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US2374375A - Illuminated brooch - Google Patents

Illuminated brooch
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Publication number
US2374375A
US2374375AUS512581AUS51258143AUS2374375AUS 2374375 AUS2374375 AUS 2374375AUS 512581 AUS512581 AUS 512581AUS 51258143 AUS51258143 AUS 51258143AUS 2374375 AUS2374375 AUS 2374375A
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
lamp
brooch
illuminated
rear section
recesses
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US512581A
Inventor
James H O'donnell
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
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Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by IndividualfiledCriticalIndividual
Priority to US512581ApriorityCriticalpatent/US2374375A/en
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US2374375ApublicationCriticalpatent/US2374375A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
Expired - Lifetimelegal-statusCriticalCurrent

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Patented Apr. 24, 1945 NITED s 'rss PATENT OFFICE ILLUMINATED BROOCH James H. O'Donnell, Woburn, Mass.
Application December 2, 1943, Serial No. 512,581
1 Claim. (Cl. Mil-6.4)
' My invention relates to illuminated brooches to be worn upon the clothing of a person for purposes of display, amusement and the like, and it has for its object to provide an inexpensive and eflicient self-contained device of the character 5 described which can be detachably fastened in position upon the clothing of the wearer and which shall be provided with illuminating means that can be lighted and extinguished at the will of the wearer.
To these ends I have provided a brooch of the character described which, in its preferred form,
Figs. 1, 2 and 3 of the drawing is a box-like structure comprising a molded front section or wall III which is preferably made from a plastic and which may be molded to present an ornamental design as shown, and' a rear receptacle section II of metal made at its front with two recesses l2, l2 within each of which is provided a dry cell battery It. a
Adjacent to its lower end the rear section II is made interiorly with a transverse groove it within whichis confined the intermediate portion of a sheet metal spring ll whose opposite end portions are within therecesses l2, l2 and bear against the lower ends of the metalcasings of the batteries is so as to yieldingly urge the latter upwardly against shoulders I provided adjaceht to the upper endsof the recesses II. In this way the batteries are held against endwise movement in their recesses. The metal casings It will thus be clear that when either lamp l I is manually screwed downwardly its center contact will seat upon the center contact of its battery is thereby completing the circuit through said lamp. It will also be clear that when either lamp is thereafter manually adjusted outwardly within its socket ll, away from contact with its battery, the lamp will be extinguished.
The front wall III is removably fastened in posiio tion against the front of the rear section II by means of two *screws II which extend loosely through holes provided in rear section II and are screwed into threaded apertures II (Fig. 1) formed in the front wall ll. Thus the front wall is may readily be removed whenever it becomes necessary to replenish the batteries, but while it is secured in position upe'n the rear section it assists in holding the batteries in axial alinement with the lampsi so Directly in front of each lamp is the front wall II is made with a window aperture 2| within which is secured a transparency If, one of these two transparencies being indicated as colored red and the other as colored green; These transas parencies may be made from glass, Lucite,"
Vynlite," or the like, and are cements in position within their window apertures.
soldered or otherwise fastened at its one end to the exterior of the back wall of the rear section H is a pin It whose opposite pointed end portion is adapted to be engaged with a hook it that is soldered or otherwise fastened to said wall, said pin and hook providing means by which. the brooch .is fastened to the clothing of the wearer.
The design ofthe device shown in Figs. 1, 2 and 3 is appropriate for use by young girls and other young people. For example, when worn by a young girl or woman who is approached by a young man seeking her acquaintance, she can signal encouragement to him by illuminating the green transparency to the exclusion of the red by adjustment of the lamp thereof, or should she desire to repel his attentions then she can iiof the batteries are, as usual, provided with an lumihate the red transparency to the exclusion of the green by adjustment of the lamp of the same.
other kinds of transparencies may be substiq tuted for those shown, if desired.
What 1 claim is:
A device of the character described comprising a box-like rear section, a front wall section, and
means sep r bly fastening said sections together, said rear section being provided upon its exterior with means for separably attaching it to a garin said sockets ment and made interiorly with a pair oi! battery recesses disposed side by side and having an end wall made with a pair of threaded lamp sockets whereof each is axially alined with one of said recesses; an electric dry-cell battery element held in position within each of said recesses by said front wall section; two electric lamp elements having threaded bases removably mounted withby which latter said lamp elenieTitsazesupported each in axial alinement with the axis of "one of said battery elements with its center contacfidirectly opposite the center contact of said battery element so that when said lamp element is manually rotated its center contact is shifted into and out of contact with the center contact oi said battery element thereby to close and open a circuit including said two elements; and two transparencies having diiferent visual characteristics each of which is in front of one or said lamp elements so that it is illuminated by the latter when one of said circuits is closed, the bulbs 01 said'lamps being disposed upon the exterior of said rear section back of said transparencies where they are accessible for direct manual operation.
JAMES H. O'DONNEIL.
US512581A1943-12-021943-12-02Illuminated broochExpired - LifetimeUS2374375A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US512581AUS2374375A (en)1943-12-021943-12-02Illuminated brooch

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
US512581AUS2374375A (en)1943-12-021943-12-02Illuminated brooch

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US2374375Atrue US2374375A (en)1945-04-24

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Family Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US512581AExpired - LifetimeUS2374375A (en)1943-12-021943-12-02Illuminated brooch

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US (1)US2374375A (en)

Cited By (18)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2430607A (en)*1947-03-241947-11-11Walter S GaskouitzElectric lighting novelty
US2854563A (en)*1955-06-031958-09-30James W CatchingIlluminated jewelry
US2966580A (en)*1959-09-241960-12-27Frank E TaylorBattery hand lamp
US3392276A (en)*1966-04-191968-07-09Alfred I. RomanElectrically illuminated jewelry
US3521049A (en)*1967-09-271970-07-21Gordon W YoungSelf-luminous jewelry
US3689758A (en)*1969-05-231972-09-05Don W PowerLighted earring
US3953722A (en)*1974-02-141976-04-27Danny R. StickFlashlight support means
USD250007S (en)1977-02-221978-10-24Kleiner Carl JIlluminable pendant
USD250006S (en)1977-02-221978-10-24Kleiner Carl JIlluminable pendant
USD268366S (en)1981-12-211983-03-22Hasty Paris JCombined illuminable novelty pin and flashing tail light
US4508520A (en)*1981-10-071985-04-02Sellers Richard KHeart-shaped light-emitting novelty
US4556932A (en)*1983-03-281985-12-03Lehrer Bradley DLighted novelty item
US4623206A (en)*1984-12-281986-11-18Fuller James TSpring battery retainer
USD304697S (en)1987-11-061989-11-21Crews Timothy RFlashing earing
USD362318S (en)1993-05-141995-09-12Corriher Donna JBarrette attachment
US6860614B1 (en)2000-11-152005-03-01Fred J. PinciaroChemiluminescent jewelry and accessories
USD508428S1 (en)2003-12-162005-08-16James Dale CollierCombined illuminable novelty pin, pendant, and magnet
US20090217702A1 (en)*2008-02-282009-09-03Oksana NagornovaIlluminating jewelry items useful for sending coded messages to other persons

Cited By (19)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US2430607A (en)*1947-03-241947-11-11Walter S GaskouitzElectric lighting novelty
US2854563A (en)*1955-06-031958-09-30James W CatchingIlluminated jewelry
US2966580A (en)*1959-09-241960-12-27Frank E TaylorBattery hand lamp
US3392276A (en)*1966-04-191968-07-09Alfred I. RomanElectrically illuminated jewelry
US3521049A (en)*1967-09-271970-07-21Gordon W YoungSelf-luminous jewelry
US3689758A (en)*1969-05-231972-09-05Don W PowerLighted earring
US3953722A (en)*1974-02-141976-04-27Danny R. StickFlashlight support means
USD250006S (en)1977-02-221978-10-24Kleiner Carl JIlluminable pendant
USD250007S (en)1977-02-221978-10-24Kleiner Carl JIlluminable pendant
US4508520A (en)*1981-10-071985-04-02Sellers Richard KHeart-shaped light-emitting novelty
USD268366S (en)1981-12-211983-03-22Hasty Paris JCombined illuminable novelty pin and flashing tail light
US4556932A (en)*1983-03-281985-12-03Lehrer Bradley DLighted novelty item
US4623206A (en)*1984-12-281986-11-18Fuller James TSpring battery retainer
USD304697S (en)1987-11-061989-11-21Crews Timothy RFlashing earing
USD362318S (en)1993-05-141995-09-12Corriher Donna JBarrette attachment
US6860614B1 (en)2000-11-152005-03-01Fred J. PinciaroChemiluminescent jewelry and accessories
US7222980B1 (en)2000-11-152007-05-29Fred James PinciaroJewelry exhibiting chemiluminescent properties
USD508428S1 (en)2003-12-162005-08-16James Dale CollierCombined illuminable novelty pin, pendant, and magnet
US20090217702A1 (en)*2008-02-282009-09-03Oksana NagornovaIlluminating jewelry items useful for sending coded messages to other persons

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