The invention relates to the field of styling hair in general, and more particularly, relates to apparatus and methods for creating accurate and balanced outlining and trimming of a person's hairline.
Hair styling involves techniques that require creativity and technical precision. Training and experience are paramount to being successful at hair styling. However, even the most highly trained and experienced stylist must deal with difficult hair styles on a daily basis and with customers that request and expect precision cuts and styles. One specific challenge to many stylists or barbers is the need to accurately and reproducibly trim a customer's hairline, such as the forehead hairline, in a consistent manner depending on the type of hairline or a customer's desired shape of the hairline. For example, different types of natural forehead hairlines include, but are not limited to, high and broad, low and narrow, straight and square, rounded, and widow's peak. Creating a haircut consistent with the natural forehead hairline or with a customer's particular desired shape presents unique difficulty, given the lack of useful measuring tools to ensure reproducibility.
Of particular concern for a stylist or barber are those customers that have very short hair, where slight imperfections in shape or angles of the hairline are highly noticeable and undesirable. For decades, clients have asked barbers for a shape-up, also known as a line-up, which is a hairstyle that involves cutting along the nature hairline to make it straight. Techniques such as using a tape measure or string, do not allow for a barber to create a hairline that follows the natural curvature of the forehead hairline or other unique shape desired by the customer. With respect to a tape measure or string in particular, when these devices are looped around a person's head, they cannot be shaped, fail to hold a particular shape, and/or fail to stay in place.
Likewise, even the most experienced barber cannot guarantee a straight or consistent trim along the forehead hairline by solely relying on freehand work or the guidance of a comb. For instance, prior devices, like U.S. Pat. No. 6,267,119, provide a curved edged comb that can be used as a guide or clamps to an individual's hair to assist in cutting hair in a straight line. However, the comb cannot be affixed to an individual's head and hold its shape, allowing for misalignment to occur. The comb is also designed to clamp to longer hair and is not effective in cutting the hairline of shorter hair. Further, the comb would be ineffective at accurately reproducing the wide range of forehead and hairline shapes.
Other prior art devices, such as U.S. Pat. No. 2,176,880, are designed to reproduce a particular length of hair measured from the scalp, and would not be effective at trimming a hairline along the forehead along the natural curvature or other desired shape.
Some prior art devices, such as U.S. Pat. App. Pub. 2005/0217687, are designed to cut longer hair such as bangs. The '687 Publication, for example, requires a strip of material with an adhesive that is applied to an individual's skin on the forehead, neck, or back. The hair hangs over the strip allowing the hair to be cut in a line. This device is not effective at cutting short hair along the natural curvature of the forehead hairline or other unique shape desired by the customer because the device cannot overlay the hairline (i.e., the device has to be adhered to the individual's skin).
The present invention seeks to overcome these deficiencies in prior devices.
The present invention provides a novel styling tool that provides a user with a precise outline of a person's hairline, and particularly the forehead hairline, and the ability to cut or trim consistently along the natural hairline or otherwise in an accurate shape along the hairline. The invention includes a shapeable but firm wire. There can be two small loops present at each end of the wire to avoid sharp ends since the invention is used around persons' eyes.
The invention establishes accuracy and balance. The wire preferably includes fixed reference points along the wire. The reference marks can include a mark in the center of the wire and any number of additional reference marks placed on both sides of the center mark and spaced, for example, equidistant apart. The different reference marks on the wire allow the barber to measure distance of different points along the hairline. For example, the reference marks can be used to determine where the edges of the shape-up and/or outline should start, such as the temporal points and the apexes of the front-temporal recesses along the forehead hairline. Thus, the invention can determine if certain points along the forehead hairline are in the correct proportions (e.g., balanced along the hairline on both sides of the forehead) by establishing the distance from the center of the forehead hairline above the center of the nose (i.e., mid-frontal point).
In a preferred embodiment, one end of the wire is looped past the other end of the wire, creating an oval or circular shape with the wire, called a bow for the purposes of this invention. In the preferred embodiment, the barber secures the bow onto the top of the client's head, aligning the center reference mark on the wire with the mid-frontal point of the forehead hairline. In the preferred embodiment, the bow is adjusted to fit the correct curvature around the perimeter of the client's head and can hold its shape without the aid of the barber. The firmness of the wire of the invention allows it to hold its form such that the barber can secure the wire around the perimeter of the client's head in a particular shape. The adaptability or shapeable nature of the wire allows the barber to then manipulate the wire to create a particular shape, including one that follows the natural curvature of the forehead hairline or other unique shape desired by the customer. When the wire is looped, squeezed, or bent, for example, it maintains its shape such that it can be used to outline different hairlines, including those that are generally consistent with a wide range of natural forehead hairline shapes. Once fit around the perimeter of the client's head and shaped, the firmness of the wire allows the formed shape to stay fixed around the perimeter of the client's head and maintain the desired shape along the forehead hairline. In the preferred embodiment, the barber then cuts any hair protruding out under the wire following the outline created by the wire.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the present invention become further apparent by reference to the following drawings and descriptions.
For the present invention to be clearly understood and readily practiced, the present invention will be described in conjunction with the following figures, wherein:
The components in the figures are not necessarily drawn to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of the invention. Moreover, in the figures, like reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the different views. However, like parts do not always have like reference numerals. Furthermore, all illustrations are intended to convey concepts, where relative sizes, shapes and other detailed attributes may be illustrated schematically rather than literally or precisely.
In a preferred embodiment, the novel invention is illustrated by
In a further preferred embodiment via the method depicted in
It is to be understood that additional embodiments of the present invention described herein may be contemplated by one of ordinary skill in the art and that the scope of the present invention is not limited to the embodiments disclosed. While specific embodiments of the present invention have been illustrated and described, numerous modifications come to mind without significantly departing from the spirit of the invention, and the scope of protection is only limited by the scope of the accompanying claims.