This invention relates to a cosmetic applicator and dispenser having a rotating applicator head or tip constituted of a core having a surface for carrying cosmetic material and for applying the cosmetic material which is delivered from the dispenser.
For purposes of illustration, but without limitation, the invention will be particularly described with reference to applicators for lip gloss.
A typical applicator contains an elongated core with a multiplicity of fibers attached to the core such that the fibers extend outwardly therefrom to form a brush fiber array surrounding the core over a substantial portion of the length of the core. This combination of a core and array of fibers attached to the core provides a simple, low-cost and effective brush for the application of cosmetic materials.
Such applicators are well known and widely used in the cosmetics industry. Commonly, the proximal end of the brush is mounted in a receptacle in a threaded cap of a cosmetic material container, so that the brush projects into the container when the cap is in container-closing position. Upon removal of the cap, the brush carries a quantity of cosmetic material, such as lip gloss, out of the container, and is manipulated to deliver and apply the product to the user's body, for example the user's lips, the cap serving as a handle for the brush. Since the brush only carries a limited amount of the cosmetic material upon removal from the container, such brushes must be repeatedly dipped into the container during the application of cosmetic material to refill the brush with a sufficient amount of the cosmetic material. Thus the user must stop applying the cosmetic material to resupply the applicator with more cosmetic material as the cosmetic material on the brush is depleted.
Also, because existing applicators are fixed with respect to the handle, the majority of the cosmetic material contained on the surface is applied onto a small concentrated region of the user's body, and is subsequently moved around and spread out by the tip. Because of this, even distribution of cosmetic material can be difficult to obtain. Since ease of use and effective distribution of cosmetic material is important, a cosmetic brush desirably would apply even amounts of the cosmetic material to the user's body without using excess cosmetic material.
An object of the present invention is to provide applicators for applying cosmetic material such as lip gloss that automatically transport and dispense an appropriate amount of cosmetic material as the applicator is used. In this manner, the user will not need to repeatedly dip the applicator into the cosmetic material container during the application process.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a new type of lip gloss applicator that evenly distributes lip gloss to a wide region of the user's body without using excess cosmetic material.
To these and other ends, the present invention broadly contemplates the provision of a cosmetic brush having a core and an array of fibers projecting outwardly therefrom. In one embodiment, the fibers can be flocked to the core, for example by electrostatic delivery of fibers to an adhesive coating located on the core. However, other methods of attaching fibers may also be used. The core has holes which allow cosmetic material contained inside the core to flow to the outside surface. The core is rotatably fixed to the handle in such a manner that rotating the core against the user's body will cause additional cosmetic material to flow from the dispenser within the applicator through the core and onto the fibers, thereby ensuring that a proper amount of cosmetic material is located on the applicator tip and thus alleviating the need to repeatedly supply the applicator with cosmetic material by dipping the brush into the cosmetic material storage container or receptacle.
While the present invention will generally be described with a core having an array of fibers or flocked fibers, other surfaces can be employed to provide a surface that can both carry the cosmetic material and allow the carried cosmetic material to be applied by the user from the surface. Examples of such surfaces include the bare surface of the core formed with or modified to have indentations. The indentations can be dimples, grooves, etchings, and so forth. Other suitable surfaces can be applied as a layer or layers on the bare surface of the core, for example, foam, spongy materials and other ‘soft-touch’ materials. These applied surfaces can be layered onto the core by any of several methods including spray-coating, dipping, or over-molding.
The rotating design of the applicator of the present invention distributes cosmetic material evenly across a wide area by transporting the cosmetic material directly from the brush to the user's body, instead of applying a large amount of material to a small area and subsequently moving the material to other locations on the body with the brush fibers. In this way, a more even and efficient distribution of cosmetic material is provided. Accordingly, the applicators of the present invention offer the consumer the quick and easy application that the user demands, without requiring special skill or newly-learned technique for the user. Finally, the unique advancing mechanism to transport and dispense the cosmetic material ensures that a proper amount of cosmetic material is present on the applicator tip.
Referring to
In accordance with other embodiments of the present invention and as shown in
Unlike conventional lip gloss applicators, the tip 12 of the present invention is not coated with cosmetic material by dipping the top into a container full of the appropriate cosmetic material. Instead, cosmetic material is stored inside of cosmetic material receptacle 14, is forced upwards through the hollow interior 20 of tip 12, and flows to the outside surface 22 of the tip. One or more holes or slits 24 connect the hollow interior 20 of the tip 12 to the outside surface 22. This configuration continuously supplies the outside surface 22 of the tip 12 with cosmetic material and eliminates the need to repeatedly dip the tip into a cosmetic material receptacle during the application of cosmetic material to a user's body.
As the tip 12 moves across a user's body, the tip rotates freely instead of remaining fixed, as is typical of traditional cosmetic material applicators. This rotational motion or energy is tapped to dispense the cosmetic material by an advancing mechanism 26 which forces the cosmetic material upward in the cosmetic material receptacle 14, through the holes 24, and onto the outside surface 22 of the applicator tip 12.
The advancing mechanism 26 has several parts. The tip 12 is rigidly attached to a hollow rotating pin 28 on the end adjacent to the cosmetic material receptacle 14. This rotating pin 28 has an inner and an outer set of ratchet (sawtooth) teeth 30, 32. Each tooth has a substantially vertical side 50 and a slanted side 52. The inner teeth 30 and the outer teeth 32 are oriented in opposite directions to each other. The cosmetic material receptacle 14 has an inner wheel 34 and an outer barrel 36 which like the pin 28 have respective sides of teeth facing in opposite directions. The teeth 31 located on inner wheel 34 are oriented in the opposite direction of, and engage, inner teeth 30 of the pin 28, while the teeth 33 on the outer barrel 36 face in the opposite direction of, and engage, outer teeth 32 of the pin 28. The inner wheel 34 extends down towards the handle 16 and has threads 38 that engage threads on a plunger nut 40 so that the plunger nut, if prevented from rotating, will travel up the threads 38 in the receptacle 14 towards the tip 12 when the inner wheel 34 and, thus, the threads 38 of the inner wheel are rotated clockwise. Outer barrel 36 has alignment ribs 42 which engage alignment slots 44 of the plunger nut 40 so that the plunger nut will rotate simultaneously with the outer barrel. Thus, when the outer barrel 36 is rotated counter-clockwise, the plunger nut 40 will travel upwards along the threads 38 towards the tip 12, provided that the inner wheel 34 and its threads 38 remain stationary. A switching spring (not shown) located toward the bottom end, that is the end opposite of tip 12, of the cosmetic material receptacle 14 independently pushes both the inner wheel 34 and the outer barrel 36 against the rotating pin 28.
More specifically, in operation, when the user rotates the tip 12 clockwise, as seen from the top, the inner teeth 30 of the pin 28 engage the teeth 31 of the inner wheel 34, that is, the vertical side 50 of the teeth abut each other, causing the wheel 34 to rotate in the same clockwise direction. As the wheel 34 rotates, the threads 38 which are attached to the wheel 34 rotate clockwise causing the plunger nut 40 to rise since the threads 38 screw through the plunger nut 40 which is rotationally immobilized by the alignment ribs 42. Also, in the clockwise direction, the outer teeth 32 of the pin 28 will not engage the teeth 33 of the outer barrel 36, but instead the slanted sides 52 of the teeth 32, 33 will slide over each other. The outer barrel 36 will thus not rotate when the tip 12 moves clockwise.
When the user rotates the tip 12 in the counter-clockwise direction, as seen from the top, the outer teeth 32 of the pin 28 engage the teeth 33 of the outer barrel 36, such that the vertical sides 50 of the teeth 32, 33 abut each other which causes the outer barrel 36 to rotate in the same counter-clockwise direction. As the outer barrel 36 rotates, the alignment ribs 42 interact with alignment slots 44 to rotate the plunger nut 40 counter-clockwise, causing the plunger nut 40 to rise since the threads 38, which screw through the plunger nut 40, are immobilized. In the counter-clockwise direction, the inner teeth 30 of the pin 28 will not engage the teeth 31 of the wheel 34, but instead the slanted sides 52 of the teeth 30, 31 will slide over each other. Thus, the wheel 34 and its threads 38 of the wheel will not rotate when the tip 12 is moved counter-clockwise.
Thus, as explained above, no matter which way the tip 12 is rotated, plunger nut 40 will rise towards the tip 12. By storing the cosmetic material above the plunger nut 40, the rotation of the tip 12 will cause the plunger nut to rise, which will in turn push the cosmetic material up into the interior 20 of the tip, through holes 24 and onto the outer surface 22 of the tip 12. In this manner, a supply of cosmetic material is transported to and dispensed to the tip 12 as the cosmetic material is applied by its tip, that is, simply by running the tip across the user's body.
Although the inner wheel 34 is described as turning only in a clockwise direction while the outer barrel 36 turns in a counter-clockwise direction, one should understand that these components can turn in either direction, so long as the teeth 30, 31, 32, 33 permit the plunger nut 40 to only move toward the tip.
Different rotating tips 12 can be provided for different user applications. For example, the embodiments of
However, when a tip 12 is not symmetrical about the longitudinal axis, a selected circumferential portion can be preferred. For example, the embodiments shown in
In another embodiment, the advancing mechanism is independent of the rotating mechanism. As shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The embodiment shown in
In any of these embodiments, as the user rotates the tip 102, 152, 192 by rolling the tip across a surface, for example, the user's lips, the protrusions 120, 170, 190 will move around the groove 122, 172, 194 thereby causing the tip to rotate relative to the receptacle 104, 154, 198.
The applicator 200 shown in
In embodiments having an independent rotating mechanism, advancement of material from the receptacle into the hollow interior and then through the holes or slits onto the outer surface of the tip is not provided by the rotation of the tip, but instead is provided by activation of a separate pump. Almost any pump which moves material manually or automatically can be employed with these embodiments. Examples of such pumps include a squeeze tube receptacle, a receptacle having a rotatable threaded nut in the receptacle, a syringe plunger, and a spring loaded pump. Co-pending U.S. Application No. 60/854,494, which is incorporated herein by this reference, shows these and other such pumps.
It is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the features and embodiments hereinabove specifically set forth, but may be carried out in other ways without departure from its spirit.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/903,067 filed Feb. 23, 2007, hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60903067 | Feb 2007 | US |