A koozie ( KOO -zee ), coozy , coozie , or - in Australia - stubby holder is a cloth or foam sleeve designed to isolate thermally beverage containers, such as cans or bottles.
Video Koozie
Dispute name, origin, and trademark
The name "Koozie" is an artificial term, trademark. The KOOZIE brand first started with Radio Cap Corporation (RCC). RCC specialized in baseball caps. The RCC registered a trademark for the name KOOZIE in 1980 and it introduced styrofoam which could become cooler in 1982. As the promotional product industry grew, more products were added to the KOOZIE brand, including drinkware, more cooling styles, cooler bags, recreation outdoor items, travel accessory accessories and business accessories.
Promotional Products Norwood acquired RCC in 1991 and continues to grow its KOOZIE product line. In 2009, BIC Graphic purchased Norwood and its sub-brands. BIC Graphic downgraded "RCC" for the brand name of KOOZIE and expanded the line to include additional styles of cooling cans, coolers and carry-on bags, and household appliances.
Other alternative names for cooling are:
- "qoozie"
- "cry"
- "beach"
- "beer hugger"
- "beer huggie"
- "beer rubber"
- "beer sleeves"
- "bottle jacket"
- "can cool"
- "candom"
- "coastie"
- "coldy-holdy"
- "coozy"
- "holders of the folders"
- "scungi"
- "cool"
- "convenient"
- "drinking the veil"
- "holders can be isolated"
- "beautiful puppets"
- "mopler"
- "stubby cooler"
- "stubby holder"
- "The Pisgah"
- "cans can be tauntun"
In Australia, beverage insulators are called stubby holder because local beer is traditionally sold in 375Ã, mL (13.2Ã, à ° flÃ, oz; 12,7Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, à , Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, Ã, United States) are literally known as "stubbies" because of their short, squat look compared to alternative packaging of bottles 750Ã,à mL (26à , Impro, flÃ, oz; 25Ã, USÃ, flÃ, oz) ("king brown", "tallie", or just "bottle"), and 300 to 375Ã, mL (10.6 to 13.2 bottles of chili, 10.1 up to 12.7 pounds US) longneck bottles commonly used for beer imported from North America and Europe. Most Australian domestic beer now adopts bottles of longnecks and/or tinnies for packaging of 375Ã, mL (13.2Ã, à ° flÃ, oz, 12,7Ã,Ã, flÃ, oz), and 750Ã, Ãμl (26Ã, impÃ, flÃ, oz; 25Ã, à ° flÃ, USA) oz) the bottle is now on sale much less frequently than it has historically happened. Victoria Bitter (VB) is famous for continuing to use traditional stubby, albeit with a twisting touch replacing the traditional crown seal.
Norwood was in dispute, continuously for several years in the 2000s, over Koozie's trademark status with an online retail business called Kustom Koozies. Norwood insists that names like beer hugger can be cooler and huggie does not violate his trademark, but it's koozie >, coozie , coolies , and comfortable do. Custom Koozies asserts in 2005 that the trademark has become a generic. In later years, Norwood and Koo Koozies came to a license agreement for the use of trademarks, but in 2009 they were at odds again, because Kustom Koozies tried and failed to cancel a trademark license agreement in response to Norwood's order to make certain changes to his website , one of which is that "Koozie" should be set in all caps as "KOOZIE", and the other is that the registered trademark symbol "Ã,î" is used to identify the original Norwood BRASS.
Maps Koozie
Use
Insulated beverage containers, or KOOZIE branded products, are used to isolate cold drinks from heating by conduction and heat radiation, such as hands, warm air, warm surface, or sunlight. Using an insulated beverage container, or KOOZIE branded products, can reduce the level of warm drinks in the sun by up to 50%.
Secondary uses include easily identifying someone's drink from others and for marketing. By printing on insulated beverage containers, or KOOZIE branded products, many different companies have used items as promotional gifts because they are not only cheap to produce, but their use is often more likely to bring the company's name to the household. Initially the logo or image is screen-printed on a round foam cylinder with a foam base, which generally has a hole in the base for easy inserting and removing the drink container.
Materials and styles
Insulated beverage containers, or KOOZIE branded products, have evolved both in materials and styles. Materials used include skin, neoprene, EVA, polyester, vinyl, and various open cells and closed cell foams. There is an insulated beverage container for 40 oz. bottles, and customizable beverage containers, or KOOZIE branded products, which suit different beverage sizes.
Some of the insulated beverage containers are becoming increasingly popular, giving the wearer a Rambo-type look. Bandie is an example that allows the user to carry multiple cans in an individually isolated beverage container. There is a hole in the bottom of the koozie for suctioning
See also
- Cup holder
- Cooler
- Tea is convenient
- Thermal insulation
- Vacuum flask
References
Source
Source of the article : Wikipedia