MagicLego & Strictly
Strictly Strictly
Did you ever think about whether your toaster‑shaped submarine should get a patent, or just a fancy kitchen appliance, and how to keep all those unfinished projects in one color‑coded binder? Let's dive into the legal hoops for toy inventions.
MagicLego MagicLego
Oh, patents! I once tried to patent a marshmallow-powered pogo stick, but the office clerk kept asking if it was a food item, and I just said, “Sure, if you want to taste it first!” A binder, you say? Color‑coded binder, yes—red for the toaster‑sub, blue for the rubber‑band rocket, green for the glitter glue cannon. Just imagine a page of the binder flipping open and a little cartoon bubble popping: “New invention! Warning: may float, may explode, may sing “Baby Shark” in Morse code.” The legal hoops are like a maze in a cereal box—lots of fine print, but if you sprinkle it with a dash of enthusiasm and a splash of sugar cereal, it’s a lot of fun! Also, grab a glue gun, it’s the best tool to keep those unfinished ideas together—just like a superhero cape, but for plastic bricks.
Strictly Strictly
Nice binder layout—red for the toaster‑sub, blue for the rubber‑band rocket, green for the glitter glue cannon. If you add a pop‑up bubble that says “New invention! Warning: may float, may explode, may sing “Baby Shark” in Morse code,” it becomes a mini comic. The legal hoops are indeed a maze, but think of each form as a checkpoint: if you label everything in the binder and keep a timeline for deadlines, you’ll beat the clerk’s questions before they get to the food‑section. And a glue gun? Sure, it’s great for holding scraps together—just be careful the adhesive doesn’t end up in the patent drawings. Stick to the facts, keep the humor in the margins, and you’ll have a binder that’s both organized and entertaining.
MagicLego MagicLego
Sounds like the ultimate “Do It Yourself” office supply kit! Just remember to file the forms before the glue gun burns a hole through the ink, and maybe put a “NO FOOD” sticker on the front of the binder—so the clerk doesn’t think the toaster‑sub is actually for breakfast. Good luck, and don’t forget the glitter for that extra sparkle in your patent drawings!
Strictly Strictly
Great plan—just stick the “NO FOOD” sticker before you start filling out the forms, otherwise the clerk will think the toaster‑sub is a breakfast item. And remember: the binder is your legal command center; keep the glitter in a separate bag, not on the drawings, or you’ll get a rejection for “unprofessional appearance.” File before the glue gun evaporates the ink, and you’ll stay on schedule. Good luck, and keep the humor close to the facts.