The Stay Snapped Suspender 1 is an invention which addresses suspender clasps. The USPT office classification is Class DO2 subclass 626. Suspenders often come loose when the wearer sits down especially in a vehicle. Many people think this is caused by the cloth pulling out from the suspender clasp. As witness to this the Holdup Suspender Company makes a clasp that has a spear that penetrates the cloth and Mars Suspender Company has a clasp that grips the cloth very hard. This is not what happens. Ask wearers how often they find the clasp closed when the suspenders have come loose. The clasp is nearly always open. I have a set of suspenders that I purchased from the Walmart. If I close the clasp on even a thin piece of cloth like a handkerchief it is very hard to pull loose by hand.
Commonly used suspenders are frequently made with three plates hinged together. The bottom and middle plates are toothed. The top plate serves as a lever to force the middle toothed plate toward the bottom plate. What happens when suspenders become loose when a wearer is moving across a surface such as a vehicle seat or sliding across a couch is that the free end of the top lever-plate is lifted by friction between the plate and the seat back or couch. This invention redesigns the clasp by forming a side or sides of the middle plate turned upward and extending above the top plate on one or both sides, when the clasp is closed. This holds the top plate away from the surface the wearer is sliding across so as to prevent the surface from contacting the top plate and opening the clasp.
Commonly used suspenders are frequently made with three plates hinged together [see
Provisional Application number U.S. 61/690,179 as filed Jun. 21, 2012 with title Suspender buckle. Also related to Provisional Application number U.S. 61/744,586 as filed Oct. 01, 2012 with title Unknown Statement Regarding Federally Sponsored Research or Development (not applicable) Reference to Sequence Listing, a Table or a Computer Program Listing Compact Discs Appendix (not applicable)