US627646A - Hand-support for piano pupils. - Google Patents

Hand-support for piano pupils. Download PDF

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US627646A
US627646A US69713498A US1898697134A US627646A US 627646 A US627646 A US 627646A US 69713498 A US69713498 A US 69713498A US 1898697134 A US1898697134 A US 1898697134A US 627646 A US627646 A US 627646A
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pendent
wristbands
support
piano
supports
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US69713498A
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Hugo Kuerschner
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09BEDUCATIONAL OR DEMONSTRATION APPLIANCES; APPLIANCES FOR TEACHING, OR COMMUNICATING WITH, THE BLIND, DEAF OR MUTE; MODELS; PLANETARIA; GLOBES; MAPS; DIAGRAMS
    • G09B15/00Teaching music
    • G09B15/06Devices for exercising or strengthening fingers or arms; Devices for holding fingers or arms in a proper position for playing

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  • DOi/Pneouo m Monaus Psrsns c0. PHOTO-LITHO. wAsnwm'oN. a c
  • This invention relates to devices for supporting the arms or wrists of piano pupils While playing.
  • the object of the invention' is to provide an arm or wrist support which, while sustaining the arm and wrist in the correct position for fingering the keys of the piano, will be yielding to a sufficient extent to permit the hand to conveniently reach all the octaves of the keyboard and will also permit of the hands occupying the correct lateral position with regard to the keys at the two extremes of the keyboard.
  • the object is, moreover, to provide a support which may be carried about conveniently and which will not necessitate attachment to the piano directly.
  • my invention consists, essentially, in a pair of wrist-supports, preferably in the form of wristbands, which are secured, preferably in a removable manner, to pendent supports, which in turn receive their support from the person of the player or piano pupil.
  • These pendent supports are preferably in the shape of a shoulder band, strap, or cord or equivalent device, which passes around the neck and over the shoulders of the player and reaches down to the wristbands or wrist-supports.
  • the connection between the wristband and the pendent support is such as to allow the wristbands to swing or rotate freely around a substantially vertical axis, and, moreover, this connection is so arranged as to enable the wristbands to be readily detached from the pendent supports during intervals of rest.
  • Figure 1 represents a front View of section, of the length-ad j usting device for the pendent supports.
  • Figs. 4 and 5 represent detailviews, in front elevation and vertical longitudinal section, of a modified form of length-adjusting device for the pendent supports; and
  • Fig. 6, a modified form of removable connecting device between the wristband and pendent support.
  • the arm-support embodying my invention consists of a pair of Wrist-supports A A, preferably in the form of wristbands, as shown, which are suspended from a pair of pendent supports B B, which in the present case constitute the ends of a shoulder band or strap B,which shoulder band or strap, as shown in Fig. 2, passes around the rear portion of the neck of the wearer and down over the shoulders
  • the wristbands A A are secured to the ends of the pendent supports B B by a swinging rotatable j ointthat is to say, a connection which will permit the wristbands to swing horizontally and also to yield vertically in alldirections.
  • This connection is also so constituted as to make the wristbands removable from the pendent supports B B.
  • This swinging rotatable joint is illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2, and it consists in a number of rings or links a a.
  • the lower links a are connected to the wristbands A by engaging eyes a forming part of tabs or loops a through which the wrist-bands A pass, as clearly shown in the drawings, the said tabs being flattened at their lower portions to form narrow slots for the passage of said wristbands.
  • the upper links a of the swinging rotatable joints A engage the eyes 5 of similar tabs 19 which also have elongated and narrow slots at their upper portions for the passage of the pendent supports B.
  • Fig. 6 I have shown a modified form of swinging rotatable connection whichconsists in interposing between the tabs at and b a link E, whose loop e engages the eye a of the tab a and whose upper portion is swiveled to the tab If at c in any desired or convenient
  • the wristbands A are made removable from the pendent supports B in any suitable or preferred way.
  • I have carried this removability into effect by making the lower links a in Fig. 1 and e in Fig. 6 in the shape of snap-hooks, the tongues a or e of which will readily yield to pressure from the outside when it is desired to put the wristbands into position or to remove them from the pendent supports.
  • These snap-hooks being so well known it is not necessary to enterintoanyfurther description of the same.
  • the wristbands A maybe made adjustable in diameter to accommodate the arms and wrists of different sizes in any convenient or suitable way, as will be readily understood.
  • the manner in which such adjustment is effected in the present instance consists in attaching one end of the wristbands A to buckles A and passing the otherends through said buckles in a manner well known and readily understood.
  • the ends of the wristbands may be passed under s'lidable strapguards an, if desired.
  • the length of the pendent supports B may be made adjustable in any desired way.
  • Figs. 1 and 3 I have shown one such method of making them adjustable, which consists'in attaching the lower ends b of the pendent supports B to a clamp-buckle O, which may be of any suitable or convenient form and which in the present instance consists of a bed-plate c, in front of which is pivoted a clamp-leverc, the pivots of said clamp-lever o passing through ears 0 extending outward from the bed-plate c.
  • a clamp-buckle O which may be of any suitable or convenient form and which in the present instance consists of a bed-plate c, in front of which is pivoted a clamp-leverc, the pivots of said clamp-lever o passing through ears 0 extending outward from the bed-plate c.
  • the buckle is released by raising the clamplever 0' into the open position indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3, when the part of the pendent support B which passes through between the clamp-lever and the bed-plate 0 can be drawn up or down, as the case may require, and then looked in the desired position by pressing the clamp-lever 0 down in the position shown in full lines in Fig. 3.
  • FIG. 4 Another modified form of adjusting the length of the pendent supports B B is shown in Figs. 4 and 5. As there shown, the free end of the pendent support B passes through the loops of an ordinary buckle D, attached to the lower section b of said pendent support,and is held in anyposition of adjustment by the spurs cl.
  • This buckle is so well known as to require no further explanation.
  • the shoulder band or strap is placed in position around the neck and over the shoulders of the pupil, as indicated in Fig. 2, and the hands are passed through the wristbands until the same occupy a position around the wrist or any other desired part of the forearm of the pupil.
  • the forearm and wrist will be held in the proper position for fingering the piano and sufficient freedom will be given the player to conveniently reach all the parts of the keyboard and to hold the hands and wrists in a correct position at all points of said keyboard.
  • a correct position can thereby soon be acquired without cramping the pupil or causing undue fatigue.
  • the lengths of the pendent supports may be readily adjusted in the way indicated above.
  • the wristbands may be readily removed from the pendent supports by pressing the tongues a or e of the snaphoops a or e inwardly and lifting the eyes a out of engagement with the same.
  • the wristbands may be readily replaced when it is desired to resume playing or for any reason in a manner that will be readily understood.
  • an arm-support embodying my invention embodies the advantages of occupying a very small amount of space. It may be folded up and carried without inconvenience. It, moreover, does not necessitate attachment to the piano, whereby the latter is rendered unsightly. Finally, what I consider the most important advantage of the invention is the fact that while it maintains the hands and wrists in the exact and proper position for playing it allows perfect freedom of movement and in no way cramps the arms, wrists, or fingers of the player, no matter what portion of the keyboard the finger may occupy.
  • An arm-support for piano pupils comprising a strap or band freely mov able about the shoulders of the pupil and having pendent portions for supporting the arms, and wristbands suspended from said pendent portions.
  • An arm-support for piano pupils comprising pendent portions to hang loosely from the body of the pupil, wristbands, and swinging rotatable connections between said pendent portions and the wristbands.
  • An arm-support for piano pupils comprising pendent portions provided with detachable wristbands connected there with by swinging rotatable connections.
  • An arm-support for piano pupils comprising a strap or band freely mov IIO Wristbands which are adjustable in diameter,

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Physical Education & Sports Medicine (AREA)
  • Multimedia (AREA)
  • Business, Economics & Management (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Educational Administration (AREA)
  • Educational Technology (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Stringed Musical Instruments (AREA)

Description

No. 627,646. Patented 1611627, I899.
H. KUERSCHNEB.
. HAND SUPPORT FOR PIANU PUPILS.
(Application filed Nov. 22, 1898) 1N0 Mudel.)
DOi/Pneouo m: Monaus Psrsns c0. PHOTO-LITHO. wAsnwm'oN. a c
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
IIUGO KUERSOIINER, OF iVASI-IINGTON, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.
HAND-SUPPORT FOR PIANO PUPILS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 627,646, dated June 27, 1899.
Application filed November 22, 1398. Serial No. 697,184. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, Hueo KUERSOHNER, a citizen of the United States, residing at Washington, District of Columbia, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Hand-Supports for Piano Pupils; and I do hereby declare the following to be a full, clear, and exact description of the invention, such as will enable others skilled in the art to which it appertains to make and use the same.
This invention relates to devices for supporting the arms or wrists of piano pupils While playing.
The object of the invention'is to provide an arm or wrist support which, while sustaining the arm and wrist in the correct position for fingering the keys of the piano, will be yielding to a sufficient extent to permit the hand to conveniently reach all the octaves of the keyboard and will also permit of the hands occupying the correct lateral position with regard to the keys at the two extremes of the keyboard.
The object is, moreover, to provide a support which may be carried about conveniently and which will not necessitate attachment to the piano directly.
\Vith these objects in View my invention consists, essentially, in a pair of wrist-supports, preferably in the form of wristbands, which are secured, preferably in a removable manner, to pendent supports, which in turn receive their support from the person of the player or piano pupil. These pendent supports are preferably in the shape of a shoulder band, strap, or cord or equivalent device, which passes around the neck and over the shoulders of the player and reaches down to the wristbands or wrist-supports. The connection between the wristband and the pendent support is such as to allow the wristbands to swing or rotate freely around a substantially vertical axis, and, moreover, this connection is so arranged as to enable the wristbands to be readily detached from the pendent supports during intervals of rest.
My invention, moreover, consists in such features, devices,'and combination of parts as will be hereinafter setforth, and pointed out in the claims.
In the drawings forming part of this specification, Figure 1 represents a front View of section, of the length-ad j usting device for the pendent supports. Figs. 4 and 5 represent detailviews, in front elevation and vertical longitudinal section, of a modified form of length-adjusting device for the pendent supports; and Fig. 6, a modified form of removable connecting device between the wristband and pendent support.
By referring to Figs. 1 and 2 in the drawings it will be noted that the arm-support embodying my invention consists of a pair of Wrist-supports A A, preferably in the form of wristbands, as shown, which are suspended from a pair of pendent supports B B, which in the present case constitute the ends of a shoulder band or strap B,which shoulder band or strap, as shown in Fig. 2, passes around the rear portion of the neck of the wearer and down over the shoulders The wristbands A A are secured to the ends of the pendent supports B B by a swinging rotatable j ointthat is to say, a connection which will permit the wristbands to swing horizontally and also to yield vertically in alldirections. This connection is also so constituted as to make the wristbands removable from the pendent supports B B. One form of this swinging rotatable joint is illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2, and it consists in a number of rings or links a a. The lower links a are connected to the wristbands A by engaging eyes a forming part of tabs or loops a through which the wrist-bands A pass, as clearly shown in the drawings, the said tabs being flattened at their lower portions to form narrow slots for the passage of said wristbands. The upper links a of the swinging rotatable joints A engage the eyes 5 of similar tabs 19 which also have elongated and narrow slots at their upper portions for the passage of the pendent supports B.
In Fig. 6 I have shown a modified form of swinging rotatable connection Whichconsists in interposing between the tabs at and b a link E, whose loop e engages the eye a of the tab a and whose upper portion is swiveled to the tab If at c in any desired or convenient The wristbands A are made removable from the pendent supports B in any suitable or preferred way. In the present instance I have carried this removability into effect by making the lower links a in Fig. 1 and e in Fig. 6 in the shape of snap-hooks, the tongues a or e of which will readily yield to pressure from the outside when it is desired to put the wristbands into position or to remove them from the pendent supports. These snap-hooks being so well known it is not necessary to enterintoanyfurther description of the same.
The wristbands A maybe made adjustable in diameter to accommodate the arms and wrists of different sizes in any convenient or suitable way, as will be readily understood. The manner in which such adjustment is effected in the present instance consists in attaching one end of the wristbands A to buckles A and passing the otherends through said buckles in a manner well known and readily understood. The ends of the wristbands may be passed under s'lidable strapguards an, if desired.
The length of the pendent supports B may be made adjustable in any desired way. In Figs. 1 and 3 I have shown one such method of making them adjustable, which consists'in attaching the lower ends b of the pendent supports B to a clamp-buckle O, which may be of any suitable or convenient form and which in the present instance consists of a bed-plate c, in front of which is pivoted a clamp-leverc, the pivots of said clamp-lever o passing through ears 0 extending outward from the bed-plate c. This is a well-known form of construction and its use will be readily understood. hen it is desired to lengthen or shorten the pendent supports, the buckle is released by raising the clamplever 0' into the open position indicated in dotted lines in Fig. 3, when the part of the pendent support B which passes through between the clamp-lever and the bed-plate 0 can be drawn up or down, as the case may require, and then looked in the desired position by pressing the clamp-lever 0 down in the position shown in full lines in Fig. 3.
Another modified form of adjusting the length of the pendent supports B B is shown in Figs. 4 and 5. As there shown, the free end of the pendent support B passes through the loops of an ordinary buckle D, attached to the lower section b of said pendent support,and is held in anyposition of adjustment by the spurs cl. The use of this buckle is so well known as to require no further explanation.
It is manifest that any device for adjusting the length of the pendent supports B B will answer the purpose of my invention, and it is therefore to be understood that the same is not confined to the forms herein shown in exemplification of my said invention, which, so
far as this feature is concerned, essentially consists in the pendent supports adjustable in length in any way whatsoever.
The operation and use of the arm-support embodying my invention is apparent from the foregoing; IVhen it is desired to use the same, the shoulder band or strap is placed in position around the neck and over the shoulders of the pupil, as indicated in Fig. 2, and the hands are passed through the wristbands until the same occupy a position around the wrist or any other desired part of the forearm of the pupil. By this means the forearm and wrist will be held in the proper position for fingering the piano and sufficient freedom will be given the player to conveniently reach all the parts of the keyboard and to hold the hands and wrists in a correct position at all points of said keyboard. A correct position can thereby soon be acquired without cramping the pupil or causing undue fatigue. The lengths of the pendent supports may be readily adjusted in the way indicated above. In order to release the arms of the pupil when a pause occurs in the course of the lesson or for any other reason, the wristbands may be readily removed from the pendent supports by pressing the tongues a or e of the snaphoops a or e inwardly and lifting the eyes a out of engagement with the same. The wristbands may be readily replaced when it is desired to resume playing or for any reason in a manner that will be readily understood.
It will be seen that an arm-support embodying my invention embodies the advantages of occupying a very small amount of space. It may be folded up and carried without inconvenience. It, moreover, does not necessitate attachment to the piano, whereby the latter is rendered unsightly. Finally, what I consider the most important advantage of the invention is the fact that while it maintains the hands and wrists in the exact and proper position for playing it allows perfect freedom of movement and in no way cramps the arms, wrists, or fingers of the player, no matter what portion of the keyboard the finger may occupy.
What I claim, and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States, is
1. An arm-support for piano pupils, the same comprising a strap or band freely mov able about the shoulders of the pupil and having pendent portions for supporting the arms, and wristbands suspended from said pendent portions.
2. An arm-support for piano pupils, the same comprising pendent portions to hang loosely from the body of the pupil, wristbands, and swinging rotatable connections between said pendent portions and the wristbands.
3. An arm-support for piano pupils, the same comprising pendent portions provided with detachable wristbands connected there with by swinging rotatable connections.
4. An arm-support for piano pupils, the same comprising a strap or band freely mov IIO Wristbands which are adjustable in diameter,
and swinging rotatable connections between said Wristbands and said pendent portions.
In testimony whereof I affix my signature in presence of two Witnesses.
HUGO KUERSOHNER.
Witnesses:
.ANTON A. GLOETZNER,
BERT-HA L. DANA.
US69713498A 1898-11-22 1898-11-22 Hand-support for piano pupils. Expired - Lifetime US627646A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050164765A1 (en) * 1997-02-07 2005-07-28 Okuniewicz Douglas M. Means for generating a supplement bonus for an electronic gaming device
US11004354B1 (en) * 2020-07-06 2021-05-11 Strum Perfect LLC Guitar training device

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050164765A1 (en) * 1997-02-07 2005-07-28 Okuniewicz Douglas M. Means for generating a supplement bonus for an electronic gaming device
US11004354B1 (en) * 2020-07-06 2021-05-11 Strum Perfect LLC Guitar training device
US11475786B2 (en) 2020-07-06 2022-10-18 Strum Perfect LLC Guitar training device

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