Industrial Designs Rules Schedule




1164

THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.

[No. 64

Class 17.
Manufactures from mineral and other substances for
building or decoration—such as cement; plaster; imitation
marble; asphalt.

Class 18.
Engineering, architectural, and building contrivances—
such as diving apparatus; warming apparatus; ventilating
apparatus; filtering apparatus; lighting contrivances;
drainage contrivances; electric and pneumatic bells.

Class 19.
Arms, ammunition, and stores, not included in Class 20—
such as cannon; small-arms; fowling-pieces; swords; shot
and other projectiles; camp equipage; equipments.

Class 20.
Explosive substances—such as gunpowder; gun-cotton;
dynamite; fog-signals; percussion caps; fireworks; cart-
ridges.

Class 21.
Naval architectural contrivances and naval equipments
not included in Classes 19 and 20—such as boats; anchors;
chain cables; rigging.

Class 22.
Carriages—such as railway-carriages; wagons; railway-
trucks; bicycles; bath chairs.

Class 23.
Cotton yarn and thread—such as sewing-cotton on spools
or reels; sewing-cotton not on spools or reels; dyed cotton
yarns.

Class 24.
Cotton piece-goods of all kinds—such as cotton shirtings;
long cloth.

Class 25.
Cotton goods not included in Classes 23, 24, or 38—such
as cotton lace; cotton braids; cotton tapes.

Class 26.
Linen and hemp yard and thread.

Class 27.
Linen and hemp piece-goods.

Class 28.
Linen and hemp goods not included in Classes 26, 27,
and 50.

Class 29.
Jute yarns and tissues, and other articles made of jute,
not included in Class 50.

Class 30.
Silk—spun, thrown, or sewing.

Class 31.
Silk piece-goods.

Class 32.
Other silk goods not included in Classes 30 and 31.

Class 33.
Yarns of wool, worsted, or hair.

Class 34.
Cloth and stuffs of wool, worsted, or hair.

Class 35.
Woollen and worsted and hair goods not included in
Classes 33 and 34.

Class 36.
Carpets, floor-cloth, and oil cloth—such as drugget;
mats and matting; rugs.

Class 37.
Leather, skins unwrought and wrought, and articles made
of leather not included in other classes—such as saddlery;
harness; whips; portmanteaus; furs.

Class 38.
Articles of clothing—such as hats of all kinds; caps and
bonnets; hosiery; gloves; boots and shoes; other ready-
made clothing.

Class 39.
Paper (except paper-hangings), stationery, and book-bind-
ing—such as envelopes; sealing-wax; pens (except gold
pens); ink; playing-cards; blotting-cases; copying-presses.

Class 40.
Goods manufactured from indiarubber and gutta-percha
not included in other classes.

Class 41.
Furniture and upholstery—such as paper-hangings; papier-
mâché; mirrors; mattresses.

Class 42.
Substances used as food, or as ingredients in food—such
as cereals; pulses; olive oil; hops; malt; dried fruits;
tea; sago; salt; sugar; preserved meats; confectionery;
oil cakes; pickles; vinegar; beer-clarifiers.

Class 43.
Fermented liquors and spirits—such as beer; cider; wine;
whiskey; liqueurs.

Class 44.
Mineral and aërated waters, natural and artificial, includ-
ing ginger-beer.

Class 45.
Tobacco, whether manufactured or unmanufactured.

Class 46.
Seeds for agricultural and horticultural purposes.

Class 47.
Candles, common soap, detergents; illuminating, heating,
or lubricating oils; matches; and starch, blue, and other
preparations for laundry purposes—such as washing-powders;
benzine.

Class 48.
Perfumery (including toilet articles, preparations for the
teeth and hair, and perfumed soap).

Class 49.
Games of all kinds and sporting articles not included in
other classes—such as billiard-tables; roller-skates; fishing-
nets and lines; toys.

Class 50.
Miscellaneous, including—(1) Goods manufactured from
ivory, bone, or wood, not included in other classes; (2)
goods manufactured from straw or grass, not included in
other classes; (3) goods manufactured from animal and
vegetable substances, not included in other classes; (4)
tobacco-pipes; (5) umbrellas, walking-sticks, brushes and
combs; (6) furniture-cream, plate-powder; (7) tarpaulins,
tents, rick-cloths, rope, twine; (8) buttons of all kinds, other
than of precious metal or imitations thereof; (9) packing
and hose of all kinds; (10) goods not included in the fore-
going classes, such as coopers' wares.


INDUSTRIAL DESIGNS RULES.

Short title and commencement.

  1. These rules may be cited as the Industrial Designs
    Rules, 1890, and shall come into operation on the 1st day of
    January, 1890.

Interpretation.
2. In the construction of these rules, "the said Act"
means "The Patents, Designs, and Trade-marks Act, 1889,"
and any words herein used and defined by the said Act shall
have the meaning thereby assigned to them respectively.

Classification of goods.
3. For the purposes of the registration of designs and of
these rules, goods are classified in the manner appearing in
the Schedule hereto.

Agents.
4. All communications between an applicant for the regis-
tration of a design and the Registrar may be made by or
through an agent duly authorised to the satisfaction of the
Registrar.

Size of papers.
5. An application for the registration of a design, and all
drawings, sketches, photographs, or tracings of a design, and
all other documents sent to or left at the Patent Office,
or otherwise furnished to the Registrar, shall be written,
printed, copied, or drawn upon strong foolscap paper (on
one side only), of the size of 13in. by 8in., leaving a margin
of not less than 1in. on the left-hand side thereof, and the
signature thereto of the applicant or agent must be written
in a large and legible hand.
The Registrar may in any particular case vary the require-
ments of this rule as he may think fit.

Sketches and drawings. Nature of design
6. An application for the registration of a design shall be
accompanied by a sketch or drawing, or by three exactly
similar drawings, photographs, or tracings of the design, or
by three specimens of the design, and shall, in describing
the nature of the design, state whether it is applicable for
the pattern or for the shape or configuration of the design,
and the means by which it is applicable.
When sketches, drawings, or tracings are furnished, they
must be fixed.
When the articles to which designs are applied are not of
a kind which can be pasted into books, drawings, photo-
graphs, or tracings of such designs shall be furnished.

Acknowledgment to applicant.
7. On receipt of an application for registration, the Regis-
trar shall send to the applicant an acknowledgment thereof.

Notice to applicant by Registrar.
8. Before exercising any discretionary power given to the
Registrar by the said Act adversely to an applicant for regis-
tration of a design, the Registrar shall give him ten days
notice of the time when he may be heard personally or by
his agent before the Registrar.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1889, No 64





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏭 Classification Schedule for Industrial Designs Registration (Classes 17-50)

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
Goods Classification, Industrial Designs, Schedule, Classes 17 to 50

🏭 Industrial Designs Rules, 1890 Commencement and Interpretation

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
Industrial Designs, Rules, Registration, Patents Act 1889, Agent, Registrar

🏭 Classification Schedule for Industrial Designs (Continuation, Classes 17-50) (continued from previous page)

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
Classification, Schedule, Manufactures, Goods, Materials

🏭 Industrial Designs Rules, 1890 Commencement and Procedures

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
Rules, Patents Act 1889, Registrar, Application, Agent, Drawings
  • Registrar