This invention relates to a spatula for personal use, particularly for depilatory use.
In a depilatory method a preparation is applied to the skin, in order to degrade the hair growing from the skin. The preparation and hair may be removed without any mechanical assistance, for example by showering. This method is kind to the skin but tends to be imperfect in respect of hair removal.
An alternative method is to remove the preparation and hair by means of a spatula, used in the manner of a scraper or strigil. The scraping action of the spatula helps to remove those hairs which have been incompletely degraded by the preparation. Thus, hair removal is very effective. However, the scraping action can lead to skin coarsening and roughness.
Existing spatulas which have this effect are composed entirely of hard plastics materials, terminating in a scraper head.
There is a need for a spatula for the purpose stated above, and which is able to achieve efficient removal of the hair-degrading preparation and hair, but which is less aggressive to the skin across which it is to be drawn.
In accordance with the first aspect to the present invention there is provided a spatula adapted for the removal of a preparation applied to the skin, the spatula comprising a body portion to be held, in use, by a user, the body portion comprising a plastics sheet capable of being elastically flexed and a fin adapted to remove the preparation from the skin, the fin projecting beyond the body portion, and being of an elastomeric material.
In principle the preparation to be removed could be any cosmetic preparation, but is preferably a preparation formulated for the weakening or removal of hair from human skin. Thus, the spatula of the invention preferably effects removal of a hair-degrading preparation applied to the skin, and of hair itself.
By hair-degrading preparation we mean any composition—wax, gel, cream or other—which breaks, thins or otherwise weakens hair.
Preferably the fin has a straight edge.
Preferably the spatula is a generally elongate body, and the fin is located at one end thereof.
The fin may have a plurality of parallel edges which make contact with the skin at spaced-apart positions. Thus, the fin may be stepped or ridged. Preferred is a fin with one skin-contacting edge, or a fin with two skin-contacting parallel edges.
Preferably, in terms of the shape of the spatula the fin is a continuation of the body portion. The spatula is preferably manufactured by a co-moulding process. Preferably the thickness of the body portion is less than 3 mm, more preferably less than 2 mm.
At the junction of the plastics material and the elastomeric material which constitutes the fin, the latter may be moulded around the former, or the former around the latter. The plastics material may thus provide some structural support to the fin. Alternatively it may be perfectly adequate if there is face-to-face contact between the plastics material and the elastomeric material which constitutes the fin.
Preferably the fin extends not more than 5 mm beyond the body portion, preferably not more than 4 mm.
When, as is preferred, the spatula is of elongate form and has a said fin at one end of it (hereinafter the “first fin”, at the “first end”), it preferably has a second fin able to remove a preparation from the skin, at the other end (the “second end”) of the spatula, the second fin also being of an elastomeric material.
Preferably the body portion is substantially entirely constituted by the non-elastomeric plastics material. An elastomeric fin is only at one end, or at both ends. In an alternative embodiment the spatula has a sandwich structure, with an elastomeric sheet sandwiched between two sheets of a more rigid plastics material and extending beyond it at one or both ends, to provide a fin or fins. The two plastics sheets together define the flexural characteristics of the body portion. In another embodiment an elastomeric material surrounds a stiffer plastics sheet, which reinforces the elastomeric material. The elastomeric material may extend beyond the plastics sheet, forming a fin, at one end, or both ends, or all round the plastics sheet. The plastics sheet defines the flexural characteristics of the body portion in such an embodiment.
The second fin may have a plurality of parallel edges which make contact with the skin at spaced-apart positions. Thus, the second fin may be stepped or ridged. Preferred is a second fin with one skin-contacting edge, or a fin with two skin-contacting edges.
Preferably the second end of the spatula is of different shape to the first end. Preferably it is not of straight-line form. Preferably it is curved, preferably somewhat indented or convex. Most preferably it is of “fish-tail” shape. Preferably the “fish-tail” ends thereof are themselves curved. Thus, the second end may have two somewhat lobe-shaped portions which can be used for removing a preparation from an awkward location, such as an armpit.
The elastomeric material of the second fin may be moulded around the plastics material of the body portion, or vice-versa, at their junction. The plastics material may thus provide some structural support to the second fin. Alternatively it may be perfectly adequate if there is face-to-face contact between the plastics material and the elastomeric material which constitutes the second fin.
Preferably the second fin extends not more than 5 mm beyond the body portion, preferably not more than 4 mm,
Preferably the spatula is not flat, but curves, at least in the region of the adjoining fin. Preferably it has a convex portion and, facing in the opposite direction, a complementary concave portion. In use, the user will usually orient the concave portion adjoining the fin to face the skin. Preferably the other end of the spatula curves in the opposite sense. Preferably, the spatula is a flattened S-shape, in longitudinal cross-section, in other words an S-shape notionally elongated in the direction from one end of the “S” to the other.
Preferably, the or each concave portion of the spatula is formed with a transverse ridge, to aid grip and/or act as a barrier to the preparation and/or aid stacking of spatulas.
Preferably the spatula is a small article not longer than 20 cm, and more preferably not longer than 12 cm, at its longest. Preferably it is not wider than 7 cm, and more preferably not wider than 5.5 cm, at its widest.
Preferably the spatula does not have a handle projecting from the body portion; the body portion is itself held, in use.
In accordance with a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of removing a preparation from human skin, using a spatula of the first aspect of the present invention. Preferably the preparation is a hair-degrading preparation, and the method is a depilatory method.
The invention will now be further described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
With reference to
The head portion 6 terminates in an elastomeric fin 10. The fin extends, straight, from one side of the spatula to the other.
The tail portion of the spatula terminates in an elastomeric fin 12. The tail portion 8 is of “fish-tail” shape, and this shape is matched by the fin 12. The fin 12 may be seen as having distinct lobes 14, 16, and an inwardly curved region 18 between them.
As will be seen in
As will be seen in
At its junction 26 with the body portion each fin makes face-to-face contact with the body portion.
The spatulas of this invention may be made by a bi-injection moulding process. In another embodiment a sandwich structure could be employed, with an elastomeric sheet being sandwiched between two sheets of a more rigid plastics material, and extending beyond it, to provide a fin, or fins.
In another embodiment an elastomeric material could be moulded around a plastics stiffener sheet, extending beyond it to provide a fin, or fins.
In use a depilatory cream, shown as 28 in
In the embodiment of
A further difference is that in the
In
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0015774.3 | Jun 2000 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB01/02799 | 6/26/2001 | WO | 00 | 5/6/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO02/00059 | 1/3/2002 | WO | A |
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