made of cloth and is nicely sized for facial use, but provides no container for storage (either for clean or soiled conditions). However, handkerchiefs are large so a soiled portion can be wrapped within clean sections of the cloth, thereby allowing the handkerchief to be returned to ones pocket without worry of soil transfer to the pocket. Rather than being disposed of like current facial tissues, it's to be laundered after use. The popularity of the handkerchief has diminished over the years, as facial tissues have offered an inexpensive and disposable alternative.
Pocket packs of facial tissues were made for people to carry with them, and to take along when away from home or office. However, facial tissues are much smaller in size than the handkerchief, and therefore do not have the same quantity of material for use, or for wrap-up protection for re-pocketing after use. This often causes more than one tissue to be used. The packages are also bulky to carry, and provide no storage space for the used tissue. Therefore, people do not often carry pocket facial tissue multi-packs, as they are rather large for a pocket and may be needed only on infrequent occasions. Hence, they often fail the real need. Often, loose tissues are carried for convenience instead. Paper napkins are also carried as a substitute for facial tissues, and as a general-purpose wipe. In these instances again, there is no storage means for the clean or used tissue. Dirt, dust and dyes can accumulate on tissues while pocketed, and fibers from the tissue can become loosened and dislodged. Re-pocketing after use may cause more severe material transfers, and often from the soiled tissue fibers to ones pocket.
The only known facial tissue products on the market today are multi-packs. The pocket facial tissue multi-packs typically contain 15 or more tissues. One of the most common and smaller packages is approximately 1″ thick, 2½″ wide, and 4½″ long. The Kleenex® brand by Kimberly-Clark Corporation (Neenah, Wis.) is possibly the most widely used product of this type. These packages supply more than an adequate quantity of tissues. When pocket tissue multi-packs are used, a tissue is removed from a thin plastic film container (or, over-wrap) for use. The tissues are folded into rectangles and are dispensed from the container by lifting an edge of a tissue that lays flat against a folded side of the tissue from within the container; or by removing the entire tissue from the container first. If one is able to grasp and pull the edge that lays flat against the tissue, the tissue may open up pretty much on it's own when slightly shaken. However, often times the entire tissue is removed first, and one then needs to unfold it about two times in one direction and another two times in a different direction to arrive at the full-sized tissue. The Puffs to Go® brand of tissue by Puffs (Dist. by Procter & Gamble, Cincinnati, Ohio) has a tissue that will open up pretty much on its own when removed from the package, with a good hand position on the tissue for use. It is folded similar to the Kleenex® brand with one less fold and has a grasping edge that is positioned differently in the container, but also lays flat against the tissue. The package is also larger, approximately 1″ thick, 4″ wide and 5″ long. This is a large package to carry for occasional tissue use, and is basically a full hand-size to hold. Often, these multi-packs are not even carried on an individual, but rather are placed in a car, travel bag, or large purse. Typically then, the multi-pack cannot be held comfortably while a tissue is being used, and is put down or placed back in ones pocket, purse, bag, or car before a tissue is used. Therefore, upon removal and use of a tissue, one has both the multi-pack and the soiled tissue to re-pocket or re-store. That's now two items, to handle and carry. Also, the items are usually separated from each other by using different pockets, or sections of one's purse, bag, or car. After half or more of the multi-pack's tissues have been used, handling of the package becomes increasingly awkward as the tissues become loose in an increasingly oversized package. It's most awkward with the last few remaining tissues.
Several wet wipe and moist wipe products use plastic film containers that can be resealed. These typically hold about 10 to 30 wipes. The smallest known container for such wet wipe products (multi-pack form) approximates the size of a pocket facial tissue multi-pack, as previously described. These packages have similar drawbacks to the pocket facial tissue packs, but also often dry out before all the wipes are used.
The current availability of individually packaged tissue is extremely limited. No individually packaged consumer facial tissue or dry wipe is known to be available. The closest known product is sterile gauze used in medical applications. In this instance, the sterile gauze is often contained between two flat sheets of a medical grade paper, or a medical grade paper-like plastic such as Tyvek® brand of spun-bonded olefin made by DuPont (Wilmington, Del.).
Individually packaged wet wipes are available. However, these wipes are uncomfortably sized and folded, and are sandwiched between two sheets of a laminate of metal foil and plastic film. The package must be torn open to arrive at the wipe. The wipe, which had been folded into a small rectangle, must then be unfolded. One of the more popular products of this type is the Wet Ones® brand of “Singles” moist wipes, distributed by Playtex Products, Inc. (Dover, Del.). The package is designed for tearing open at a small cut that has been placed into an edge approximately 40% of the way in. One must then grab the folded wipe and remove it from the package. Before explaining the unfolding of the Wet Ones® wipe, it's perhaps best to describe how it was folded. A rectangular wipe is folded back and forth (zigzag) along its width and flattened so that the wipe is approximately a fifth of the original width. The wipe is now the same length, but narrower. Next, this long folded wipe is folded in the middle to make it half as long, and then folded approximately in half again to make it about a quarter of the original length. The result is a rectangular shaped folded wipe approximately one-fifth the original width and about one-fourth the original length of the wipe. To unfold, one opens two folds to arrive at the full length of the wipe, and then picks the edges from the sides to pull open the width. If the outermost edges of the wipe had not been picked and pulled, then only a section of the wipe had been unfolded and it becomes necessary to unfold or pick at these edges again. As these edges lay flat against a folded side of the moist wipe, they can be difficult to peel up, grasp and use to pull open the wipe. As this folded wipe is fairly long, one then typically needs to assist the unfolding of the other portions of the wipe by using ones other fingers as well, or by grasping and pulling the wipe in a different location. All of this, to open and use a wipe, requires a bit of effort.
What is common with all the aforementioned products is that the edge of the tissue that one needs to pull to remove or to unfold the tissue, lays flat against a folded side of the tissue making it difficult to grasp and unfold. Moist wipes and wet wipes are especially difficult to open.
In the selection of pocket facial tissues and wipes, size, convenience, and ease of use are all extremely important. It should fit easily within a pocket, while leaving room for other things. It should be easy to use, with a tissue that quickly and easily dispenses from a container and unfolds by itself, or almost by itself. It should be new and clean, and in a standardized form. After the tissue has been soiled, there should be somewhere to store it, as a means of disposal may not be nearby. It should also be inexpensive, and an item that can be readily asked for and exchanged in public when needed. This invention describes such an article and method. Accordingly, several objects and advantages of the present invention are:
a.) to provide an article that is much smaller than current pocket multi-tissue packs as it contains only a single tissue. Thus, one or more of these items can be easily carried on an individual. This is especially convenient for social events, outdoor activities, and public places such as churches, libraries, and waiting areas.
b.) to provide an article that can be displayed for complimentary use at establishments, similar to displays of business cards, matches, toothpicks, and packets of condiments. Several examples of these establishments might include restaurants, hotels, and funeral homes.
c.) to provide an article that upon which advertisement such as company names and logos, and artistic designs may be printed or placed for promotional or fanciful purposes. Several promotional uses may include gift packages, trade show giveaways, and complementary items at establishments and sponsored events.
d.) to provide an article and method for more quickly removing a tissue from a closed container. Unlike prior art, embodiments of the present invention allow for a tissue to be removed from a container without a separate step of opening the initial closed container.
e.) to provide an article and method for a tissue unfolding on its own or with only minimal assistance.
f.) to provide an article and method for a tissue to dispense close to the hand position normally used during tissue use, so that repositioning of the tissue before use is minimized.
g.) to provide an article and method for a small, thin, and flexible container to be brought up to ones face along with a tissue, during facial tissue use. This allows for more immediate use of a tissue with fewer handling steps.
h.) to provide an article and method that offers a solution to the unsolved need of “Where to put the soiled tissue?” by providing a means of storage for the used tissue, and thus providing for more sanitary handling prior to final disposal. Additionally, the container can be made to both close and re-seal, so as to fully confine the used tissue.
i.) to provide an article and method for simultaneously reducing the bulk and handling steps (for use) of a pocket tissue product.
j.) to provide an article that is an inexpensive and disposable alternative to the handkerchief, with additional enhanced features, while maintaining a similar or more reduced size.
k.) to provide an article that makes exchanging a tissue in public more common and acceptable. One would feel more comfortable requesting a tissue in public, as one would be asking for a standardized item with known quality and sanitary condition. Likewise, a provider of the article will also feel more comfortable in providing a tissue, as this is now in a known form, and is both useful to others and of little expense. The article may also provide the recipient with a means of storage for the used tissue, which is especially useful, as often in public a means of disposal is not readily available.
Further objects and advantages of this invention will become apparent from a consideration of the drawings and ensuing description.
The present invention provides a sheeted cleaning medium (such as a facial tissue, napkin or wipe) and typical dispenser for easily dispensing the sheeted cleaning medium and, in an embodiment, a means of storage for the soiled sheeted cleaning medium. The article comprises a sheeted cleaning medium (such as a tissue, napkin or wipe), a member attached to the sheeted cleaning medium, and a typically hand-sized or pocket-sized container. Advertising and/or logos may be applied to the container surface for promotional purposes. The member is preferably both internally and externally exposed from the container and provides a means of opening the container and dispensing the sheeted cleaning medium. The sheeted cleaning medium may be dry, moist or wet; and in embodiments may unfold upon dispensing or with minimal assistance such as a shake of the hand, or by way of pulling a protruding area of the folded sheeted cleaning medium.
a is a plan view of a backside of the container of
b is a plan view of a backside of the container of
c is a plan view of a backside of the container of
d is a plan view of a front side of the container of
a is a plan view of the tissue of
b is a perspective view of the tissue of
c is a perspective view of the tissue of
d is a perspective view of the tissue of
a is a plan view depicting a single piece member/container package.
b is a perspective view of the member/container package of
c is a plan view of the assembly of
a is a perspective view of an embodiment of a member attached to a wipe and showing typical fold lines.
b is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
c is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
d is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
e is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
a is a plan view of an alternate embodiment of the present invention depicting a wipe assembly sandwiched between two sheets of packaging film.
b is a plan view of an alternate embodiment of
a is a plan view of a backside of the container of
b is a perspective view of a backside of the container of
c is a plan view of a backside of the container of
d is a plan view of a front side of the container 20 of
a-d describes one possible method of constructing a tissue assembly for use in this invention. This is the presently preferred method, as the tissue unfolds rather easily upon being dispensed by the member.
a is a plan view of the tissue 26 shown in
b is a perspective view of the tissue 26 of
c is a perspective view of the tissue 26 of
d is a perspective view of the tissue 26 of
The unfolding of the tissue 26 occurs as an expansion of the horizontal and vertical “wave forms” that were earlier formed and compressed (during the folding steps
A presently preferred embodiment of the container 20 is one that is constructed of such materials and design so as to provide one with a comfortable feeling for allowing the container 20 to remain in ones hand while the tissue 26 is being used. One such material may be a thin flexible plastic film such as made of polyethylene, as was previously mentioned.
A description of a typical operation of this presently preferred embodiment of the invention may include the following steps:
a.) Hold the container in one hand with the member facing you, and with the lid located at the top end of the container;
b.) Dispense the tissue by pulling the member upward toward the top end of the container, thereby opening the container and removing the tissue;
c.) Grasp the nearest edge of the tissue by the member, and if necessary, shake the tissue using a downward and upward stroke of the hand (Or, shake with the member and then grab the nearest edge of the tissue);
d.) Use tissue (The container at this time would preferably remain held in the same hand as in step a. above.);
e.) Grasp the lid of the container with the thumb and forefinger of the hand holding it, and reinsert the soiled tissue (One may use a secondary holding position of the container after re-insertion has begun as well, for a two step insertion process; or just use the secondary method. A secondary method is shown in
f.) Close and re-seal container; and
g.) Place the used article of the present invention back in one's pocket, or other area desired, until a more proper means of disposal becomes available.
Notice the present invention allows for easier dispensing and more immediate use of a tissue than currently available products. The tissue can be removed directly without first opening the container as a separate step. In the embodiment shown, the tissue comes out fully open (or fully opened with a slight shake of the hand), and with the hand positioned at or near to that desired for use. Also, in the shown embodiment, the container allows for easy re-insertion of the soiled tissue (1 item again). Thus, the soiled tissue is not directly placed into a pocket, purse or bag, or on something, but rather, it's confined and re-packaged so as not to wet or soil something else. All is done easily with two hands, without placing a container down as is most often done with multi-packs of tissues. One hand could easily hold the container of the present invention throughout the process of dispensing, tissue use and re-storage.
Alternate embodiments of a member may include a loop of material where both ends of the material are attached to the tissue; or may include a rigid, semi-rigid, multi-component, or multi-compositional member, such as a rigid component with a flexible seal.
An alternate embodiment of the present invention may use a single piece member-container, as shown in
a is a plan view of a member-container 40 whereby a member portion 48 of the member-container 40 may be separated from the member-container 40 by a weakened area 50 such as perforations, as is shown. One end of the member portion 48 is shown attached to a lid 42.
b is a perspective view of the member-container 40 of
c is a plan view of the sealed member-container 40 with folded tissue 26 enclosed, and a section of the member portion 48 exposed. When the member portion 48 is pulled in an upward direction toward the opposite end of the lid 42 from the member portion 48, the member-container 40 opens and the member portion 48 separates from the lid 42 by separating along the weakened area 50.
An alternate embodiment of the present invention that may be useful for moist wipe and wet wipe applications is shown in
a is a perspective view of a wipe assembly comprised of a wipe 60 and attached member 62. The member 62 can be made of an injection molded plastic or elastomer material. The member 62 may also be comprised of more than one component, such as an injection molded plastic with rubber seal. The member 62 could be attached anywhere on the wipe 60, however a location near a corner or edge is preferred. The wipe 60 has multiple vertical fold lines 64, and a single horizontal fold line 66. The multiple vertical fold lines 64 have created multiple sections 68 of equal (or near equal) area with one exception, section 70 which is larger and furthest from the member 62.
b is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
c is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
d is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
e is a perspective view of the wipe assembly of
The example provided by
Additional alternate embodiments of the present invention that may be particularly useful for moist and wet wipe applications are shown in
a is a plan view of the frontal view of the wipe 60, folded as shown in
b is a plan view of the container 80 and wipe 60 as shown in
As the above embodiments show, the use of a member greatly enhances the operability of present single moist and wet wipe products, making the dispensing and unfolding of the wipe easy. Likewise, a single tissue product now becomes practical and advantageous, with similar ease of dispensing and unfolding.
While various embodiments of the invention have been disclosed and described herein, it may be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope thereof.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/694,040 filed Jun. 24, 2005 by the present inventor, Gregg R. Rapala.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60694040 | Jun 2005 | US |