The use of single sheets provided as interfolded sheets for bath tissue has been widely accepted. Such single interfolded sheets often provide less waste than traditional rolled bath tissue. Similarly, the use of premoistened or “wet” sheets has gained wide acceptance for a variety of uses, particularly premoistened bathroom applications. The dry sheets and premoistened sheets are generally formed from an absorbent material such as a paper or a polymeric web, or combinations thereof, and may contain a disinfectant, medicant, deodorant, anti-microbial, anti-bacterial, cleansing agent, and so forth, in one or more combinations, on a dry sheet, or in a “wet” formulation on a premoistened sheet. Premoistened sheets are generally stored and dispensed from a sealable container to prevent the sheets from drying out.
Various dispenser designs for dry and/or premoistened sheets have been used with existing bathroom fixtures, such as fixtures for conventional rolled products. These separate or combined dispensers are often cumbersome and bulky, and they are problematic with regard to space and mounting considerations. Refilling one or both dispensers can also be difficult.
Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide a dispenser capable of dispensing dry and/or premoistened sheets, such as facial tissue, bath tissue, and so forth, from a table top, a standard rolled product fixture, a hook, and so forth. Such a dispenser would desirably be manufactured easily and inexpensively, and would desirably be a one-use, non-refillable dispenser which would be disposed of when the tissue or sheet material was depleted therefrom.
As used herein, the terms “sheet material” and “tissue” are used interchangeably, and they mean a material that is thin in comparison to its length and breadth. Generally speaking, sheet materials or tissues should exhibit a relatively flat planar configuration and be flexible to permit folding, rolling, stacking, and the like. Exemplary sheet materials and tissues include, but are not limited to, paper tissue, such as facial tissue and bath tissue, paper towels, label rolls, or other fibrous, film, polymers, or filamentary products.
As used herein, the term “fasteners” means devices that fasten, join, connect, secure, hold, or clamp components together. Fasteners include, but are not limited to, screws, nuts and bolts, rivets, snap-fits, tacks, nails, loop fasteners, and interlocking male/female connectors, such as fishhook connectors, a fish hook connector includes a male portion with a protrusion on its circumference. Inserting the male portion into the female portion substantially permanently locks the two portions together.
As used herein, the term “couple” includes, but is not limited to, joining, connecting, fastening, linking, or associating two things integrally or interstitially together.
These terms may be defined with additional language in the remaining portions of the specification.
In response to the difficulties and problems discussed above, a dispenser is provided which is adapted for dispensing from a table top and convertible to dispensing from a standard rolled product fixture is provided. The dispenser includes a flexible, resilient housing having a compartment configured to hold sheets therein and a dispensing opening. The housing includes an integrated sling. The sheets in the compartment are sealed and separated from the sling by a seal. The housing is configured to be coupled to a standard rolled product fixture via the sling for dispensing sheets therefrom. The housing is also configured to be positioned on a table top for dispensing sheets therefrom; the sling is masked as a portion of the housing when the dispenser is positioned on the table top.
Reference will now be made in detail to one or more embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the drawings. Each example and embodiment is provided by way of explanation of the invention, and is not meant as a limitation of the invention. For example, features illustrated or described as part of one embodiment may be used with another embodiment to yield still a further embodiment. It is intended that the invention include these and other modifications and variations as coming within the scope and spirit of the invention.
Referring to the figures in general, a dispenser is provided for storing and dispensing sheets. It should be appreciated that the present invention is not limited to any particular type of sheets. The dispenser, however, is well suited for dispensing, by way of non-limiting example, individual stacked sheets and/or interfolded sheets, as generally illustrated in the figures. Non-limiting examples of dry sheets are disclosed in U.S. Pat No. 3,301,746 to Sanford et al., U.S. Pat. No. 3,322,617 to Osborne, U.S. Pat. No. 5,048,589 to Cook et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,399,412 to Sudall et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,607,551 to Farrington et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,672,248 to Wendt et al., all of which are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety. Non-limiting examples of premoistened sheets are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,741,944 and 4,865,221, both to Jackson et. al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,629,081 to Richards et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,656,361 to Vogt et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 5,964,351 to Zander, all of which are incorporated by reference in there entirety herein. Such stack configurations for dry sheets, such as toilet tissue and/or premoistened sheets are well known to those of ordinary skill in the art and need not be described in great detail herein.
The dispenser shown in
Turning now to
The dispenser 10 includes a housing 14 which has a compartment 18 in which dry sheets 12 are stored and dispensed therefrom. A dispensing opening 20 (
The housing 14 includes front and back walls 22, 24 and upper and lower ends 26, 28. An opposing pair of sidewalls 30 cooperate with the walls front and back walls 22, 24 and upper and lower ends 26, 28 to provide the housing 14. Desirably, but not by way of limitation, the housing 14 may be formed to generally conform to a certain amount or plurality of dry sheets 12 provided in the housing 14. In the present embodiment, the dry sheets 12 as a group have a generally polygonal shape. Similarly, by way of non-limiting example, the housing 14 has a generally polygonal shape as well. The housing 14 may take any form to conform to functional and/or aesthetic requirements.
As shown in
A standard rolled product fixture may have spaced apart side support arms mounted to and extending transversely from a generally vertical support surface, such as a wall, or coupled to a base or back member (not shown). Typically, a roll mount extends between and is releasably coupled to such support arms (not shown). The roll mount shown in
In addition, the sling 32 includes perforations 38 positioned in a central location thereof. These perforations 38, when separated, provide an opening for a hook to extend therethrough (not shown). Therefore, the dispenser 10 may be easily hung (and detached) from a hook for dispenser therefrom.
The dispenser 10 may also be used to dispense dry sheets 12 for use as, for example, facial tissue, from a generally horizontal surface (not shown). Such a horizontal surface may include a table top, and so forth. In this instance, the sling 32 may be folded down, against the upper end 26 of the housing 14, and may be held in position by, for example, but not by way of limitation, an adhesive, a separate seal, and so forth. In addition, when the sling 32 is positioned against the housing 14, it may be masked. That is, its purpose my not be clear, and its purpose or function may be masked or “hidden” as a portion of the housing 14 when it is folded against the housing 14.
As shown in
As described previously, when the dispenser 10 is desired for use in a bathroom, the sling 32 may be moved away from the upper end 26, as shown in
Any portion of any housing shown and/or described herein may include an opening which, if the housing is opaque, reveals the amount of tissue contained in the compartment (not shown). Such an opening provides an indication of the amount of tissue or sheet material contained in the compartment. It will be appreciated that when the housing, or any portion thereof, may be clear, tinted, or opaque.
The housing 14 may desirably be for one use and non-refillable, and when the dry sheets 12 are removed, the dispenser 10 is disposed of. The housing 14 is desirably, but not by way of limitation, formed from any conventional material, and desirably, from a relatively inexpensive material(s) such as, but not by way of limitation, cardboard, paper, paperboard, plastic, polymer film, cellophane, metallic film, any combination thereof, and so forth. Desirably, the housing is provided at least partially from a flexible, resilient material, such as a plastic film. Any housing herein may be provided in any shape or configuration, and the present embodiments are provided as a non-limiting examples thereof.
In another embodiment of the invention, as illustrated in
The housing 114, similar to the housing 14; the housing includes an opening for dispensing dry sheets 12 and perforations 121 to provide an opening for dispensing premoistened sheets 111 as well. Desirably, but not by way of limitation, the housing 114 may be formed to generally conform to a certain amount of dry sheets 12 and the container 119 of premoistened sheets 111 as well. In the present embodiment, the dry sheets 12 and the container 119 of premoistened sheets 111 may together have a generally polygonal shape.
The premoistened sheets 111 are dispensed from the container 119 from openings (not shown) in the container 119 and through a dispensing opening (not shown) in the housing 114. The dry sheets 12 are dispensed from the dispensing opening 120 on the front wall 22 of the housing 114, as illustrated in
A resealable cover (not shown) may be positioned over a dispensing opening (not shown) in the housing 114 which is aligned with the opening (not shown) in the container 119 of premoistened sheets 111. The premoistened sheets 111 are then accessed through the resealable cover to permit dispensing of the premoistened sheets 111 from the dispenser 110. Alternatively, or, in addition thereto, the container 119 may also include a resealable cover which is aligned with the dispensing opening of the housing 114 to permit access to the premoistened sheets 119 as well (not shown). Such a resealable cover is used to maintain the moisture conditions within the container 119 and to prevent undesired drying out of the premoistened sheets 111. Such releasable covers may, by way of non-limiting example, use an adhesive, such as a pressure sensitive adhesive, a cohesive adhesive, such as a latex or other natural rubber material, and so forth, to provide a seal. Other resealable mechanisms, such as, by way of non-limiting example, snap-fit, hinged cover and lid, and so forth are known and may be used; any resealable mechanism known in the art may be used with any dispensing opening in the housing and/or any opening in the container.
As illustrated in
The premoistened sheets 111 may be encased in a liquid impermeable film, and this film may provide a portion, or all, of the container 119. In a further example, the container 119 may be formed from at least one other material, and the container 119 may be lined with the film (not shown).
The dispenser 110 may be utilized as described herein previously. That is, the dispenser 110 may be coupled to a roll mount 122 via the sling 132, as shown in
It will be understood that the position of the premoistened sheets and/or the dry sheets within the housing of any embodiment of this invention may be reversed, and they need not be in a specific configuration, and may take on any suitable arrangement, including a stacked arrangement, a side-by-side arrangement, a coaxial arrangement, and so forth. Any number of configurations may be used for simultaneously dispensing dry and premoistened sheets from a single housing. All such configurations are within the scope and spirit of the present invention.
While the present invention has been described in connection with certain preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the subject matter encompassed by way of the present invention is not to be limited to those specific embodiments. On the contrary, it is intended for the subject matter of the invention to include all alternatives, modifications and equivalents as can be included within the spirit and scope of the following claims.