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The present invention provides a hutch for displaying goods in a retail environment that can be folded into a flat position and moved to an erect position. The hutch can be shipped in the flat position and pressed by hand into the erect position by an end user without the use of tools, glue or tape. The hutch can also be folded back into a flat position for ease of storage, disposal and recycling.
Point of purchase displays are widely used for sale of products in a retail environment. Some displays are made from paperboard material and are lightweight. Often-times paperboard displays are used during a short promotional period of time where the displayed items are sold at reduced prices. After the promotional period, the display can be disposed of or recycled. Point of purchase displays often are carried to a retail location by a sales staff member, erected on site and loaded with products for sale. This requires considerable time and effort and expense for the product seller. Notwithstanding, such displays are utilized as they typically are effective for bringing attention to the products and allows for setting the displayed products apart from other products on large shelving units.
The present invention provides a fold flat assembly capable of being erected into a display hutch having a shell and a tray assembly attached to an inner surface of the shell. The shell has opposed side walls spaced from one another and each having a front edge and a rear edge. A back panel connects the rear edges and a plurality slats connect portions of the front edges of the opposing side walls and are spaced from one another defining gaps between adjacent slats. The shell is moveable between a flat position and an erect position. The tray assembly has a peripheral wall and a bottom wall. The peripheral wall is connected to the back panel, the opposed side walls and one of the slats of the plurality of slats. The bottom wall is connected by a first hinge to a segment of the peripheral wall. The tray assembly folds flat within the shell and a portion of the bottom wall extends into the gap when the shell is in the flat position, and the bottom wall forms a shelf, spanning from the one slat to the back panel, when the shell is in the erect position.
Other aspects of the invention are shown in the Figures and are described herein.
To understand the present invention, it will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings and attachments in which:
While this invention is susceptible of embodiments in many different forms, there is shown in the drawings and will herein be described in detail preferred embodiments of the invention with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as an exemplification of the principles of the invention and is not intended to limit the broad aspect of the invention to the embodiments illustrated.
The shell 12 has an inner surface 20 and opposed side walls 22 spaced from one another. Each side wall 22 has a front edge 24 and a rear edge 26. A back panel 30 connects to the rear edges 26 along a fold line 28 and a plurality of slats 32 connect portions of the front edges 24 of the opposing side walls 22 and are spaced from one another defining gaps 34 between adjacent slats. When the assembly 10 is oriented vertically as shown in
The tray assembly 14 or tray assemblies are connected to the inner surface 20 of the shell by glue or tape. The hutch is shown with two tray assemblies but the hutch could have from one tray assembly to say 10 tray assemblies, for example. As best seen in
The bottom wall 42 is generally rectangular in shape and is connected to the peripheral wall along a fold line or hinge 46. Opposite of the fold line 46, the bottom wall 42 has a forward edge 48 and a tab 49 generally centrally disposed thereon. The tab 49 is dimensioned to fit within a slot 50 cut through a segment of the peripheral wall. The bottom wall forms a shelf for supporting products on display spanning from the slat 32 to the back panel 30. When the tray assembly 14 is in the flat position, a portion of the bottom wall 42 extends above an upper edge of the slat 32 and into the gap 34 as is shown in
The flap 44 is generally rectangular in shape and is connected along a fold line or hinge 52 that depends from an opposing segment of the peripheral wall 40 from the hinge 46 from which the bottom wall 42 depends. The bottom wall 42 and the flap 44 are moved between the flat position and the erect position with the assistance of the corner flanges 56 and in response to pressure applied to the opposed side walls 22 inwardly of the hutch 10 by a user of the hutch.
The corner flanges 56 are attached by a hinge or fold line 57 to opposed segments of the peripheral wall that form vertically upstanding opposed end walls 59 when the hutch is in an erect position. The corner flanges 56 have a diagonally extending fold line 58 dividing the corner flange into two generally triangular shaped segments 60 and 62.
As is shown in
As used herein, directional terms such as left/right, top/bottom, vertical, etc. are used with regard to the invention as shown in the figures or as normally positioned in use. They are not meant to limit the invention to a particular position.
Many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood within the scope of the appended claims the invention may be protected otherwise than as specifically described.
The present invention claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Nos. 62/524,087 filed Jun. 23, 2017 and 62/546,940, filed Aug. 17, 2017, the contents of which are incorporated in their entirety herein by reference and made a part hereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62524087 | Jun 2017 | US | |
62546940 | Aug 2017 | US |