Claims
- 1. A vertically orientable pin screen for providing a three-dimensional image of a three-dimensionally configured object applied thereto comprising:
- first and second spaced parallel vertically orientable apertured interconnected plates adapted to receive and hold a plurality of pins inserted into the apertures in said two plates,
- said respective apertures in said respective plates when said plates are vertically oriented being in horizontal alignment such that a pin inserted through said aligned apertures in each of said plates will be horizontally oriented,
- said apertures in each of said plates being aligned in rows,
- said rows being in a staggered pattern with said apertures in alternate rows being aligned with each other,
- a plurality of pins each having a shank with a head on one end thereof and with the other end of the shank being blunt,
- said apertures being slightly larger than the shanks of said pins,
- said shanks being inserted through aligned apertures in said first and second plates with said heads abutting against said first plate,
- each pin having a head larger than said apertures to prevent said pins from passing through said apertures,
- said first and second plates being spaced apart from each other a distance less than the length of said pins inserted through said apertures in said plates for allowing the end portions of their shanks to project beyond said second apertured plate when said heads are abutting against said apertured plate,
- said spacing of said plates being sufficient to maintain said pins inserted through said aligned apertures in said respective plates in a substantially horizontal orientation when said plates are vertically oriented,
- said plates being adapted to allow selective horizontal displacement of said pins relative to said plates when said plates are vertically oriented,
- a transparent cover mounted in a plane parallel to said first and second apertured plates and being spaced from said first apertured plate, said first apertured plate being disposed between said transparent cover and said second apertured plate, the spacing between said transparent cover and said first apertured plate being less than the length of said pins inserted through said apertured plates for limiting the displacement of said pins in said apertures and preventing the pins falling out of said plates head first,
- said pins being horizontaly displaceable by pressing a three-dimensionally configured object against said end portions of their shanks projecting beyond said second apertured plate for displacing away from said first apertured plate and toward said transparent cover the heads of those pins whose end portions have been pressed by such object for causing the displaced heads as seen through said transparent cover to create a three-dimensionally configured image of such object,
- said displaceable pins being held in their respective displaced positions by frictional engagement of the shanks of the pins in said apertures for retaining said three-dimensionally configured image while said plates are vertically oriented, and
- said pins being returnable to their original positions in which their heads are abutting against said first apertured plate by gravitational force by lifting and tilting said pin screen with the end portions oriented downwardly.
- 2. The pin screen as claimed in claim 1, wherein said apertures in a staggered row pattern are spaced about 7/64th of an inch center to center, and the pin heads are about 1/8th inch in size.
- 3. A liftable, tiltable and vertically orientable pin screen comprising:
- first and second apertured plates,
- a transparent cover,
- mounting means mounting said first and second apertured plates and said transparent cover in spaced parallel relationship with respect to each other with said transparent cover being spaced from and parallel to said first apertured plate and with said first apertured plate being located between said cover and said second apertured plate and being parallel to said second apertured plate,
- numerous identical pins each having a shank with a head on one end and a blunt other end,
- said first and second apertured plates each having rows of apertures,
- the respective apertures in the rows in said first apertured plate being aligned with the respective apertures in the rows in said second apertured plate,
- said apertures being larger than the diameter of said shanks,
- said heads of the pins being larger than said apertures,
- said shanks extending through aligned apertures in said first and second plates with said heads initially abutting against said first apertured plate,
- said shanks being longer than the spacing between said plates for causing said other ends of the shanks to project beyond said second plate when the heads are abutting against said first plate,
- said shanks being freely displaceable in an axial direction through said apertures,
- with said plates and said transparent covering being oriented in vertical parallel planes, said shanks become oriented horizontally and said shanks are then horizontally displaceable for moving said heads away from said first plate and toward said transparent cover by pressing a three-dimensionally configured object against said other ends of said shanks for causing the displaced heads to create a three-dimensionally configured image of such object seen through said transparent cover,
- said horizontally oriented freely displaceable pins being held in their displaced positions by friction in the respective aperatures through which said shanks extend,
- said first and second apertured plates being spaced sufficiently far apart for assuring that the horizontally displaced pins will not pivot and slope down significantly below horizontal,
- said heads being returnable to their initial position abutting against said first plate by gravitational force by lifting and tilting said pin screen with the other ends of the shanks being oriented downwardly, and
- said transparent cover being sufficiently close to said first apertured plate for preventing the pins from falling out of said apertured plates head first.
- 4. The pin screen as claimed in claim 3, in which:
- said apertures in each of said plates are spaced about 7/64ths of an inch center to center and the pin heads are about 1/8 inch in diameter.
- 5. The pin screen as claimed in claim 3, in which:
- said transparent cover is spaced farther from said first apertured plate than said first apertured plate is spaced from said second apertured plate for allowing at least a range of 1/2 inch displacement of the pins.
- 6. The pin screen as claimed in claim 5, in which:
- said pins are about 3 inches long.
- 7. A pin screen for providing a three-dimensional pattern of an object applied thereto comprising:
- two spaced normally vertically oriented parallel apertured plates mounted to each other and each having a plurality of closely spaced normally horizontal apertures,
- said apertures being aligned in rows,
- said rows being arranged in a staggered row pattern,
- said apertures in alternate rows being aligned with each other,
- the apertures in said plates being aligned with each other,
- a plurality of pins all of the same size and shape each having a shank with a pin head on one end of the shank,
- said apertures in said plates being slightly larger than the diameter of said shanks,
- said pin heads being larger than the apertures in said plates for preventing said pins from passing through said apertures in said plates,
- said plurality of pins being disposed in said apertures in said plates and normally being retained in their horizontal positions in said apertures by frictional engagement in said horizontal apertures in said plates when said plates are normally vertically oriented,
- the horizontal distance between said two apertured plates being less than the length of said pin such that a pin inserted through an aperture in one of apertured plate extends horizontally through the corresponding aligned aperture in the other parallel apertured plate with the end portion of the pin projecting beyond said other apertured plate for enabling such three-dimensionally contoured object to be pressed against the projecting end portion of the pin,
- said end portions of said pins being non-pointed,
- a transparent cover mounted parallel to and spaced from one said apertured plate,
- said transparent cover being faced by the heads of said pins,
- the distance between said transparent cover and said one apertured plate being less than the length of said pins for preventing said pins from being displaced out of said plate in the direction of their heads,
- said pins normally being oriented in a horizontal direction and the end portions extending through said other plate being adapted to be selectively displaced relative to said plates by pressing a three-dimensionally contoured object against said non-pointed end portions for displacing those pins which are contacted by said object for causing the displaced heads thereof as seen through said transparent cover to create a three-dimensionally contoured image of the corresponding three-dimensionally contoured object which contacts and selectively displaces said pins,
- said pins retaining their respective displaced positions by frictional engagement in said horizontal apertures in said plates for retaining said three-dimensionally contoured image, and
- said displaced pins being returnable to their original positions in which the pin heads abut against said apertured plate by gravitational force by lifting and tilting said pin screen with the end portions of the pins downwardly.
- 8. A liftable, tiltable and normally vertically oriented three-dimensional image screen comprising:
- a vertical apertured plate having a front and a back,
- a transparent cover spaced from the front of said apertured plate,
- mounting means extending between said apertured plate and said cover for holding said cover spaced from and substantially parallel to said apertured plate,
- said vertical apertured plate having multiple rows of apertures extending horizontally through the plate,
- numerous identical pins each having a shank with a head on one end and a blunt other end,
- said apertures being slightly larger than the diameter of the shanks of said pins,
- said shanks of said pins extending horizontally through said horizontal apertures with said heads of said pins facing said transparent cover and said heads initially abutting against the front of said apertured plate,
- said horizontal shanks being longer than the thickness of said apertured plate from front to back for causing said blunt ends to project beyond the back of said apertured plate when said heads are abutting against the front,
- said horizontal shanks each being freely displaceable in an axial direction through the aperture in which the respective shank extends,
- said horizontal shanks of said pins having sufficient length relative to the thickness of said apertured plate from front to back for causing a projection of the blunt ends of said shanks horizontally far enough beyond the back of said apertured plate for allowing the horizontal shanks of the respective pins to be displaced axially by pressing a three-dimensional object against said blunt ends to move the heads of pins far enough horizontally to abut the heads of axially displaced pins against the transparent cover,
- said apertured plate having sufficient thickness from front to back relative to said length of the pin shanks to prevent pivoting of the pins for maintaining horizontal orientation of the pins in spite of said projection of their blunt ends far beyond the back of the apertured plate,
- said horizontal shanks being displaceable by pressing a three-dimensional object against their blunt ends for moving their heads horizontally away from the front of said apertured plate toward said transparent cover for causing the displaced heads to create a three-dimensionally configured image of such object as seen through said transparent cover,
- said horizontal freely displaceable shanks being held in their respective displaced positions by friction in the respective apertures for retaining said three-dimensionally configured image of said object,
- said pins being returnable to their initial positions with their heads abutting against the front of the apertured plate by gravitational force by lifting and tilting of the three-dimensional image screen with the blunt ends of the pin shanks facing downwardly,
- said heads of said pins being larger than said apertures for preventing the pins from falling out of the apertured plate blunt end first, and
- said transparent cover preventing the pins from falling out of the apertured plate head first when the three-dimensional image screen is lifted and tilted with the heads of the pins facing downwardly.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is a division of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 527,741, filed Aug. 30, 1983, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 4,536,980 on Aug. 27, 1985, which is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 423,114 filed on Sept. 24, 1982, and now abandoned, which itself is a divisional application of U.S. design patent application Ser. No. 091,125 filed Mar. 21, 1980, issued as Design Pat. No. Des. 270,317 on Aug. 30, 1984.
US Referenced Citations (5)
Foreign Referenced Citations (5)
| Number |
Date |
Country |
| 2357621 |
May 1975 |
DEX |
| 907977 |
Mar 1946 |
FRX |
| 2267736 |
Nov 1975 |
FRX |
| 112002 |
Sep 1980 |
JPX |
| 2037471 |
Jul 1980 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (6)
| Entry |
| "The Tactile Multiple", by John Ballantine, Art in America, p. 141, Jul. 1978. |
| Dimensions, Inc., brochure, Jul. 13, 1967. |
| Specialized Forms of Animation, by Alexander Alexeieff & Claire Parker, pp. 304-305. |
| The Animation Book, by Kit Laybourne, cover page, and pp. 152-154. |
| ASIFI Information Bulletin, pp. 90-99, published 1972, describing Alexander Alexeieff's and Claire Parker's animation work. |
| Fuji T-120; Pin Screen, 116C 0173 031; 38 min., 53 sec.; National Film Board of Canada. |
Divisions (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
527741 |
Aug 1983 |
|
| Parent |
91125 |
Mar 1980 |
|
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
| Parent |
423114 |
Sep 1982 |
|