Filamented animal collar and method of manufacture

Animal husbandry – Body- or appendage-encircling collar or band – Having or specifically adapted to support a diverse element...

Reexamination Certificate

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C119S863000, CD30S152000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06748903

ABSTRACT:

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
None
BACKGROUND-FIELD OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to animal collars, particularly to a strong, decorative, and substantially filamented animal collar having a jewelry quality sequence of adorning items incorporated as a functional part of the collar structure, and a method for its manufacture, that can be used by an animal handler to fulfill the basic pet collar functions of being able to exercise control over a domestic animal while it is being ambulated via the use of a leash or other tether and providing a means of being able to affix to the domestic animal law mandated disease inoculation records as well as personalized identity information, and which in addition to these basic functions also provides a means of adorning the domestic animal with a selection of attractive jewelry quality filament-supported decorations, including precious and semi-precious stones, according to the stylishness and preference of the animal owner/handler. Due to the sturdiness and strength of its construction, there is minimal risk of filament breakage or unfastening and loss of the valuable stones and other adorning items, and little risk of the animal wearing the collar swallowing any of the valuable stones, crystals, pearls, antique beads, and/or other filament supported decorations. Existing multi-purpose collars fail to simultaneously fulfill the basic pet collar functions mentioned above, while also adorning a domestic animal with attractive, durable, jewelry quality, and secure filament-supported decorations.
BACKGROUND-DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART
Historically, domestic pets have been useful members of human society, loved and honored companions, and symbols of status for individuals and organizations alike. People continue to incorporate pets into modern society, however, for a variety of important reasons modern pet owners are required to exercise responsibilities to society in the course of their pet ownership and thereby have an obligation to provide certain tools during the exercise of such responsibilities. One such pet ownership tool is the pet collar. A pet collar should have a sturdy construction to enable an owner/handler to exercise control over his or her pet in public and when otherwise needed. It also should provide a means for affixing a variety of informational devices thereto, such as pet identification tags and government-required inoculation badges. Further, for those who love pets and treat them as honored companions, and according to the stylishness and preference of the animal owner/handler, pet collars can be also made to function as decorative embellishments and adorning devices. However, prior to use of the present invention, high-quality decorations, including but not limited to precious and semi-precious stones, antique beads, pearls, and crystals, were seldom used as adorning items or embellishments for pets since the flexible lengths of fabric, fiber, and/or rubber materials used to support them had a limited useful lives and limited strength that caused such materials to be at risk for breakage under the stress of use, and which as a result placed all adorning items and embellishments of appreciable value supported by such materials at a risk for loss while at the same time presented a safety hazard to animals wearing them who might attempt to swallow loose adorning items after breakage. In contrast, the present invention has a more sturdy construction than prior art collars attempting to incorporate an aligned sequence of adorning items into their structure and allows a pet owner/handler to decorate his or her pet with high quality decorative objects that provide visible evidence of the status and value of the pet, and/or provide decoration that communicates the stylishness and preferences of the owner/handler.
While the following inventions represent prior art for the present invention and may provide one or more of the functions described hereinabove, none alone or in combination teaches all of the features and advantages of the present invention. The invention disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,322,037 to Tozawa (1994) is a cat collar that uses a slip-prohibiting friction clasp that allows for disengagement of the clasp members when a predetermined resistance is reached. Thus, the Tozawa clasp allows the collar to become unleashed and sets the animal free in the event that the collar gets caught on a foreign object or the animal is involved in a struggle. While the Tozawa clasp would prevent breakage of its collar under stress and would thereby prevent any adorning items thereon from becoming lost or swallowed by the cat wearing it, the Tozawa invention does not teach the jewelry-like and strong filamented support of a sequence of adorned items as a part of the functioning collar structure that is fundamental to the present invention. Similarly, the invention disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. D206,525 to Klimkiewicz (1966) is dog collar with bib ornamentation. Although ornamentation is involved, the Klimkiewicz invention does not teach the jewelry-like and strong filamented support of adorned items found in the present invention. Further, the invention disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,321,891 to Moeller (1982) is an adjustable animal collar that uses a buckle and spaced-apart holes to adjust the collar to various sizes to accommodate different sized animals. Although the present invention also has a buckle and spaced-apart holes, it is the strong filamented support of a sequence of adorning items that distinguishes the present invention from the Moeller invention and other existing inventions. In addition, the invention disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,407,233 to Bozzazzo (1983) discloses a safety collar for pets that can include the attachment of reflective forms and shapes. The Bozzazzo collar incorporates attachments transversely extending from the length direction of the collar, with the attachments optionally comprising elements of highly reflective material on individual hook-like members suspended about the collar to signal oncoming traffic as to the presence of the animal during situations involving reduced visibility. However, the means of attachment of adorning items in the Bozzacco invention does not teach the structure, means of attachment, or manner of use for the adorning items in the present invention In addition, the invention disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,719,876 to Wilken (1988) is a restraint collar which uses a pliable and thickened elongated pad for the area between the base of the shoulders and the animal's neck with hook-and-pile type of fastening means to snugly place the collar around the animal's neck. Although the Wilken invention teaches secure connection of its collar around the neck of a pet so as to prevent the collar from breaking under stress, the Wilken invention does not teach the jewelry-like and strong filamented support of adorning items that is fundamental to the present invention. As a result, no prior art alone or in combination is known that discloses a means of fulfilling all three of the above-identified purposes of a pet collar, that is, to provide a functional collar that is sufficiently strong to enable the pet owner to exercise control over the domestic animal without collar breakage under routinely anticipated conditions, to supply an effective connection means that enables the pet owner to attach leash and other temporary tether devices to the collar as well as permanently affixed items such as identification tags and inoculation badges, and finally to supply a jewelry-like aligned sequence of decorative components including but not limited to precious stones, semi-precious stones, metallic objects, antique beads, pearls, glass beads, crystal beads, other valuable objects adaptable for threaded/stringed attachment, and the like, as well as related identification adornments, as a part of the functioning portion of the pet collar with a filamented construction that has a sufficiently strong composition and assembly to protect expensive decorative components against lo

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