An identifying tag more specifically a technology for impermanent and attractive marking of stemware.
At most social gatherings, the guests are served beverages in vessels, such as wine glasses, snifters, beer steins, or even mugs (by way of non-limiting example). Except where guests are seated at specific locations on one or several tables, and by extension, their vessels and tables settings will remain proximate to their seating location; the very act of mingling presents the opportunity to confuse the vessels. In the course of such a gathering, guests may not hold on to their vessel throughout the evening and in many cases, because the vessels are identical or nearly identical to each other, there is a risk of confusing and exchanging vessels.
The possibility of confusing the vessels can have a subtle but real effect of causing guests to use more vessels than necessary. Because of the possibility that vessels may have been confused, guests often get a new glass when they forget where they left their original drinking vessel or where guests have placed several in proximity one to another. In addition to those vessels then in use, there may also be several empty or partially filled drinking vessels at the venue. Thus, when hosting a social gathering, the hosts must provide a supply of drinking vessels to be abandoned in the course of the gathering. Unfortunately, the exact number may vary and therefore hosts are well advised to prepare with even more vessels and to do so increases the expense or might occasion the collection and washing of vessels during the course of the event, taking the host away from other duties.
Naturally, guests would rather not inadvertently pick up a drinking vessel believing it to be their own to find they have been drinking out of a drinking vessel previously used by someone else. Discovering such a mistake foments awkward social situations. In the worst instance, the vessels may become media for the exchange of bacteria and viruses with resulting medical complications.
Realizing the dangers identical drinking vessels pose, one solution has been to create tags that surround handles or stems of vessels to impermanently identify the vessels with paper inserts to bear the written name of the guest. Such tags are rarely elegant and can interfere with the guest's secure grasp of the vessel. Another solution employs labeled paper roundels used as coasters and bearing the user's name. Unfortunately, using the vessels, a user can separate the vessel from the coaster and, thereby, defeat the identification function. Where the roundels are further modified to prevent separation, hosts have been known to the roundel cut from the perimeter to the center to permit insertion of the stem of a wine glass and the cut is closed by length of adhesive tape. The user can then write his/her name on the paper roundel for identifying purposes. Identifying media of this type is relatively inexpensive and serves its purpose but affixing the roundels is time consuming and can interfere with drinking from the vessel. In any of these solutions, preparation and the unwieldy nature of the solution severely impinge the upon the usability of the solution.
Still, hosts have employed another form of identifying media, comprising differently configured charms mounted on or depending from a wire clasp. Such a clasp includes a U-shaped ends or hooks to permit mounting the clasp about the stem of a wine glass or handle of a beer stein and engaging the hooks with one another. For some people such engagement requires two-handed manipulation and depending upon the dexterity of a user, more or less difficulty is encountered. To make the charms attractive, the surface will often be irregular and because of that irregularity, awkward or uncomfortable to hold. In short, there exists no ideal solution to the problem of identifying the vessels.
In a system for imparting visually identifiable distinctions between individual drinking vessels, an identification helix is used to impermanently attach to an elongate element of at least one of the drinking vessels. At least two identification helices are provided for engaging an elongate element of a drinking vessel such as a stem or handle. The system of identification helices comprises a first helical member of resilient flexible material having a pair of ends and adapted to engage the elongate element by wrapping the elongate element with a generally encircling geometry. A second helical member of resilient flexible material has, as well, a pair of ends and adapted to engage the elongate element by wrapping the elongate element with a generally encircling geometry. The second helical member is visually distinct from the first differing in one of a group of qualities consisting of handedness, color, color combinations, and attached charms.
Preferred and alternative examples of the present invention are described in detail below with reference to the following drawings:
In a social gathering, an exemplary vessel assembly 10 as shown in
The identification helix 20 advantageously exploits a geometric property of the helix to obviate the need for any form of clasp or closure. A helix is a type of smooth space curve, i.e. a curve in three-dimensional space. A helix has the property that the tangent line at any point makes a constant angle with a fixed line called the axis.
Helices can be either right-handed or left-handed. With the line of sight along the helix's axis, if a clockwise screwing motion the helix away from the observer, then it is called a right-handed helix; if towards the observer then it is a left-handed helix. Handedness (or chirality) is a property of the helix, not of the perspective: a right-handed helix cannot be turned or flipped to look like a left-handed one unless it is viewed in a mirror, and vice versa. The handedness of the identification helix 20 is a further differentiator in use such that at a social gathering, for example, couples might receive identification helices of the same color with opposite handedness so that the vessels 11 (
Considering, therefore, that the identification helix 20, when viewed from either of the top (
A quality of resilience in a material exploits the generally encircling geometry of the identification helix 20. Resilience, the power or ability to return to the original form and, thus, position, after being bent, compressed, or stretched enables the principal mathematical feature of the helix curve to engage the stem: a tangent line at any point makes a constant angle with a fixed line called the axis. Resiliency can cause the material to engage a stem or handle without any further means of attachment. Should the axis pass through a cross-section of a stem or handle of a vessel, the resilient helix will wrap around that vessel in much the manner of a snake around the trunk of a tree. So long as the stem or handle is within the generally encompassing geometry, the helix will remain wrapped around that stem or handle without requiring a means to close the curve.
In the preferred embodiment, the helix is formed of a homogenous silicon rubber 30 as shown in
Silicone rubber is a highly inert material and does not react with most chemicals. Due to its inertness, it is used in many medical applications and in food preparation utensils and containers. Because of the described use in close proximity to food and beverages, silicone rubber's inert nature assures that odors or flavors will transmit to a guests hands for movement to the mouth or nose.
Silicone rubber has further enhancements that make it desirable in this presently preferred embodiment:
While a homogenous silicone rubber 30 is formed into the preferred embodiment, other embodiments are possible with both organic polymers and silicone rubber. Consider, for example, the form of identification helix 20 illustrated in
While the preferred embodiment of the invention has been illustrated and described, as noted above, many changes can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, multiple colored silicone rubber resins might be pumped into an extruded helix to yield a striated or varied color scheme in the finished identification helix. Another such exemplary embodiment might include a charm depending from the helix, the presence of distinct charms further providing differential identification between one of several such identification helices. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited by the disclosure of the preferred embodiment. Instead, the invention should be determined entirely by reference to the claims that follow.
This application is a non-provisional of co-pending, commonly owned U.S. application Ser. No. 29/432,016 filed on Sep. 12, 2012 incorporated herein fully by this reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 29432016 | Sep 2012 | US |
Child | 13619628 | US |