The invention relates to an arrangement that is worn on the heads of members of a group.
Placards, flags and banners can be waved around by people in order to make information visible for other bystanders. Here, the information can serve for a wide range of purposes, for example can contain promotional content or can express the affiliation of a person to a group having specific properties or similarities. The problem encountered here is that these placards, etc. are usually secured to posts or bars and have to be held high by a person by hand in order to be able to be waved in a raised position.
Furthermore, for example in the case of major events, at which a very large number of people might come together, it has become usual for the spectators or participants to wear items of clothing which are provided with a decoration tailored especially to the event in question. For example, accordingly decorated jumpers, shirts, bandanas, scarves, and caps for example are worn at sporting events, such as a football, baseball, or basketball game, at music events, for example an open-air festival, but also at rallies and demonstrations. Individuals can thus express heir support for example for a sports team, an interest group, such as a union, or political party. However, this is associated with the disadvantage that items of clothing of this type and the decorations provided thereon can be covered, in particular when the individuals stand in numbers in a manner pushed closely against one another.
Document DE 19 30 664 U1 discloses a tensile advertising fabric consisting of at least two fabric parts. These can be provided with an inscription or with images and each have a zip half on at least one fabric edge. The individual fabric parts can be coupled along the corresponding cloth edges by closing the zip halves. A number of individual fabric parts can thus be chained together, and any individual fabric part can be easily exchanged.
An arrangement for securing a flag to a motorbike helmet is also described in US 2006/0021 117 A1. For this purpose, a profiled groove is arranged on the rear head region of the helmet shell of the motorbike helmet and follows the contour thereof. A flag has a profile rail on one edge. As a result, the flag can be inserted into the profile groove on the motorbike helmet. This enables a simple fixing and exchange of the flag on the helmet shell.
Furthermore, a flag arrangement for securing to a visor of an item of headgear, for example a baseball cap, is known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,881,391 A. This arrangement has at least one elongate rod with a flag which is secured to the visor of an item of headgear with the aid of a securing means. The rod is directed upwardly from the visor, approximately vertically. In addition, a banner can be clamped between two rods secured to the visor. A flag or a banner held in this way therefore can be seen, unhindered, above the item of headgear.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 9,010,000 B1 discloses an arrangement having at least one flagpole, to which a flag is secured. The flagpole can be held via a clip at the lower end thereof on a body panel of a vehicle, for example on a luggage compartment cover. A banner can be clamped over the vehicle between two flagpoles of this type.
The object of the invention is to specify an arrangement with which for example a joint interest easily can be made clearly visible to bystanders by a group of people.
The object is achieved with the arrangement of claim 1. Advantageous further embodiments of the invention are specified in the dependent claims.
The arrangement according to the invention can be worn on the heads of the members of a group. This arrangement comprises at least one banner with two side edges and least two items of headgear, each with at least one holding means on an outside. The banner can be fixed on the holding means via the side edges in such a way that the items of headgear are connected to each other by the fabric of the banner.
The invention provides the advantage that an affiliation of individuals can be made clearly visible to bystanders, in an on-going manner and without physical efforts on the part of the individuals involved. Here, the arrangement according to the invention can be used for groups of different size. Even just two individuals standing next to each other can be provided in accordance with the invention with items of headgear which are connected to each other by means of a banner. In addition, a large number of individuals stopping in the spatial vicinity of one another and thus forming a group can be connected to each other in this way.
Nevertheless, the freedom of movement of the individuals when selecting a suitable length of the banner disposed between two individuals is hardly limited. In practice, it is therefore quite possible that the individuals even within a larger group connected to each other by means of an arrangement according to the invention nonetheless can physically distribute themselves individually and can also change location. Individuals of a group within a large crowd of people can thus arrange themselves individually, for example can form chains, circles, stars or other geometric figures, outlines of emblems, and many more. Furthermore, in particular the surfaces of the banners or fabrics thereof can have graphic designs individually adapted to a current event or can serve as carriers for such designs.
The arrangement according to the invention can be particularly advantageously used when a large number of people are participating in a major event, for example in a sporting or music event in an arena or a stadium or in a meeting within the scope of the demonstration. Here, the members belonging for example to a small group can make their affiliation visible to bystanders with the aid of an arrangement according to the invention, for example with the aid of individual information on the banners. For example, details of a joint interest or local or regional origin, and/or details of a specific service offer, and many more can be provided. The invention offers the further advantage that the arrangement with (usually individual) group information displayed on the associated banners can readily be added to the items of clothing, such as T-shirts and jumpers, tailored to a specific event.
In a preferred further embodiment of the invention, a holding means is formed detachably on at least one item of headgear. This makes it possible for a banner to be separated from the corresponding item of headgear as soon as an excessively high tensile force occurs in the fabric of the banner.
A detachable connection of this type offers a large number of advantages. The banners thus can be easily exchanged for other banners that have altered inscriptions and designs. Furthermore, this embodiment of the invention also offers increased protection against accidents. A side edge of such a banner can thus detach automatically from an item of headgear, for example if a third person becomes caught in the banner or the members of the group wearing the items of headgear accidentally move too far away from one another. In addition, it is thus possible to reduce the risk of a banner tearing or of the item of headgear connected thereto being pulled down uncontrollably from the head of the person wearing the item of headgear. In addition, such an embodiment of the invention makes it easier for an increasing or decreasing number people to become integrated into a group of people connected by means of the arrangement according to the invention and uncoupled therefrom again, easily and quickly.
For this purpose, a holding means on at least one item of headgear can particularly advantageously have a hook-and-loop strip, to which at least one banner can be fixed at a side edge. This can be possible without further aids, particularly if the fabric cloth of the banner has a roughness to which a hook-and-loop strip can adhere. For a particularly reliable detachable connection, at least one banner can have an additional hook-and-loop counter strip on a side edge, which strip can be brought into engagement with a hook-and-loop strip on the holding means of an item of headgear. This embodiment offers the further advantage that the value of the tensile force necessary for a detachment can be predefined by a selection of the hook-and-loop strip and look-and-loop counter strip and in particular can be tailored to the type of items of headgear in question and the desired purpose.
In a further advantageous embodiment of the invention, at least one holding rod is extendable. Said rod is extendable for example by fitting of extension rods. In a particularly advantageous embodiment, the at least one holding rod can be extended telescopically. The visibility of attached banners is further improved as a result, and in particular enables a height adjustment of the strip edges in the case of individuals of different height.
Practically all types of items of headgear can be used with an arrangement according to the invention. In addition, a wide range of designs and embodiments of banners and also types of attachment to the items of headgear are possible. This will be explained hereinafter by way of example on the basis of the example of peaked caps, headbands, and cylinders. The invention and advantageous further embodiments thereof will thus be explained in greater detail with reference to exemplary embodiments shown in the following figures, in which
In the example shown in
In the example illustrated in
The holding rods K21b, K22b, K23b, K24b, K25b can be bent in a spring-elastic manner. On the one hand, the risk of injury is reduced as a result. Furthermore, a bendable embodiment makes it possible that one or both pocket-like side edges can be more easily removed from a bent-over holding rod on an item of headgear in the event that an inadmissibly high tensile force occurs in a banner. Since in such a case neither the holding rod nor the banner normally are damaged, the arrangement according to the invention can be produced again by once more fitting the end of the banner onto the associated holding rod. Spring-elastically bendable holding rods can consist here for example of a plastic, of rubber, or a bendable metal coil spring.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2014 104 579.1 | Sep 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/DE2015/100360 | 8/28/2015 | WO | 00 |