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The entirety of this application, specification, claims, abstract, drawings, tables, formulae etc., is protected by copyright: 2019-2020 Donald L. Baker dba android originals LLC.
United States Patent | 10,878,785 |
Baker | December 29, 2020 |
This invention uses a simple, decorative and effective way to hold picks to a guitar body, especially a solid electric guitar body or the head of a neck. It comprises a flat plate, which can be conveniently included in the design of a pick guard, using at least one mounting screw, one or more fingers to hold down individual picks, each tensioned by separate screw, and a thin shield under the pick holder to keep each pick from rubbing on the body finish. The parts can be cut, carved or printed to decorative designs.
Inventors: |
Baker; Donald L (Tulsa, OK) | ||||||||||
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Applicant: |
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Family ID: |
73245141 | ||||||||||
Appl. No.: |
16/845,482 | ||||||||||
Filed: |
April 10, 2020 |
Document Identifier | Publication Date | |
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US 20200365122 A1 | Nov 19, 2020 | |
Application Number | Filing Date | Patent Number | Issue Date | ||
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62847449 | May 14, 2019 | ||||
Current U.S. Class: | 1/1 |
Current CPC Class: | G10D 3/173 (20200201); G10D 1/08 (20130101) |
Current International Class: | G10D 3/173 (20200101) |
3181410 | May 1965 | Phillips |
3442169 | May 1969 | Bowers |
3752029 | August 1973 | Watrous |
4135431 | January 1979 | Ferguson |
4785708 | November 1988 | Vaughan |
4890531 | January 1990 | Tischer |
4982641 | January 1991 | Duhart |
5127300 | July 1992 | Silverman |
D355667 | February 1995 | Burger |
5413020 | May 1995 | Thompson |
D362264 | September 1995 | Trees |
5488892 | February 1996 | Jepsen |
5649634 | July 1997 | Irizarry |
5651468 | July 1997 | Irizarry |
5796021 | August 1998 | Longshore |
5837913 | November 1998 | Newman |
5905217 | May 1999 | Byers |
6054643 | April 2000 | Chance |
6262354 | July 2001 | Solomon |
6933430 | August 2005 | Oskorep |
7312388 | December 2007 | Oskorep |
7417184 | August 2008 | Weathersby |
7626103 | December 2009 | Phillips |
7847171 | December 2010 | Kidd |
9047849 | June 2015 | Koster |
9135897 | September 2015 | McDonald |
9418663 | August 2016 | Storck |
9704459 | July 2017 | Paterson |
9734806 | August 2017 | Storck |
9837056 | December 2017 | Davis |
2010/0263515 | October 2010 | Hollin |
1161410 | Oct 2016 | ES | |||
a. a flat, plate-like, semi-flexible body with one or more tapering fingers for holding picks to an instrument body, and
b. a flat, thin shield material under said device body, fingers and picks, but on top of said instrument body, and
c. one or more mounting screws, passing through said body and said shield, to mount said body and shield to said instrument, and
d. one or more tension screws per each of said fingers, situated between said finger and said mounting screws, passing through said body and said shield, functioning to adjust the individual pressure of each said finger on said picks, so as to adjust for said pick thickness and surface roughness.
2. An embodiment of the invention as recited in claim 1, wherein
said body, said fingers and said shield are cut, carved, printed
or otherwise decorated to some pleasing design.
3. An embodiment of the invention as recited in claim 1, wherein
said invention is incorporated in to the edged of a pick guard,
using an extension of said pick guard as said body and fingers.
4. An embodiment of the invention as recited in claim 1, wherein said invention is a separate device, mounted to said instrument in some place convenient to the user of said instrument.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,181,410, Phillips, 1965-05-04, Guitar pick retention (magnetic pick retention on guitar)
U.S. Pat. No. 3,442,169, Bowers, 1969-05-06, Guitar pick holder (pick with bolt-on ring for finger)
U.S. Pat. No. 3,752,029, Watrous, 1973-08-14, Pick holder (coil spring for holding several picks, with attachment device for instrument)
U.S. Pat. No. 4,135,431, Ferguson, 1979-01-23, Stringed musical instrument pick dispenser (dispenser for multiple picks, attached to pick guard)
U.S. Pat. No. 4,785,708, Vaughan, 1988-11-22, Pick holder for stringed instruments (wide, thin holster for multiple picks attachable to guitar body)
U.S. Pat. No. 4,890,531, Tischer, 1990-01-02, Musical instrument pick holder (coil spring for holding multiple picks, attached to musical instrument or other surface) U.S. Pat. No. 4,982,641, Duhart, 1991-01-08, Guitar pick holder (pick attached by lanyard to wrist)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,127,300, Silverman, 1992-07-07, Pick holder for a stringed musical instrument (folded spring with slot for multiple picks and recess for holding allen wrench)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,413,020, Thompson, 1995-05-09, Retracting guitar pick holder (pick on elastic lanyard through hollow tube to wrist strap)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,488,892, Jepsen, 1996-02-06, Pick holder (flat, close-fitting compartment for single pick, stackable & attachable to guitar body) U.S. Pat. No. 5,649,634, Irizarry, 1997-07-22, Holder for thin planar objects (coil spring attached to suction cup)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,651,468, Irizarry, 1997-07-29, Holder for thin planar objects (coil spring attached to spring clip)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,796,021, Longshore, 1998-18-18, Pick holder for guitars and other stringed instruments (slotted bar for holding single pick to guitar with legs & small feet)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,837,913, Newman, 1998-11-17, Plectrum holder and method for using same (pick held on elastic or spring-retrieved lanyard to finger ring)
U.S. Pat. No. 5,905,217, Byers, 1999-05-18, Pick holder (flexible snap holster for single pick, sewn onto guitar strap or hung from strap button)
U.S. Pat. No. 6,054,643, Chance & Gray, 2000-04-25, Guitar pick with gripping means (pick with spring clip)
U.S. Pat. No. 6,262,354, Solomon, 2001-07-17, Protective guard and pick holder for musical instruments (string cover with recesses for 2 picks)
U.S. Pat. No. 6,933,430, Oskorep, 2005-08-23, Guitar pick holder made of a flexible magnetic body (refrigerator magnet on guitar holds down picks with metallic parts)
U.S. Pat. No. 7,312,388, Oskorep, 2007-12-25, Guitar pick stickers which provide highly-platicized formulations or material to synthetic guitar picks (ditto)
U.S. Pat. No. 7,417,184, Weathersby, 2008-08-26, Portable guitar pick holder apparatus (pick holster that works like store shelf springs to dispense picks)
U.S. Pat. No. 7,626,103, Phillips, 2009-12-01, Musical instrument pick holder (flat, single-pick holster with internal spring retention and metal ring to attach to key ring)
U.S. Pat. No. 7,847,171, Kidd, 2010-12-07, Guitar with pick support (coil spring pick holder mounted on guitar)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,047,849, Koster, 2015-06-02, Pick holder (single-pick socket with suction cup)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,135,897, McDonald & Benjamin, 2015-09-15, Magnetic guitar pick ring and material for use therewith (finger ring attached to pick either magnetically or by lanyard chain)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,418,663, Storck, 2016-08-16, Pick holder for stringed musical instrument picks (array of p-shaped spring clips to hold picks)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,704,459, Paterson, 2017-07-11, Pick holder (complex money-clip type pick holder with spring clip for mounting the guitar strap & decoration)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,734,806, Storck, 2017-08-15, Guitar pick holder with integral strap holder (pick with several alternative slots and jaws for gripping guitar strap)
U.S. Pat. No. 9,837,056, Davis, 2017-12-05, Guitar pick holder (hand-held device with retention for several picks to pick strings simultaneously or in sequence)
US2010/0263515, Hollin, 2010-10-21, Plectrum with attached grasping devices (pick with slot or Velcro hooks for lanyards)
U.S. D355667, Burger, 1995-02-21, Guitar pick holder (spring wire with coils for holding picks)
U.S. D362264, Trees, 1995-09-12, Holder for guitar pick (pick
lanyard and wrist strap with ornamental design)
Background and Prior Art--Technical Problems Found and Resolved
The references cover the prior art which this inventor was able
to find after creating the invention. Most, if not all of them
suffer from some deficiencies or inconveniences: 1) hanging the
pick on or off the finger or wrist, which can be distracting;
2) complex design, more expensive to manufacture; 3) allowing
the picks to stick up above the surface of the guitar, where they
can get knocked off; and 4) placing the picks across the strings
from the guitarist or on the neck, where they are less convenient
to reach.
This inventor had been slipping picks under the low-E string side
of an ordinary electric guitar pick guard, as shown in FIG. 1A.
Then he designed a homemade pick guard, as shown in FIG. 1B, which
keeps at least two picks handy to the guitarist between the guitarist
and the strings. The next step was to deliberately design adjustable
fingers into the pick guard to hold picks with friction and the
pressure of the pick guard against the guitar body, as generated
by the pick guard mount screws, as shown in FIGS. 2 & 3. This
invention adds a tension screw per finger, specifically to allow
for different thicknesses and materials of picks, and an optional
shield of thin material to protect the guitar finish from the
sliding of the picks.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
This invention uses a simple, decorative and effective way to
hold picks to a guitar body, especially a solid electric guitar
body or the head of a neck. It comprises a flat plate, which can
be conveniently included in the design of a pick guard, using
at least one mounting screw, one or more fingers to hold down
individual picks, each tensioned by separate screw, and a thin
shield under the pick holder to keep each pick from rubbing on
the body finish.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1A shows a standard pick guard (1) for a generic S-type electric guitar with pick guard mounting screw holes (3) and three single-coil pickups (5). FIG. 1B shows a modified pick guard with integral fingers (7, 11 & 13) meant to hold guitar picks between the pick guard and the body by pressure and friction.
FIG. 2A shows a simple one-finger pick holder of this invention, with an optional shield (19) against the guitar body, and under the pick (21), to protect the body finish from the pick. The pick is held down by friction and pressure, with a flat finger of semi-flexible plate-like material (23), screwed to the body by a screw (27), with a tension screw (25) to adjust for different pick thicknesses. FIG. 2B shows a 2-finger embodiment with one mounting screw (27) and two tension screws (25). FIG. 2C shows a 3-finger embodiment with three tension screws (25) and two mounting screws (27). The tension and mounting screws also hold the shield in place.
FIG. 3A shows a more aesthetic embodiment of the 2-finger pick
holder, with two picks (21), two tension screws (25), one mounting
screw (27), one finger plate with two fingers (31) and a body
finish shield under the picks (29), held in place by all the screws.
The outline of the shield follows the bottom contour of the finger
plate to protect the guitar finish from everything but the screws.
FIG. 3B shows a similar aesthetically-designed pick holder, integral
to the pick guard (33) similar to the prototype shown in FIG.
1B. The dotted line shows the extent of the shield under the pick
guard, so that it engages the mounting screw (27).
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
This invention is comprised of one or more finger-like extensions
of plate-like semi-flexible material, affixed to a stringed instrument
by one or more mounting screws at the base, with the friction
and tension to hold different types and thicknesses of picks or
plectrums set by one or more tension screws per finger (generally
only one), with an optional shield of thin but tough material
adjacent to the instrument body below the pick and finger, meant
to protect the finish of the instrument from wear by sliding picks
under the finger(s). The finger and shield is held in place and
position by both the mounting and tension screws. The shield extends
entirely underneath the finger structure, so as to protect the
instrument finish from any shifting of the finger structure under
the tension and mounting screws.
FIG. 1A shows a standard S-type electric guitar pick guard for
comparison. FIG. 1B shows a prototype without tension screws.
The fingers can be arranged in any convenient geometric disposition,
as shown in FIGS. 2A-B. They can be designed more aesthetically
as shown in FIG. 3A, or incorporated into the design of an electric
guitar pick guard, as shown in FIGS. 1B and 3B. They can be decorated
in various ways (not shown), for example, as upswept eagle or
dragon wings, or opposing heads of serpents or other animals.
FIGS. 3A&B show a decorative design on the shield. The pick
holder & fingers can be front-printed or carved or otherwise
decorated, and the body shield can be transparent and back-printed,
or otherwise colored or cut to decorative shape.