Businesses use a variety of types of display structures to present products and related information to customers for purchase. These display structures support both the product and shelf-type price label holders that receive printed material indicating the product price. An example display structure includes shelf-type structures having shelf-type price label holders.
The discussion above is merely provided for general background information and is not intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
A label holder includes a base, a sign sleeve for receiving at least one printed price label and a living hinge coupling the base to the sign sleeve. The sign sleeve is defined by a main panel that is substantially planar and a return flange that is coupled to the main panel at a joined end. The return flange extends upward from the joined end and terminates at an end located along the main panel.
A shelf assembly includes a first shelf label holder coupled to a shelf-type display structure and including a pocket for receiving at least one first printed sign. The shelf assembly also includes a second shelf label holder insertably held within the pocket of the first shelf label holder. The second shelf label holder includes a rigid base, a pocket having a rigid portion coupled to a flexible flap at a joined bottom end and a flexure connecting the rigid base to the pocket of the second shelf label holder. The rigid base of the second shelf label holder is held in the pocket of the first shelf label holder behind the at least one first printed sign.
A method of altering a shelf-type display structure includes providing a first shelf label holder having a pocket that retains at least one first printed sign that is coupled to a shelf-type display structure and inserting a rigid base of a second shelf label holder into the pocket of the first shelf label holder. The second shelf label holder includes a sign sleeve coupled to the rigid base by a flexure. The sign sleeve is defined by a rigid main panel and a flexible flap joined to the substantially planar rigid main panel by a joined bottom end.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter. The claimed subject matter is not limited to implementations that solve any or all disadvantages noted in the background.
In a business, such as a retail business, certain areas in a store display products on shelf-type display structures that include shelf label holders for holding small-sized labels. For example, in a beauty department, a shelf-type display structure may display many different types of beauty products on the same shelf or many of the same beauty products on the same shelf that are differentiated only by color. Since each beauty product including each color of the same beauty products requires their own label, small-sized labels are preferred to not detract from the product being displayed. However, in some jurisdictions, these small-sized labels do not satisfy certain consumer label size requirements.
As will be described in detail below, a shelf label holder is engaged with an existing shelf label holder in an area of a business where larger-sized labels are needed. The engagement of the shelf label holder with the existing shelf label holder modifies or alters the existing shelf label holder so that larger-sized labels that meet consumer label size requirements are displayed. The shelf label holder includes a base for engagement with the existing shelf label holder, a pocket or sign sleeve for receiving at least one printed price label and a hinge or flexure that couples the base to the pocket or sign sleeve.
Shelf label holder 100 can have a variety of different lengths depending on how shelf label holder 100 is to be used. For example, shelf label holder 100 can be two or three inches in length in situations where only a single, small-sized printed label resides in an existing shelf label holder and needs to be covered to meet consumer label size requirements. In another example, shelf label holder 100 can be one, two, three or four feet in length, for example, in situations where multiple small-sized printed labels reside in an existing shelf label holder and need to be covered to meet consumer label size requirements.
As illustrated in
In one embodiment, return flange 108 is substantially flexible and is biased towards main panel or rigid portion 106. More specifically, return flange 108 is biased such that back surface 122 of return flange 108 is biased to interact with or contact a portion of front surface 116 of main panel 106. The flexible nature of return flange 108 allows return flange 108 to be rotated about joined end 110 as indicated by arrow 124 (
Base 104 extends from hinge or flexure 103 and, like main panel 106, is rigid. Base 104 terminates at end 130 and includes a front surface 132 and a back surface 134. Extending between hinge or flexure 103 and end 130, the rigid material of base 104 is wavy. Although the rigid material of base 104 does not make abrupt changes between frontward and backward directions to form its wavy shape, the rigid material of base 104 makes changes between frontward and backward directions by including a first arcuate bend 136 having a radius of curvature r that is concave relative to front surface 132, a second arcuate bend 137 having a radius or curvature r that is convex relative to front surface 132 and is connected to the first arcuate bend 136, a third arcuate bend 138 having a radius of curvature r that is concave relative to front surface 132 and is connected to the second arcuate bend 137 and a fourth arcuate bend 139 having a radius of curvature r that is convex relative to front surface 132 and is connected to the third arcuate bend 138. First arcuate bend 136, second arcuate bend 137, third arcuate bend 138 and fourth arcuate bend 139 each include radii of curvature r, which are all substantially the same.
In one embodiment, arcuate bend 136 can be directly coupled to arcuate bend 137, arcuate bend 138 can be directly coupled to arcuate bend 137 and arcuate bend 139 can be directly coupled to arcuate bend 138 so that the change in direction of arcuate bends occurs at a single point. In other embodiments, however, and in the embodiment illustrated in
Hinge or flexure 103 couples pocket or sign sleeve 102 to base 104. In one embodiment, hinge or flexure 103 is a living hinge, which is made from the same material or as the same entity as the two rigid pieces it connects and in one embodiment is thinned or cut to allow the two rigid pieces to be flexibly rotated relative to each other. For example, main panel 106 of sign sleeve 102 and base 104 are made rigid, while hinge or flexure 103 is made flexible. In this way, when base 104 is inserted into a pocket of an existing shelf label holder, hinge or flexure 103 allows sign sleeve 102 to be rotated about base 104 or about the pocket of the existing shelf label holder to which base 104 is inserted.
A living hinge is a term of art that defines a thin flexible hinge made usually from plastic, as opposed to cloth, leather, or some other substance, that joins two rigid plastic parts together. The living hinge allows the rigid plastic parts to bend relative to each other along the living hinge. Typically, living hinges are manufactured in an injection molding process that creates all three parts at one time as a single entity. The living hinge is thinned to allow for movement. Polyethylene and polypropylene are two exemplary resins for living hinges and include characteristics of excellent fatigue resistance, low cost and ease of manufacturing.
In
As clearly illustrated in
As further illustrated in
A method of altering shelf-type display structure 262 will now be described. The method includes providing first shelf label holder 200 coupled to shelf-type display structure 262. As previously described first shelf label holder 200 includes pocket 274 that retains at least one first printed sign 266. As also previously described, the method further includes base 104 of second shelf label holder 100 being inserted into pocket 274 of first shelf label holder 200 to be held in place.
Furthermore, at least one second printed sign 140 is inserted into pocket or sign sleeve 102 of second shelf label holder 100. As previously described, second printed sign 140 has a size that is greater than a size of first printed sign 266. In one embodiment, second printed sign 140 is inserted into pocket or sign sleeve 102 before base 104 of second shelf label holder 100 is inserted into pocket 274 of first shelf label holder 200. In the alternative, second printed sign 140 can be inserted into pocket or sign sleeve 102 after base 104 of second shelf label holder 100 is inserted into pocket 274 of first shelf label holder 200. With reference back to
Still further, when inserting base 104 of second shelf label holder 100 into pocket 274 of first shelf label holder 200, base 104 is inserted behind the printed price label(s) 266 that are held in pocket 274. In this way, while second shelf label holder 100 covers first printed price label(s) 266 after being inserted into pocket 274 because second printed price label(s) 140 hide first printed price label(s) 266 from view, first printed price label(s) 266 can still be accessed for viewing or for bar code scanning by rotating pocket or sign sleeve 102 of second shelf label holder 100 about base 104 of second shelf label holder 100 using hinge or flexure 103.
Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims.
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Office Action from Canadian Patent Application No. 2,842,974, mailed May 12, 2014 (2 pages). |
Pending U.S. Appl. No. 13/893,636, filed May 14, 2013, entitled Shelf Label Holder, 18 pages. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150068086 A1 | Mar 2015 | US |