The present invention relates to a method displaying art in an illuminated display.
Museum gift shops often have items for purchase related to their purpose. With the advent of wide format high resolution digital printers and the availability of art images on digital media, low volume translucent reproductions of art or designs for illuminated display are feasible.
Visitors to museums are varied. Some arrive by car and would therefore be able to purchase a bulky item; place it in a car, and take it home. Others arrive by public transportation such as a subway or bus, and therefore their carrying capability is limited. Still others may arrive by rental car while on a distant trip; but they must return by air thereby limiting the bulk and fragility of their purchase at a museum shop. For some, purchasing a compactly packaged kit consisting of a customer selected electric/frame kit and a customer selected art image packaged separately but sold in combination for home assembly is ideal; others would balk at purchasing anything that would require even the minimum of assembly involvement. Customer order fulfillment by purchase, purchase of an assembled unit at point of purchase or by shipment of an assembled unit to their home, assembled by the museum or by the company per museum order, should all be accommodated by the museum shop. Also, storage space for stock is at a premium at a typical museum shop and this is a factor favoring inventory of compactly packaged kits that can be flexibly combined.
The prior art reveals many types of illuminated display units. Some are for the display of two dimensional art reproductions. A sampling of such patents follows. For example, the lamp shade of Lewis, U.S. Pat. No. 2,660,317, has a fenestration on its surface and a recessed plate for accepting an art object in sheet form to be illuminated indirectly by reflected light from the lamp. Buzick's picture display panel for lamp shades (U.S. Pat. No. 2,177,204) is primarily for display of black and white pictures printed on translucent paper by transmitted light. Morgen's lightbox lampshade (U.S. Pat. No. 6,821,002) provides uniform illumination on its surface for viewing photographic slides placed on its surface. The Swanson U.S. Pat. No. 7,347,593 relates to a Giclee printed lamp shade that is capable of displaying a high resolution art reproduction made from a digital image file using a process for adhering an image printed on canvas to the surface of an existing lamp shade.
Many other patents in the prior art deal with the bulkiness of lampshades. They relate to knockdown, collapsible, or foldable lamp shades which can be shipped or stored compactly and then assembled and used on a lamp. Four such U.S. patents and one US patent application are identified here as a sampling of the field. They are U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,742,210 of Champan, 3,787,676 of Korach, 4,075,684 of Witz, 4,354,222 of Gall, and U.S. patent application US 2006/0239012 of Bin. None of these relate directly to the display of art.
Indeed, while the prior art teaches several approaches to the design of illuminated display units for displaying art or storing lampshade frames more compactly, none describe an efficient method to display art or any selected image in the home or elsewhere on an illuminated display unit that is compatible with the operation of a museum gift shop or other institution or business establishment.
The main object of this invention is to create an efficient business model that serves the need of museum gift shops and their customers so that art may be enjoyed in the home after it is appreciated in the museum. Other venues besides museum gift shops can be similarly served. Along the way, a viable manufacturing business is also created.
Other objects which become apparent from the following description of the present invention.
Museums and particularly museum gift shops have been identified as potential participants in the utilization of this invention and display by a purchaser in a home is anticipated throughout this narrative but this should be interpreted only as an example and should not be regarded as limiting the scope of the usefulness of the invention. Almost any institution or business could be a potential participant and the display unit could be located anywhere for any purpose.
The vehicle for such a method is an illuminated display unit (IDU) for displaying two dimensional high quality reproductions of art work. The concept for the IDU of this invention differs from that of an ordinary lamp and lampshade in that the display of the art image is an integral part of the lighting unit. Low manufacturing cost, compact storage in kit form, and ease of customer assembly are the hallmarks of the IDU. Although the manufactured frame parts are standardized in a range of sizes to minimize cost, the technique for creating the art sheets which are illuminated permits a wide range of image heights to be accommodated by the frame parts which are standardized. The IDU can be used as a table-top unit like an ordinary table lamp, or the very same unit can also be suspended by an integral electric pulley cord. As a table-top unit, the same frame elements can be used to illuminate and display a variety of art reproductions just by changing one art sheet for another. Since the electrical parts are provided as a completely pre-wired electrical set in the kit and a unique slot is provided to insert the electric assembly into the frame, no electrical experience nor tools are used in the customer assembly of the IDU kit.
Basically, the lamp socket is secured to the support frame part with a hand-tightened nut; then the art sheet is formed into an ellipse, or other shape, then simply attached to or secured around the support frame member and a second plain frame member is attached at the top. For table-top use, the support frame is at the bottom, and the plain frame is at the top of the art sheet. For suspended use, this is reversed. If for table top use with a pedestal, a tube and a second support frame to serve as a base (or a modified base) is added.
The production technique of printing the art sheet by high resolution wide-format ink jet printers is well known, although the material of the art sheet in this use is custom manufactured for the IDU application by virtue of its heat resistance, archival type ink acceptance, translucent neutral appearance, no visible grain pattern, and rigidity once curved into a shape around the frame members. One type of basic material that has these characteristics is styrene; fabric laminated to styrene may also be used depending on the effect desired. Wide format printers made by such companies as Epson, Canon, Hewlett Packard, Xerox and others offer widths from 24″ to 72″. For example, the 8-color 54″ wide Epson Stylus GS6000 is one such printer that can be used to print art sheets. The IDU of this invention will be described as having an oval crossectional cylindrical shape as the display surface of the art sheet. The frame members are fixed sizes. For instance, a 24″ wide art sheet formed around the appropriate size frame will fit on a frame with a major oval diameter of approximately 9.2″ and a minor diameter of about 5.7″. Provision is made for the art sheet and the frames to be permanently joined if required. The use of wider art sheets would permit IDU's of different larger or smaller standard sizes. Using this type of printing method the circumference of the IDU display is fixed by the width of the sheet being used, but the height of the art sheet can be easily varied since this is determined by the length of the sheet programmed to be printed. In this way, actual art sheet heights can practically be infinitely varied; but all would be accommodated by the same size IDU frame and related electrical kit.
The business model for this invention presupposes that a “company” is formed to produce art sheets and frame/electrical kits for IDU's that would interface with a variety of museum shops around the country or around the world. The company has a computer system which will communicate between the company and its customers. The computer system includes microprocessor and a database for receiving and storing data. The database has data processing systems by which the company and respective gift shops communicate via a browser controlling communications over a network via a server, images, plus any text required, formatted for printing by the company. All communications can be handled via internet for receiving orders, payment, and developing image files. In addition, tangible media forms such as DVD's, portable hard drives, scanned documents, memory sticks, or diskettes can be used instead. Another option is to transfer files via internet connected or direct cell phone communications. Products can be shipped by common carrier services. When a museum gift shop gears up for support of a special museum exhibit, materials related to the exhibit can be executed. The initial order for a new unit with a new image must first create an Image Art Unit (IAU) file with the exact edited digital representation of each image and any text required to be used on an art sheet. This is what will drive the wide format printer. The formatting from the source Exhibit Art Image file of the museum can either be done by the company (with instructions from the museum), or it can be performed by museum personnel using editing software supplied by the company. In all cases the instructions for customer assembly are printed on what will be an obscured part of the art sheet when assembly is completed.
The company uses pricing software which prices each art sheet corresponding to each desired IAU. Part of the pricing algorithm is based on the height and width of the particular resulting art sheet reflecting the actual substrate material and printing cost. Another pricing aspect may be the ink cost for a particular art sheet reflecting the actual digital color and color density information of each pixel of the art reproduction. Other aspects of pricing may include printer set-up charges and/or amortized formatting charges related to volume ordered. Once the pricing is set for the images, this is relayed to the museum gift shop. Based on demand estimates an initial order is placed for both the various art sheets as well as for IDU frame/electrical kits selected by the museum. The company will then schedule production and fulfill the initial order for art sheets and IDU's from the museum shop. Subsequent orders for IDU's and/or art sheets will be filled as required.
At the museum gift shop, customer order fulfillment can be accomplished in a number of ways. Customers may purchase desired art sheets and IDU kits, pay for them and leave. They may request an assembled IDU. This can be handled by on-demand assembly at the museum shop or from stock pre-assembled by the museum, or the museums shop can order the unit to be assembled by the company and shipped to the address given by the customer. Assembly for stock can be performed at the museum shop during slack periods.
The present invention can best be understood in connection with the accompanying drawings. It is noted that the invention is not limited to the precise embodiments shown in drawings, in which:
The present invention has broad applications to many fields for a variety of articles. For illustrative purposes only, a preferred mode for carrying out the invention is described herein.
Each of the art sheet support edges of the frames have an L-shaped crossection (see
The IDU assembly flow chart of
The process for the initial and subsequent order set-up with a museum gift shop was described in words in the summary section.
The flow chart of
The different customer order fulfillment options discussed above in the summary are detailed in the flow chart of
Although the main objective of this invention is to create an efficient method of displaying art that may be purchased at a museum shop, many other uses for an IDU unrelated to museums or fine art exist. One is a direct internet to customer marketing method whereby the “artwork” (which may, for instance, consist of family snapshots) is provided by the customer for creating an art sheet. Another possibility is advertising use of IDU's such as displays promoting a certain brand of beer at a tavern. The oval format described may not be optimal for theses unrelated applications. It is possible to use the identical manufacturing steps to create IDU's of any cylindrical crossection by using frames that have the alternate peripheral shape.
While intended use is to illuminate the translucent art sheet, under ambient light the art sheet still displays the art work image thereon.
In the foregoing description, certain terms and visual depictions are used to illustrate the preferred embodiment. However, no unnecessary limitations are to be construed by the terms used or illustrations depicted, beyond what is shown in the prior art, since the terms and illustrations are exemplary only a, and are not meant to limit the scope of the present invention.
It is further known that other modifications may be made to the present invention, without departing the scope of the invention, as noted in the appended Claims.
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