US3127302A - Ornamental structure made therefrom - Google Patents

Ornamental structure made therefrom Download PDF

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US3127302A
US3127302A US3127302DA US3127302A US 3127302 A US3127302 A US 3127302A US 3127302D A US3127302D A US 3127302DA US 3127302 A US3127302 A US 3127302A
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balls
block
recesses
another
tier
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63HTOYS, e.g. TOPS, DOLLS, HOOPS OR BUILDING BLOCKS
    • A63H33/00Other toys
    • A63H33/22Optical, colour, or shadow toys
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S206/00Special receptacle or package
    • Y10S206/82Separable, striplike plural articles
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S273/00Amusement devices: games
    • Y10S273/02Styrene

Definitions

  • One object of this invention is to provide a semi-finished blank for making an artificial ornamental article, the blank consisting of a block of synthetic plastic material or the like having a multiplicity of balls formed in holes in the block with a portion of each ball remaining integral with the block so as to be easily fractured by pressure applied to the ball to push it out of the hole.
  • Another object is to provide a semi-finished blank of the foregoing character wherein the block is adapted to be separated into a plurality of bars which are then secured to one another end-to-side or end-to-end to form an open-centered base for the ornamental article.
  • Another object is to provide an artificial ornamental article made up of balls of synthetic plastic material secured to one another by quills such as toothpicks, the balls being preformed in holes in blocks of plastic material and adapted to be pushed out of the holes in order to assemble them in the ornamental object.
  • FIGURE 1 is a top plan view of a semi-finished blank for an ornamental article, according to one form of the invention
  • FIGURE 2 is a vertical section taken along the line 2 2 in FIGURE 1, showing one of the balls ejected from its hole prior to assembly of the ornamental article;
  • FIGURE 3 is a top plan view of an ornamental article base assembled from components made up from the perforated block from which the balls have been expelled;
  • FIGURE 4 is a front elevation of one of the quilled balls with the connecting quills, such as toothpicks, inserted therein;
  • FIGURE 5 is a front elevation of a completed ornamental article, such as a tree, made up of the quilled balls of FIGURE 4 and the base shown in FIGURE 3;
  • FIGURE 6 is a horizontal section through the ornamental article of FIGURE 5, looking upward along the line 66 therein;
  • FIGURE 7 is a top plan view upon a reduced scale, of a modification of the base shown in FIGURE 3.
  • FIGURES 1 and 2 show a semi-finished blank, generally designated it), according to one form of the invention as consisting of a block 12 of synthetic plastic material or other suitable material, such as the foam plastic known as expanded polystyrene plastic sold under various trade names, such as Styrofoam.
  • foam plastic known as expanded polystyrene plastic sold under various trade names, such as Styrofoam.
  • the block 12 is provided with a series of laterally-spaced holes 14 disposed in spaced parallel rows, each hole 14 each composed of bores 16 and 18 (FIGURE 2) penetrating the block 12 from opposite sides but not quite meeting one another so as to be separated from one another by a diametrical junction layer the margin of which forms a zonular connecting portion 20 extending radially inward to the equatorial portion or zone 22 of a ball 24 having slightly less than hemispherical opposite surfaces 26 and 28 terminating at the zonular connecting portion 20.
  • the latter is disposed substantially in the middle plane of the block 12.
  • the almost hemispherical surfaces 26 and 28 are formed simultaneously with their respective bores 16 and 18 as by the use of hemispherical concave cutters (not shown).
  • sixteen holes 14 have been formed together with sixteen unseparated balls 24, each ball 24 being connected to the side walls of its respective hole 14 by an integrai zonular connecting portion.
  • the zonular portion 2t is sufiiciently thin to be easily fracturable by the pressure of a thumb placed upon it, yet sufiiciently thick to prevent accidental fracture during transportation or handling.
  • the balls24 and the block 12 form an integral yet separable unit which is easily packaged and sold yet which can be rapidly transformed by simple operations into the ornamental article, generally designated 36, shown in FIGURES 5 and 6, by a procedure described below in connection with the operation of the invention.
  • the block 12 is optionally provided with weakening lines, slits or grooves 32 (FIGURE 1) by which the block 12 may be separated into elongated base bars, generally designated 34, which in turn may be assembled end-to-side into a base structure, generaily designated 36 (FIGURE 3), as also described below.
  • the base bars 34 may be conveniently connected at their corners to one another by the use of quills 3d (FIGURE 3), such as toothpicks.
  • the modified open-centered base structure, generally designated 44, shown in FIGURE 7, is similarly composed of the perforated bars 34 but these are mounted end-toend with only their corners touching and with quills as, such as toothpicks, obliquely cross-connecting the inner corners id of the block bar ends 5t
  • the operator places his thumb upon each of the unseparated balls 24 within one end of each hole 14- in the block 12 and by pressure of his thumb, while holding the block 12 in his hands, expels each ball 24 from its hole 14 by the application of a sufiicient pressure to fracture the zonular connecting portion 2%.
  • each plain ball 24 into a quilled ball 40 by inserting the toothpicks or other quills 42 in the balls 24 radially, as explained above and as shown in FIGURE 4. He then makes up a series of tiers 52, 54, 56 and 53 of quilled balls 24 (FIGURE 5), each tier 52, 54, 56 or 58 containing a smaller number of balls than the tier immediately below it.
  • the first or lowest tier 52 may contain seven quilled balls 49, the second tier 54 five balls, the next tier 56 three balls and the topmost tier 58 one ball.
  • Each tier 52, 54, or 56 is made up by pressing the requisite number of quilled balls 4-0 toward one another until the tips of their quills 42 penetrate one another so as to interconnect the balls 40.
  • the perforated block 12 has been separated into base bars as by fracturing the block along the weakened lines, lists or grooves 32 and these placed either end-to-side (FIGURE 3) or end-to-end (FIGURE 7) and tied together by the quills 38 or 46 respectively.
  • the lowermost tier 52 is then mounted upon the base structure 36 or 44 and secured thereto by pressing the tips of its lowermost quills 42 into the base bars 34 of the base structure 36.
  • the next succeeding tier 54 is then placed upon the lowermost tier 52 and interconnected therewith by pressing the quills 42 or" the balls 4-0 into interpenetrating engagement with one another.
  • the third tier 56 is mounted on and secured in a similar manner to the tier 54, and the single quilled ball 40 constituting the top tier 58 connected to the tier 56 below it by similar application of pressure to cause the quills 42 thereof to interpenetrate.
  • the procedure with respect to mounting the tiers 52, 5e, 56 or 58 upon the modified base structure 44 of FIGURE 7 is similar to that just described for utilizing the base 36 of FIGURE 3 except that the base structure 44 encloses a larger open space in the center and is of greater lateral extent than the base structure 36, as Well as possessing a somewhat different appearance because of the notched effect of the perpendicular ends 50 meeting at their inner corners 48 (FIGURE 7).
  • the artistic appearance of the ornamental article 39 may be enhanced by spraying it with artificial snow or otherwise applying the latter to the quilled balls 40 after assembly into the article 30.
  • the semi-finished blank 10 from which the ornamental article 30 is prepared in the manner described above, is easily and conveniently packaged and the requisite number of balls 24 is always present because of the temporary attachment of the balls 24 to the block 12 at the Zonular connecting portions 20. This arrangement thus eliminates the necessity for counting the balls, or for separately packaging the balls after counting.
  • the semi-finished blank 10 of FIGURE 1 by having the balls 24 contained and held in their respective holes 14 within the block 12, protects the balls 24 from damage during shipment or handling. In one form of the invention as actually constructed, the balls were slightly under two inches in diameter, in a base block 12 approximately eight inches square and two inches thick.
  • a semi-finished blank for production of oppositelyconvex articles and a base structure for mounting and supporting the same comprising a block of fracturable material having spaced opposite faces and a multiplicity of pairs of oppositely-directed recesses disposed in spaced parallel rows extending inwardly toward one another from said opposite faces into close proximity to one another at approximately the middle plane of said block with a relatively thin fracturable layer of material disposed substantially at said middle plane of said block between the bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses, said bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses being outwardly convex, each such pair of recesses collectively defining and bounding an article surrounded by the side walls or" said recesses, said fracturable layers extending from their respective articles to the side walls of their respective recesses and integral with said articles and body.
  • a semi-finished blank for production of oppositelyconvex articles and a base structure for mounting and supporting the same comprising a block of fracturable material having spaced opposite faces and a multiplicity of pairs of oppositely-directed recesses disposed in spaced parallel rows and extending inwardly toward one another from said opposite faces into close proximity to one another with a relatively thin fracturable layer of material disposed between the bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses,
  • each such pair of recesses being outwardly convex, each such pair of recesses collectively defining and bounding an article surrounded by the side walls of said recesses, said fracturable layers extending from their respective articles to the side walls of their respective recesses and integral with said articles and body, said block having a plurality of weakened severance grooves extending substantially from edge to edge thereof in laterally-spaced parallel re lationship facilitating subdivision of said block into base bars constituting base structure components.

Description

March 31,1964 A BUNTING 3,127,302
. G. SEPARABLE ARTICLE-CONTAINING ASSEMBLY AND ORNAMENTAL STRUCTURE MADE THEREFROM,
2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed June 19, 1961 v INVENTOR. mm a. saw
Arr-Mays Miirch 31, 1964 A. G. BUNTING 3,127,302,
SEPARABLE ICLE-CONTAINING ASSEMBLY AND ORNAMEN STRUCTURE MADE THEREFROM 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed June 19, 1961 Ti 7 uvmvron ATTIAA/EY any 6. lair/46' United States Patent Ofiice 3,127,302 Patented Mar. 31, 1964 3,127,302 SEPARABLE ARTICLE-CONTAINING ASSEM- BLY AND ORNAMENTAL STRUCTURE MADE THEREFRGM Allen G. Bunting, Detroit, Mich, assignor to Plasteel Corporation, Inkster, Misha, a corporation of Michigan Filed June 19, 196i, Ser. No. 117,964 6 (Ilaims. (Cl. 16116) This invention relates to artificial ornamental objects and, in particular, to ornamental objects made up of balls interconnected by rods.
One object of this invention is to provide a semi-finished blank for making an artificial ornamental article, the blank consisting of a block of synthetic plastic material or the like having a multiplicity of balls formed in holes in the block with a portion of each ball remaining integral with the block so as to be easily fractured by pressure applied to the ball to push it out of the hole.
Another object is to provide a semi-finished blank of the foregoing character wherein the block is adapted to be separated into a plurality of bars which are then secured to one another end-to-side or end-to-end to form an open-centered base for the ornamental article.
Another object is to provide an artificial ornamental article made up of balls of synthetic plastic material secured to one another by quills such as toothpicks, the balls being preformed in holes in blocks of plastic material and adapted to be pushed out of the holes in order to assemble them in the ornamental object.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent during the course of the following description of the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a top plan view of a semi-finished blank for an ornamental article, according to one form of the invention;
FIGURE 2 is a vertical section taken along the line 2 2 in FIGURE 1, showing one of the balls ejected from its hole prior to assembly of the ornamental article;
FIGURE 3 is a top plan view of an ornamental article base assembled from components made up from the perforated block from which the balls have been expelled;
FIGURE 4 is a front elevation of one of the quilled balls with the connecting quills, such as toothpicks, inserted therein;
FIGURE 5 is a front elevation of a completed ornamental article, such as a tree, made up of the quilled balls of FIGURE 4 and the base shown in FIGURE 3;
FIGURE 6 is a horizontal section through the ornamental article of FIGURE 5, looking upward along the line 66 therein; and
FIGURE 7 is a top plan view upon a reduced scale, of a modification of the base shown in FIGURE 3.
Referring to the drawings in detail, FIGURES 1 and 2 show a semi-finished blank, generally designated it), according to one form of the invention as consisting of a block 12 of synthetic plastic material or other suitable material, such as the foam plastic known as expanded polystyrene plastic sold under various trade names, such as Styrofoam. The block 12 is provided with a series of laterally-spaced holes 14 disposed in spaced parallel rows, each hole 14 each composed of bores 16 and 18 (FIGURE 2) penetrating the block 12 from opposite sides but not quite meeting one another so as to be separated from one another by a diametrical junction layer the margin of which forms a zonular connecting portion 20 extending radially inward to the equatorial portion or zone 22 of a ball 24 having slightly less than hemispherical opposite surfaces 26 and 28 terminating at the zonular connecting portion 20. The latter is disposed substantially in the middle plane of the block 12. The almost hemispherical surfaces 26 and 28 are formed simultaneously with their respective bores 16 and 18 as by the use of hemispherical concave cutters (not shown). In the blank It shown by way of illustration but not limitation, sixteen holes 14 have been formed together with sixteen unseparated balls 24, each ball 24 being connected to the side walls of its respective hole 14 by an integrai zonular connecting portion. The zonular portion 2t is sufiiciently thin to be easily fracturable by the pressure of a thumb placed upon it, yet sufiiciently thick to prevent accidental fracture during transportation or handling. In this manner, the balls24 and the block 12 form an integral yet separable unit which is easily packaged and sold yet which can be rapidly transformed by simple operations into the ornamental article, generally designated 36, shown in FIGURES 5 and 6, by a procedure described below in connection with the operation of the invention.
The block 12 is optionally provided with weakening lines, slits or grooves 32 (FIGURE 1) by which the block 12 may be separated into elongated base bars, generally designated 34, which in turn may be assembled end-to-side into a base structure, generaily designated 36 (FIGURE 3), as also described below. The base bars 34 may be conveniently connected at their corners to one another by the use of quills 3d (FIGURE 3), such as toothpicks.
The plain balls 24, after expulsion from their holes 14 in the block 12 according to the procedure described below, are formed into quilled balls, generally designated 4d (FIGURE 4), by pushing toothpicks or other quills 42 into the plain balls 24- in radial directions. Toothpicks have been found suitable for use as quills because they are sufficiently pointed to easily penetrate the plastic foam material of which the balls 24 are composed.
The modified open-centered base structure, generally designated 44, shown in FIGURE 7, is similarly composed of the perforated bars 34 but these are mounted end-toend with only their corners touching and with quills as, such as toothpicks, obliquely cross-connecting the inner corners id of the block bar ends 5t In the operation of the invention, to assemble the ornamental article 36, such as a Christmas tree, the operator places his thumb upon each of the unseparated balls 24 within one end of each hole 14- in the block 12 and by pressure of his thumb, while holding the block 12 in his hands, expels each ball 24 from its hole 14 by the application of a sufiicient pressure to fracture the zonular connecting portion 2%. When all of the balls 24 have been expelled from their holes 14, the operator converts each plain ball 24 into a quilled ball 40 by inserting the toothpicks or other quills 42 in the balls 24 radially, as explained above and as shown in FIGURE 4. He then makes up a series of tiers 52, 54, 56 and 53 of quilled balls 24 (FIGURE 5), each tier 52, 54, 56 or 58 containing a smaller number of balls than the tier immediately below it. The first or lowest tier 52, for example, may contain seven quilled balls 49, the second tier 54 five balls, the next tier 56 three balls and the topmost tier 58 one ball. Each tier 52, 54, or 56 is made up by pressing the requisite number of quilled balls 4-0 toward one another until the tips of their quills 42 penetrate one another so as to interconnect the balls 40.
Meanwhile, the perforated block 12 has been separated into base bars as by fracturing the block along the weakened lines, lists or grooves 32 and these placed either end-to-side (FIGURE 3) or end-to-end (FIGURE 7) and tied together by the quills 38 or 46 respectively. The lowermost tier 52 is then mounted upon the base structure 36 or 44 and secured thereto by pressing the tips of its lowermost quills 42 into the base bars 34 of the base structure 36. The next succeeding tier 54 is then placed upon the lowermost tier 52 and interconnected therewith by pressing the quills 42 or" the balls 4-0 into interpenetrating engagement with one another. When this has been accomplished, the third tier 56 is mounted on and secured in a similar manner to the tier 54, and the single quilled ball 40 constituting the top tier 58 connected to the tier 56 below it by similar application of pressure to cause the quills 42 thereof to interpenetrate.
The procedure with respect to mounting the tiers 52, 5e, 56 or 58 upon the modified base structure 44 of FIGURE 7 is similar to that just described for utilizing the base 36 of FIGURE 3 except that the base structure 44 encloses a larger open space in the center and is of greater lateral extent than the base structure 36, as Well as possessing a somewhat different appearance because of the notched effect of the perpendicular ends 50 meeting at their inner corners 48 (FIGURE 7).
The artistic appearance of the ornamental article 39 may be enhanced by spraying it with artificial snow or otherwise applying the latter to the quilled balls 40 after assembly into the article 30.
The semi-finished blank 10 from which the ornamental article 30 is prepared in the manner described above, is easily and conveniently packaged and the requisite number of balls 24 is always present because of the temporary attachment of the balls 24 to the block 12 at the Zonular connecting portions 20. This arrangement thus eliminates the necessity for counting the balls, or for separately packaging the balls after counting. The semi-finished blank 10 of FIGURE 1, by having the balls 24 contained and held in their respective holes 14 within the block 12, protects the balls 24 from damage during shipment or handling. In one form of the invention as actually constructed, the balls were slightly under two inches in diameter, in a base block 12 approximately eight inches square and two inches thick.
What I claim is:
1. A semi-finished blank for production of oppositelyconvex articles and a base structure for mounting and supporting the same, said blank comprising a block of fracturable material having spaced opposite faces and a multiplicity of pairs of oppositely-directed recesses disposed in spaced parallel rows extending inwardly toward one another from said opposite faces into close proximity to one another at approximately the middle plane of said block with a relatively thin fracturable layer of material disposed substantially at said middle plane of said block between the bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses, said bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses being outwardly convex, each such pair of recesses collectively defining and bounding an article surrounded by the side walls or" said recesses, said fracturable layers extending from their respective articles to the side walls of their respective recesses and integral with said articles and body.
2. A semi-finished blank, according to claim 1, wherein said convex surfaces are substantially hemispherical surfaces and wherein said layers of fracturable material extend from the margins of the diametrical junction layer between said hemispherical surfaces to said side walls of said recesses.
3. A semi-finished blank, according to claim 1, wherein said block has a plurality of spaced substantially rectilinear weakened severance grooves extending substantially from edge to edge thereof along an elongated path between each pair of said rows.
4. A separable article-containing assembly, according to claim 1, wherein said convex bottom surfaces of said recesses are geometrical surfaces of revolution.
5. A semi-finished blank for production of oppositelyconvex articles and a base structure for mounting and supporting the same, said blank comprising a block of fracturable material having spaced opposite faces and a multiplicity of pairs of oppositely-directed recesses disposed in spaced parallel rows and extending inwardly toward one another from said opposite faces into close proximity to one another with a relatively thin fracturable layer of material disposed between the bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses,
said bottom surfaces of each such pair of recesses being outwardly convex, each such pair of recesses collectively defining and bounding an article surrounded by the side walls of said recesses, said fracturable layers extending from their respective articles to the side walls of their respective recesses and integral with said articles and body, said block having a plurality of weakened severance grooves extending substantially from edge to edge thereof in laterally-spaced parallel re lationship facilitating subdivision of said block into base bars constituting base structure components.
6. A semi-finished blank, according to claim 5, wherein said severance portions are disposed in spaced approximately parallel planes.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,153,185 Allen Sept. 14, 1915 1,781,529 Shulman Nov. 11, 1930 2,366,886 Van Tuyl Ian. 9, 1945 2,587,003 Shina Feb. 26, 1952 2,591,016 Shoenherr Apr. 1, 1952 2,775,998 Osborn Ian. 1, 1957 2,781,902 Smithers Feb. 19, 1957 2,860,769 Waller Nov. 18, 1958 2,877,893 Volckening et a1 Mar. 17, 1959 2,996,832 Rubin Aug. 22, 1961 FOREIGN PATENTS 597,762 Great Britain 1. Feb. 3, 1948 833,140 Germany Mar. 3, 1952

Claims (1)

  1. 5. A SEMI-FINISHED BLANK FOR PRODUCTION OF OPPOSITELYCONVEX AND A BASE STRUCTURE FOR MOUNTING AND SUPPORTING THE SAME SAID BLANK COMPRISING A BLOCK OF FRACTURABLE MATERIAL HAVING SPACED OPPOSITE FACES AND A MULTIPLICITY OF PAIRS OF OPPOSITELY-DIRECTED RECESSES DISPOSED IN SPACED PARALLEL ROWS AND EXTENDING INWARDLY TOWARD ONE ANOTHER FROM SAID OPPOSITE FACES INTO CLOSE PROXIMITY TO ONE ANOTHER WITH A RELATIVELY THIN FRACTURABLE LAYER OF MATERIAL DISPOSED BETWEEN THE BOTTOM SURFACES OF EACH SUCH PAIR OF RECESSES,
US3127302D Ornamental structure made therefrom Expired - Lifetime US3127302A (en)

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3190499A (en) * 1962-10-26 1965-06-22 Dow Chemical Co Dispensing container
US3310164A (en) * 1964-07-07 1967-03-21 Reddall Winifred Sharp Package
US4150826A (en) * 1975-05-01 1979-04-24 Baldorossi Blanche N Game ball
US4485919A (en) * 1982-08-12 1984-12-04 Dan Sandel Sterilizable foam support tray for medical instruments
US5195633A (en) * 1992-01-27 1993-03-23 David Kaminski Golf ball display device
US5677018A (en) * 1995-08-29 1997-10-14 Shin; Myung K. Candy tree
USD732729S1 (en) * 2013-12-18 2015-06-23 Knog Pty Ltd Lighting accessory for a portable electronic device
USD762914S1 (en) * 2013-12-20 2016-08-02 Jody Arthur Lentz Lamp shade
USD824795S1 (en) * 2017-12-15 2018-08-07 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display metallic bars
USD825373S1 (en) * 2017-12-29 2018-08-14 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display coins and rounds
USD856841S1 (en) * 2019-02-11 2019-08-20 Patuga Llc Neckwear for minted coins or rounds
USD1022004S1 (en) * 2021-07-19 2024-04-09 James Bland Quantz, Jr. Detachable face for a lighting softbox

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1153185A (en) * 1914-07-02 1915-09-14 Myron H Allen Egg-carrier.
US1781529A (en) * 1930-01-20 1930-11-11 Shulman Isidor Game
US2366886A (en) * 1942-11-20 1945-01-09 American Tag Company Capsule handling apparatus
GB597762A (en) * 1945-08-25 1948-02-03 Norman Ducat New or improved constructional toy and educational device
US2587003A (en) * 1950-04-22 1952-02-26 United Board & Carton Corp Artificial christmas tree
DE833140C (en) * 1949-04-29 1952-03-03 Eugenie Raedler Combination of pieces designed in the manner of a construction kit
US2591016A (en) * 1948-10-15 1952-04-01 Leonard W Schoenherr Impaling pin target
US2775998A (en) * 1953-07-08 1957-01-01 Gen Latex & Chemical Corp Cushions and method of making same
US2781902A (en) * 1954-02-23 1957-02-19 V L Smithers Mfg Company Special package
US2860769A (en) * 1956-10-05 1958-11-18 Harold E Waller Supporting structure kit
US2877893A (en) * 1957-04-16 1959-03-17 Ivers Lee Co Package with removable indiciabearing sheet
US2996832A (en) * 1959-01-20 1961-08-22 Robert L Rubin Toy construction kit

Patent Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1153185A (en) * 1914-07-02 1915-09-14 Myron H Allen Egg-carrier.
US1781529A (en) * 1930-01-20 1930-11-11 Shulman Isidor Game
US2366886A (en) * 1942-11-20 1945-01-09 American Tag Company Capsule handling apparatus
GB597762A (en) * 1945-08-25 1948-02-03 Norman Ducat New or improved constructional toy and educational device
US2591016A (en) * 1948-10-15 1952-04-01 Leonard W Schoenherr Impaling pin target
DE833140C (en) * 1949-04-29 1952-03-03 Eugenie Raedler Combination of pieces designed in the manner of a construction kit
US2587003A (en) * 1950-04-22 1952-02-26 United Board & Carton Corp Artificial christmas tree
US2775998A (en) * 1953-07-08 1957-01-01 Gen Latex & Chemical Corp Cushions and method of making same
US2781902A (en) * 1954-02-23 1957-02-19 V L Smithers Mfg Company Special package
US2860769A (en) * 1956-10-05 1958-11-18 Harold E Waller Supporting structure kit
US2877893A (en) * 1957-04-16 1959-03-17 Ivers Lee Co Package with removable indiciabearing sheet
US2996832A (en) * 1959-01-20 1961-08-22 Robert L Rubin Toy construction kit

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3190499A (en) * 1962-10-26 1965-06-22 Dow Chemical Co Dispensing container
US3310164A (en) * 1964-07-07 1967-03-21 Reddall Winifred Sharp Package
US4150826A (en) * 1975-05-01 1979-04-24 Baldorossi Blanche N Game ball
US4485919A (en) * 1982-08-12 1984-12-04 Dan Sandel Sterilizable foam support tray for medical instruments
US5195633A (en) * 1992-01-27 1993-03-23 David Kaminski Golf ball display device
US5677018A (en) * 1995-08-29 1997-10-14 Shin; Myung K. Candy tree
USD732729S1 (en) * 2013-12-18 2015-06-23 Knog Pty Ltd Lighting accessory for a portable electronic device
USD762914S1 (en) * 2013-12-20 2016-08-02 Jody Arthur Lentz Lamp shade
USD824795S1 (en) * 2017-12-15 2018-08-07 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display metallic bars
USD825373S1 (en) * 2017-12-29 2018-08-14 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display coins and rounds
USD834991S1 (en) * 2017-12-29 2018-12-04 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display coins and rounds
USD856840S1 (en) 2017-12-29 2019-08-20 Patuga Llc Neckwear to house and display coins and rounds
USD856841S1 (en) * 2019-02-11 2019-08-20 Patuga Llc Neckwear for minted coins or rounds
USD1022004S1 (en) * 2021-07-19 2024-04-09 James Bland Quantz, Jr. Detachable face for a lighting softbox

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