Recommend T-Shirt and Coffee Mug Sellers Take Note: A Trademark Must Indicate Source (Email)

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This may sound a little circular, but to be protected as a trademark, the word or symbol at issue needs to function as a trademark. That means it has to tell the consuming public that the good or service you sell in connection with the trademark comes from you.

A common pitfall is the ornamental use of a word or symbol. Let’s say you have a cool design or catchy saying, so you decide to put it on t-shirts and coffee mugs. That’s great, but it’s tricky protecting your words or design as a trademark in that context. Unless, of course, they actually function as a trademark by indicating source.

Think about where a brand appears on a t-shirt or coffee mug. On a shirt, it’s often on the inside tag or on a hang tag before the shirt is sold. On a coffee mug it’s usually on the side or even on the bottom. In both cases, the brand — the signal to customers who made the shirt or cup — takes a back seat to the catchy words or cool design that likely motivated the customer to purchase the item. If you want to protect those words or design as a trademark, you need to make sure they’re also displayed where the brand usually appears. As long as the words or design tell customers who made the good, it’s protectable as a trademark. Otherwise, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office won’t register it, and a court won’t enforce trademark rights in it.


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