Various different types of coverings exist for placement in architectural openings, such as windows, doors, archways and the like. Such coverings include roman shades as illustrated in
Rotating the roller of the head assembly in one direction causes the shade to extend and rotating the roller in an opposite direction causes the shade to retract. The roller is usually controlled by a manually driven control mechanism, though automatic mechanisms can also be used. Roman shades often include a variety of aesthetically appealing components, such as a valence 20 as illustrated in
Unfortunately, the utilization of cords on shade coverings can lead to several undesirable characteristics. For instance, the cords can become tangled and can also become entangled with other objects, which can be problematic. In an attempt to alleviate such problems, roman shades have been formed such that the distance between lift points is be less than 8 inches, so as to decrease the distance between attachment points when the shade is lowered, preventing accidental entanglement with the cord. The limited distance between lift points can lead to the formation of additional pleats when the shade is raised and undesirable thickness of the raised shade, particularly when considering thicker shade materials such as woven wood. Additionally, no matter what the spacing between lift points on a shade, utilization of cords can form a visible line when viewed from the front of the shade, which can also be less than desirable.
In view of the above, a need currently exists for a roman shade that does not utilize lift cords while also providing an aesthetically pleasing presentation.
According to one embodiment, disclosed is a roman shade assembly that can include a shade having a first end and a second and opposite end, a lift band slidably connected to the shade at a plurality of connection points between the first and second ends, and a rotatable member to which the lift band is attached. At least one of the connection points between the shade and the lift band can be a slidable connection point that allows the lift band to slide past the shade at the connection point. In addition, one of the connection points is a fixed connection point at the hem of the shade. Upon rotating the rotatable member in a first direction the shade can extend, and upon rotating the rotatable member in the opposite direction the lift band can wind around the rotatable member and cause the shade to retract. The shade can be formed of, e.g., a textile or a woven wood.
According to one embodiment, the connection points between the shade and the lift bands can be removably attachable to the shade, allowing the connection points to be moved and the overall look of the retracted shade to be variable. The utilization of removably attachable connection points can also simplify assembly of a shade and can allow for either large or small drop length on a shade, depending upon the desired appearance of the retracted shade.
According to one embodiment, a shade can include a horizontal tab on the back of the shade. The horizontal tab can define a hole or slot therethrough that can form a slidable connection point between the shade and the lift band. Thus, the hole through the horizontal tab can have an aspect ratio greater than one to accommodate the lift band therethrough. The horizontal tab can be defined by the shade itself, such as by a fold in the shade material itself, can be defined by a backing material, or can be formed from another material that can be attached to the shade.
Also disclosed is a backing sheet that can be slidably connected to a lift band. For example, a backing sheet can be adhered to a roman shade and the roman shade can be retracted and extended by the connection points on the adhered backing sheet. For example, a backing sheet can be directly adhered to a shade and the backing sheet can include one or more horizontal tabs that define the connection points used in conjunction with a lift band to raise and lower the shade. Alternatively, the backing sheet can be adjacent to but separated from a shade.
Other features and aspects of the present disclosure are discussed in greater detail below.
A full and enabling disclosure of the present invention, including the best mode thereof to one skilled in the art, is set forth more particularly in the remainder of the specification, including reference to the accompanying figures, in which:
Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent the same or analogous features or elements of the present invention.
It is to be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present discussion is a description of exemplary embodiments only, and is not intended as limiting the broader aspects of the present disclosure.
In general, the present disclosure is directed to a roman shade assembly that utilizes lift bands rather than cords. In one embodiment, the roman shade assembly is well suited for use with a shade made from a textured material. The textured material may be relatively heavy and/or stiff. The roman shade assembly is particularly well suited in one embodiment for use with shades made from woven woods. The roman shade assembly includes one or more rotatable members that can be mounted adjacent the top of an architectural opening and adjacent the top of the shade. The lift band(s) can be attached to the rotatable member(s) and can be extended or retracted within the architectural opening by rotating the member(s). In accordance with the present disclosure, the lift bands are slidingly connected to the shade or a backing sheet of the shade at multiple points along the vertical length of the shade and are fixed near or at the bottom of the shade. Accordingly, as the lift bands are extended or retracted, the shade and/or backing sheet is likewise extended or retracted to cover or uncover the architectural opening. As the shade is retracted, a series of pleats can form between the gathered connection points that can have a characteristic drop length.
Referring to
A shade 110 can be formed of any material as is generally known in the art. In one embodiment, the roman shade assembly 100 as shown in the figures is particularly well suited for use with shades made from highly textured materials. In
In addition to woven woods, it should be understood, however, that a shade can be made from any suitable material, and in one embodiment any textured, relatively stiff and/or heavy material. Textured materials, for instance, generally refer to materials having a non-uniform thickness. The shade material, for instance, may have a thickness that varies by at least about 2%, such as at least about 5%, such as at least about 7%, such as at least about 10%, over the surface area of the material.
In accord with one embodiment of the present disclosure, one or more lift bands 108 can be attached to the back of a shade 110 of a roman shade assembly 100. As shown in
A lift band can be formed of any material that exhibits suitable flexibility so as to be collected in a head rail (e.g., wrapped around a cylindrical member 115 of a head rail 112) and that can be both slidingly connected to a shade at connection points 119 and securely connected to a shade at the hem of the shade at connection points 111. In addition, a band can exhibit limited stretch. By way of example a lift band can be formed of a textile material or a polymeric tape.
The term ‘textile’ as utilized herein generally refers to any structure produced by the interlacing of yarns, multi-filament fibers, monofilament fibers, or some combination thereof. A textile can be generally planar or can be manipulated to form higher dimensional geometries. A textile can include fibers in a predetermined, organized, and interlaced pattern, herein referred to as a weave or knit fabric (i.e., a fabric formed according to a weaving and/or knitting process), or optionally can include the fibers in a random pattern (a nonwoven fabric), or in a unidirectional prepreg fabric, in which multiple unidirectional fibers are aligned and held in a matrix of a polymeric binding agent.
A lift band can be formed of a textile of any suitable basis weight. For instance, a lift band can be formed of a relatively light weight textile, for example a nonwoven web having a basis weight of, e.g., between about 0.5 ounces per square yard and about 3 ounces per square yard. A light weight web can be translucent, and as such can cast little shadow and can be less visible when viewed from the front of the shade, even when considering a shade that is itself somewhat translucent, e.g., having an open weave. Of course, a heavier textile can also be utilized as a lift band, for instance a web having a basis weight of greater than about 3 ounces per square yard. A heavier textile can be preferred in those embodiments in which a shade is itself relatively heavy.
In one embodiment, a lift band can be formed of a polymeric film, such as a polyester, a polycarbonate, or polyolefin film. For instance, a transparent polymeric film can form a lift band. A transparent polymeric material can provide a lift band that is less visible on a shade. For example, when considering an open weave shade of a textile or a woven wood, a transparent lift band can be essentially invisible, particularly when viewed from the front of the shade, even when the shade is in full sunlight.
In one embodiment, a polymeric tape lift band can have a surface finish, for instance a matte finish, and can provide a less visible lift band to a shade system. For instance, a polyester tape having a slight matte finish can be utilized in one embodiment. Exemplary polymeric tapes as may be utilized in a roman shade system include those available from SMI Gaskets of Sante Fe Springs, Calif.
Referring again to
Beneficially, as the lift band 108 lessens the possibility of tangling and entanglement as compared to utilization of previously known lift cords, the distance between adjacent sliding connection points 119 and between the lowest sliding connection point 119 and fixed connection point 111 can be greater than the 8 inch maximum for lift cords found in current roman shades. By way of example, adjacent connection points can be greater than eight inches apart, or greater than about 10 inches apart, in one embodiment. For instance, the distance between adjacent connections points can be between eight inches and about 24 inches. Of course, in other embodiments, the distance between connection points can be less (i.e., smaller drop length), for instance in those embodiments in which a larger uncovered expanse of an architectural opening is desired when the shade is fully retracted. According to this embodiment, the connection points can be less than about eight inches apart, for instance between about three and about eight inches apart, for instance about four inches apart.
The increased variability capable between adjacent vertical connection points can allow for increased design capabilities of a system. For example, a 36 inch shade can have the connection points located with a six inch spacing, while a 72 inch shade can have the connection points located with a 12 inch spacing, both shades having six full pleats when the shade is gathered in a raised orientation. This can be particularly beneficial when a shade is formed of a heavily textured material, such as a woven wood. The ability to form a shade assembly with greater distance between adjacent connection points can decrease the total number of pleats formed when the shade is in a raised orientation, which also decreases the thickness of the gathered shade. This can improve the look of the raised shade, particularly when a shade assembly includes a valence.
The increased variability in the distance between adjacent connection points can be used to improve the overall appearance of the shade, particularly when raised, for instance when a shade includes a patterned front. For example, a shade can be woven or printed with a patterned front and the vertical pattern dimension can be coordinated with the distance between adjacent connection points of the shade. By way of example, a three inch vertical pattern on the front of a shade can have three, six, nine, or twelve inch adjacent connection points coordinated with the shade pattern.
As seen in
In this illustrated embodiment, pin 120 is removably attached to shade 100. Specifically, latch 124 can be opened and member 121 slid out from engagement with warp yarns 125 to remove pin 120. A removable attachment device, such as removable pin 120 can provide a route for simple alteration of the connection points on a shade and related alteration of the appearance of the gathered pleats upon raising the shade.
Of course, a pin can be more permanently secured to a shade by adhesively or otherwise attaching the pin to the shade. Moreover, any other attachment device as is generally known in the art can alternatively be utilized to provide connection points between a lift band and a shade. For instance, an elongated ring can be sewn or adhesively secured to the back of a shade.
Referring again to
By way of example,
In
Referring again to
In general, any suitable control mechanism can be used in conjunction with the shade system of the present disclosure. In the embodiment illustrated, for instance, a manual control mechanism 130 is shown that includes a cord 150.
A cord 150 can either be an endless loop that is affixed to the wall or wall opening or can have separate, detached ends. In other embodiments, however, the control mechanism 130 may comprise an electric motor or any other suitable device capable of rotating the cylindrical member 115. For instance, a control mechanism can include a cordless system that includes an automatic winding mechanism or a cordless balanced system. Automatic winding mechanisms are generally known in the art and have been described, for instance in U.S. Patent Application Publication 2009/0283223 to Liu, which is incorporated herein by reference. When utilizing an automatic winding mechanism, a user can provide suitable pressure at the base of a shade, thereby instigating the automatic winding mechanism to retract or extend the shade. A cordless balanced system as is known can alternatively be utilized. For example, spring balanced system as described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,063,122 to Colson, et al., which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference, can be utilized.
The manual control mechanism 130 illustrated in
In one embodiment, the sprocket wheel can include a circumferential outer surface with a plurality of radially extending sprocket teeth that form pockets. In such an embodiment, the balls of the cord 150 fit within the pockets of the sprocket wheel. The housing of head rail 112 helps to maintain the cord 150 suitably engaged with the pockets of the sprocket wheel. In particular, the housing is designed to prevent the cord 150 from disengaging the sprocket wheel. In this arrangement, pulling one of the chain portions causes the balls on the cord to engage the sprocket wheel and to rotate the sprocket wheel a desired direction. In one embodiment, a stop mechanism can also be associated with the cord 150 for preventing the sprocket wheel from being over rotated in a certain direction.
Thus, pulling one of the chain portions 151 or 152 causes the cord 150 to engage the sprocket wheel and to rotate the sprocket wheel counter clockwise or clockwise. The cylindrical member 115 rotates with the sprocket wheel for rolling or unrolling the shade 110.
In another embodiment, rather than a single cylindrical member upon which multiple lift bands are wound, as illustrated, a head rail can include a single shaft that can be in mechanical communication with a control mechanism, for instance a sprocket wheel as described. A plurality of spools can be driven by the single shaft, and each spool can be connected to a single lift band. Accordingly, as the single shaft is rotated, each lift band can be wound or unwound from the associated spool.
Suitable control mechanisms that may be incorporated into the roller shade assembly of the present disclosure are disclosed, for instance, in U.S. Pat. No. 7,353,857 to Koop, U.S. Pat. No. 7,571,756 to Smith, et al., and in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2008/0142171 to Koop, et al., which are all incorporated herein by reference.
Referring now to
Similar to the embodiment in
A horizontal tab 206 can extend across the width of backing sheet 202, as shown. In one embodiment, a horizontal tab 206 can be formed by simply folding and taking a gather in the backing sheet material prior to adherence of the backing sheet 202 to the shade 200. Additional stiffness can be incorporated into a horizontal tab, in one embodiment. By way of example, a tab 206 can be formed with a batting material or the like enclosed within or adhered externally to the horizontal tab 206. In general, a horizontal tab will extend from the surface of the shade to a distance of less than about one inch, for instance less than about ¾ inch, or less than ½ inch, in one embodiment.
The lift band 208 can pass through the openings 222 defined in the horizontal tabs 206 to provide the slidable connection points on the shade system. The vertical distance between adjacent horizontal tabs (and openings therein) can be varied as desired. For instance, adjacent horizontal tabs can be greater than about three inches apart, in one embodiment. The lift points for a specific shade system can be varied as desired through utilization of all or only a portion of the horizontal tab openings. For example, a shade system can include horizontal tabs and openings therein relatively closely together, such as every three inches vertically. If one were to desire a shade with a short drop length (e.g., 1.5 inches), then the lift bands can be threaded through all of the openings along the vertical length of the shade. Alternatively, the same design can be utilized for a shade system having a longer drop length, merely through utilization of only a portion of the openings in the horizontal tabs. If the lift bands are threaded through every other opening in the vertical direction (i.e., horizontal tabs that are six inches apart), then the drop length of the retracted shade will be doubled, to three inches. Similarly, only every third opening, or every fourth opening in the vertical direction can be utilized to provide increasing drop length. Thus, a single design can be utilized with a variety of different looks provided to the shade system. Of course, a system can include horizontal tabs at greater distances, such as greater than about eight inches, with no intervening horizontal tabs in another embodiment.
The lift band 208 can be secured at the hem of the shade 210 at fixed connection points 211, for instance through use of a device as described above, to provide a secured connection point for lifting the shade.
A backing sheet 202 can be formed of any suitable material, for instance a woven or nonwoven web. In one embodiment, a backing sheet 202 can be formed of a relatively low basis weight material, for instance less than about 3 ounces per square yard, and can serve as a light filtering backing for an open weave shade. For example, a low basis weight backing sheet can be translucent and provide some light filtering affects, which can also serve to prevent the lift bands from being visible on the front of the shade assembly 200, the front of which is illustrated in
Alternatively, a backing sheet can be a material that can provide a black-out capability to a shade assembly. By way of example, a black-out laminate material can be utilized as a backing sheet to maximize the room darkening effect of the window covering when the shade is extended. One exemplary black-out laminate material is a three ply laminate comprising a polyester film such as MYLAR sandwiched between two layers of a spun bonded or spun laced polyester nonwoven material. Black-out laminates of this type are generally known in the art and have previously been used in other types of window coverings.
In one embodiment, the shade material itself can be used to form the horizontal tabs that can define openings through which the lift bands can be threaded. For instance, a shade can be formed of a textile, either a highly textured textile or a textile of more uniform thickness. In either case, the shade material can be folded and gathered during formation to form horizontal tabs across the width of the shade that can then have openings formed therein through which lift bands can be threaded for lifting the shade during retraction. As with a tabbed backing material, a tabbed shade can include additional stiffening material in conjunction with the tabs.
In yet another embodiment, a horizontal tab can be a single horizontal piece, for instance a wooden or molded slat, that can be attached to the back of a shade and define the slidable connection points. For example, a slotted dowel can be attached to the back of a shade to form slidable connection points that are defined by the dowel or formed at the junction between the dowel and the shade. A horizontal tab can extend across all or a portion of the shade system in the horizontal direction as defined above. For instance, a horizontal tab can extend across a shade from edge to edge and define multiple openings therein, each for a different lift band. In another embodiment, a horizontal tab can extend across less than the entire width of the shade, and a single horizontal tab can define only one or multiple openings therethrough for lift bands.
The horizontal tab 501 can define one or more openings 522 therethrough as illustrated in
At the hem of the backing sheet 500 the lift tape 508 is secured to the backing sheet 500 with a fastening system such as that illustrated in
The backing sheet system of
In one embodiment, a second independent backing sheet can be used in conjunction with an adjacent shade through utilization of a combination lift system as is generally known in the art.
A combination system can include, for instance, a second lift system that includes a single or a plurality of roller assemblies that are utilized to extend and retract the backing sheet behind the roman shade assembly. The second lift system can simultaneously raise or lower the backing sheet to be extended or retracted across a designated portion of an architectural opening. The backing sheet associated with the second lift system can be retracted by use of lift bands and associated roller(s) so that vision through the covering is through the roman shade assembly. In another position, the roman shade assembly can be fully retracted with the backing sheet system also retracted. In still another position, both the roman shade assembly and the backing sheet lift system can be fully extended, to provide additional light blocking capability to a system. In another embodiment, both the roman shade assembly and the backing sheet component can be partially extended to the same or different lengths.
In another embodiment, a backing sheet can be adjacent to a roman shade and the two can utilize a single lift system. For instance, the roman shade and the backing sheet can be aligned back to back and attached to each other at the horizontal tabs between the two. In one embodiment, the horizontal tabs can be defined by the material of the backing sheet and optionally stiffened, and these horizontal tabs can then be attached to the back of the adjacent roman shade.
In another embodiment, the horizontal tabs that define the openings for the lift bands can be formed of a third material (e.g., a polymeric material) and the tabs can be aligned between and adhered to both the roman shade and the backing material. Thus, the lifting system including the lift bands threaded through the openings of the horizontal tabs can lift both the shade and the backing sheet.
As discussed above, the horizontal tabs can generally extend from the surface of the shade and backing material by less than about an inch, for instance less than about ¾ inch, or less than about ½ inch, which will define the space between the shade and the backing sheet when the shade system is hung in an architectural opening.
These and other modifications and variations to the present invention may be practiced by those of ordinary skill in the art, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention, which is more particularly set forth in the appended claims. In addition, it should be understood that aspects of the various embodiments may be interchanged both in whole or in part. Furthermore, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the foregoing description is by way of example only, and is not intended to limit the invention so further described in such appended claims.
The present application is a divisional of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 13/984,640 having a filing date of Aug. 9, 2013, which, in turn, is the U.S. national phase filing of International Patent Application No. PCT/US2012/024575 having filing date of Feb. 10, 2012, which, in turn, claims the filing benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/441,447 having a filing date of Feb. 10, 2011, the disclosures of all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entirety for all purposes.
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