181 |
Necktie assembly |
US560734 |
1990-07-31 |
US5084916A |
1992-02-04 |
Joseph R. Austin |
A necktie assembly in which a reversible tie piece is held in place between interlocking front and rear tieknot shells by a slide bar and a bar lock, in which the front tieknot shell is an interchangeable part, the entire assembly is held around the neck by an adjustable band and a shadow bracket provides a raised or lowered affect to the tieknot. |
182 |
Sports tie |
US539443 |
1990-06-18 |
US5036550A |
1991-08-06 |
Steven M. Wilsey |
A sports tie is comprised of a plurality of rigid segments flexibly joined together in the form of a necktie. The exposed surfaces of the segments are finished to simulate a basketball court. The logo or other insignia of a sports team is bonded to the exposed surfaces of the segments. A band or clip attached to an end segment allows a person to wear the sports tie around his neck. In a modified embodiment, the segments have the outline of a baseball bat. In a further embodiment, the segments are covered with artificial football field material. In another embodiment, the segments are made of clear plastic to simulate a hockey rink. Disks decorated to represent various sports balls or pucks can be bonded to a segment. |
183 |
|
US37752389 |
1989-07-10 |
US5031243A |
1991-07-16 |
|
|
184 |
Pre-tied necktie |
US230306 |
1988-08-09 |
US4875239A |
1989-10-24 |
John A. Patterson, Jr. |
A support and fastening means for producing a pre-tied necktie using a modified form of body member and a support strap thereon, in which the support strap and body member reduce manufacturing costs while producing a superior product. This result is accomplished by replacing the spring clamp with the less expensive support strap which can be produced by the tie manufacturer, rather than having to be contracted out. The old spring clamp is replaced by a support strap which secures the tie around the wearer's neck and under the collar, and is detachably joined together at its ends by hook and loop area or "Velcro" fasteners secured to their respective overlapping ends. The support strap is engaged and aligned with the body member by pushing the rear post and wing posts through their respective punch holes in the support strap. A simplified necktie with only 2 pre-punched holes is more easily tied around the body member so that the ends of the support straps exit the knot at the wing tips and produce a pre-tied necktie that, when worn, looks identical to a standard necktie. |
185 |
Preset necktie |
US163592 |
1988-03-03 |
US4835794A |
1989-06-06 |
Jiann-Jong Chen; Ching-Hwa Chen |
A novel preset necktie comprises an outer tie, and inner tie, a zipper, a zipper slider of unique configuration, and a support body. The outer and the inner ties are both separate individual bodies with the upper portion of the inner tie being connected to form a loop and a zipper being disposed to the inner side of the lower portion thereof to form into the tie loop. With the inner tie having been threaded through the support body and the pull tab of the specially designed slider secured to the inner side of said slider, the size of the tie loop can be adjusted by pushing or pulling said support body. A pressing spring plate is provided on the inner side of the slider so as to keep the shape of the tie loop fixed. The upper portion of the outer tie is secured to the support body by means of a rivet and preset into a regular knot such that the user does not have to set the knot each time when wearing then necktie. |
186 |
Zipper necktie |
US875493 |
1986-06-18 |
US4656672A |
1987-04-14 |
Martin Lande |
A pretied necktie comprising a semirigid knot support, a front tie member fixed to and wrapped around the knot support, and a rear tie member having a loop-shaped, neck-encircling upper end which can be enlarged or reduced in size by means of a zip fastener comprising two continuous strings of interlockable elements that are symmetrically secured onto opposite portions of the loop and pass through a slider connected to the knot support. The slider comprises a small elongated hooking member integrally projecting from one of its side. This hooking member acts as the male element of a snap fastener. The female element of this snap fastener is defined by a small slot provided in the front wall of the knot support. The use of such a snap fastener makes the pretied necktie very easy to assemble. |
187 |
Video bow tie |
US343037 |
1964-02-06 |
US4283797A |
1981-08-18 |
Murray Seider |
1. A novelty bow necktie structure comprising a narrow strip of fabric folded into juxtaposed folds, a tube sleeved around the folds midway the ends thereof, an electric lamp structure supported and concealed within the confines of the tube, conductors connected at one end to the lamp structure, an electric battery connected to the other ends of the conductors, and a flexible band connected at one end to the fabric for fastening the strip around the neck of the wearer, the outer surface of the outermost fold having removable indicia thereon adapted to be illuminated by the lamp structure. |
188 |
Necktie and tie knot form therefor |
US3761964D |
1972-06-21 |
US3761964A |
1973-10-02 |
PIPER J |
A necktie having a simulated knot includes a contoured form for providing the knot wherein the simulated knot is formed directly from the necktie itself in cooperation with the contoured form, the necktie being fastened about the form along the contours of the outer surface thereof so as to directly form the simulated knot from the necktie. The form preferably comprises an arcuate member having a contoured inner surface concave portion and a substantially parallel contoured convex outer surface portion, the form tapering from each end to the center thereof so as to form a single continuous symmetrically tapered concave channel for the inner surface portion and a symmetrically tapered contoured arcuate convex portion for the outer surface portion. The form may be a single contoured member around which the body of the tie is secured by a single stitch or may be a pair of nesting geometrically similar forms to which the tie is secured by means of a removable slide fastener. In the latter case, the location of the form may be readily varied along the length of the tie so as to alter the location of the simulated knot.
|
189 |
Adjustable preformed necktie |
US3737917D |
1971-08-09 |
US3737917A |
1973-06-12 |
ORR J |
The invention discloses a necktie so designed that the knot stays tied and allows the portion around the neck to be unfastened and taken off the neck with the small portion of the tie sliding through the knot when refastened to adjust the neck portion to the user.
|
190 |
Neckwear construction |
US3639916D |
1969-11-20 |
US3639916A |
1972-02-08 |
VAUGHN RICHARD C |
Simulated cravat comprising a relatively stiff section of fabric having a knot portion and panel portion adapted to depend from the knot portion, the knot portion having wing portions extending beneath the left and right collar tab portions of a shirt, and the knot portion and the panel portion each having an aperture, the spacing between which is an exact multiple of the common shirt front button and buttonhole spacing, the cravat being combined with a shirt having a collar button and buttonhole, and shirt front buttons and buttonholes, and a buttonhole adjacent the collar button, the cravat having its knot portion secured to the shirt collar by a cuff link like fastener projecting through the knot portion aperture, and through both buttonholes, and being secured to the shirt front at the button in alignment with the panel portion aperture by a second cuff link like fastener extending through the cravat aperture, the shirt front buttonhole in alignment with said last named cravat aperture, and an additional aperture adjacent the button.
|
191 |
Spectrum-analyzing recorder |
US3611411D |
1969-10-29 |
US3611411A |
1971-10-05 |
MOSHIER STEPHEN L; MCCOMBS ALLAN K; RICH STANLEY R |
The spectrum-analyzing apparatus disclosed herein operates to generate a line or bar graph in which the length of each line represents the amplitude of a respective spectral component of a given input signal. A plurality of signal-holding circuits are employed each of which provides a continuing signal which is a function of the time-varying amplitude of a respective filter channel output signal. The various graph lines are generated starting simultaneously and, at the same time, a ramp generator is triggered to generate a ramp voltage. Each of the held or continuing signals is compared with the ramp voltage and, when the ramp voltage passes each continuing signal, a respective one of the lines is terminated.
|
192 |
Necktie |
US3538511D |
1969-08-15 |
US3538511A |
1970-11-10 |
ARO GEORGE A |
|
193 |
Ornamental bow |
US40348164 |
1964-10-13 |
US3283339A |
1966-11-08 |
MYRON HEIFETZ |
|
194 |
Necktie |
US19486062 |
1962-05-15 |
US3173148A |
1965-03-16 |
TSUNEO HORII |
|
195 |
Necktie |
US14469061 |
1961-10-12 |
US3154791A |
1964-11-03 |
SERRANO RICARDO A |
|
196 |
Necktie |
US80217259 |
1959-03-26 |
US3030631A |
1962-04-24 |
LEON TOBIAS |
|
197 |
Simulated bow tie |
US76692358 |
1958-10-13 |
US3022515A |
1962-02-27 |
JOSEPH BORNSTEIN; LEONARD BORNSTEIN; AMALIA BORNSTEIN |
|
198 |
Leather necktie |
US82653359 |
1959-07-13 |
US3003153A |
1961-10-10 |
LAHAM GEORGE S |
|
199 |
Neckties |
US31622752 |
1952-10-22 |
US2707787A |
1955-05-10 |
LASKOWSKI EDWIN M |
|
200 |
Preformed necktie |
US22206551 |
1951-04-20 |
US2648846A |
1953-08-18 |
TITONE ANTHONY J |
|