The present invention relates generally to the field of body cooling garments. More specifically the present invention relates to a cooling scarf. The cooling scarf includes a flexible tube having a tube side wall and a tube open end with a closure fastener and a tube closed end, defining an elongate tube internal chamber, the tube internal chamber being divided by a flexible, longitudinal, chamber partition into longitudinal first and second cooling unit pockets. A number of cooling units are provided in the form of either cooling packs such as jell cold packs or ice cubes, which are sized in width and breadth to substantially match the width and breadth of a given pocket interior, and sized in length so that a series of such cooling units are required to completely fill a given pocket. The substantially matching widths and breadths of the cooling units and pocket interiors assures that the cooling units cannot slide laterally adjacent to each other within a pocket and thereby pile up at one end of the tube, but instead must remain in a curvilinear or rectilinear array. The large number of cooling units along the length of each pocket makes the scarf highly flexible, and thus capable of more closely following and abutting the curves of the user neck, shoulders and chest for maximized heat transfer. The closure fastener preferably is a zipper extending across the tube open end the full width of the tube open end and generally perpendicular to the partition. A cover flap fastened to the tube side wall preferably wraps over and around the tube open end to cover the zipper when the zipper is closed. The flexible tube and the chamber partition preferably are formed of fabric, and the preferred fabric is brush tricot polyester spandex mix. It is preferred that two different textures of this fabric, an outward fabric strip and an inward fabric strip which is more plush for comfortably resting against the wearer neck and chest.
There previously have been garments of various sorts for cooling different parts of the human body. A prior cooling garment is disclosed in Ezell, U.S. Pat. Application Publication No. 2013/0061370, published on Mar. 14, 2013, for a Neck Scarf for Cooling or Warming the User. Ezell includes a tubular towel having an internal passageway which is collapsed at two spaced apart points where it is sewn together along stitched lines extending across its width, defining three discrete cooling pack chambers. An elongate flap referred to as an end closure section extends from each tube end and includes hook and loop fastener strips. Each chamber receives one cooling pack sized to substantially fill the chamber. See Prior Art
It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a body cooling scarf which has a continuous longitudinal chamber, which in turn preferably contains a series of at least six to fourteen cooling units in each parallel pocket, and preferably contains a series of four to fourteen cooling units for a children’s size. This number gives the scarf sufficient flexibility and a resulting ability to conform to and abut user skin for maximized heat transfer.
It is another object of the present invention to provide such a scarf which has a continuous chamber extending its full length without any lateral stitched lines between cooling units so that there are no crimped portions and therefore no heat transfer gaps between cooling units.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide such a scarf which has a longitudinal internal partition dividing the chamber into adjacent longitudinal first and second pockets, where the partition preferably extends substantially diametrically.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide such a scarf with cooling elements sized in width and breadth to substantially match the interior width and breadth of each pocket, so that the cooling units cannot slide laterally adjacent to each other and thus pile up at a scarf end, but are constrained to stay in rectilinear or curvilinear sequence.
It is a still further object of the present invention that corresponding cooling units in the two pockets be directly adjacent to each other so that the scarf can bend at common, adjacent points of abutment.
It is finally an object of the present invention to provide such a scarf which is easy to use and relatively inexpensive to manufacture.
The present invention accomplishes the above-stated objectives, as well as others, as may be determined by a fair reading and interpretation of the entire specification.
A body cooling scarf is provided, including a flexible retaining tube having a tube side wall and a tube open end and a tube closed end, defining within the retaining tube an elongate tube internal chamber; and a flexible, chamber partition extending longitudinally within and dividing the tube internal chamber into a longitudinal first cooling unit pocket and a second cooling unit pocket.
A body cooling scarf is further provided, including a flexible tube having a tube side wall and a tube open end and a tube closed end, defining within the flexible tube a longitudinal cooling unit pocket having a pocket interior with a pocket interior width, breadth and length; and a series of cooling units which are sized in width and breadth to substantially match the width and breadth of the cooling unit pocket interior, and sized in length such that a series of cooling units, preferably from six to fourteen cooling units in each parallel pocket, and preferably from four to fourteen cooling units for a children’s size, to completely fill the pocket, for substantial cooling scarf flexibility. The scarf preferably has a minimum width of three inches and a maximum width of six inches for adults, and two inches for children. The minimum length of the scarf and series of cooling units is preferably twelve inches.
A body cooling scarf is still further provided, including a flexible tube having a tube side wall and a tube open end and a tube closed end, defining within the flexible tube an elongate tube internal chamber; a flexible, chamber partition extending longitudinally within and dividing the tube internal chamber into a longitudinal first cooling unit pocket and a second cooling unit pocket, each having a pocket interior with a pocket interior width, breadth and length; and a series of cooling units which are sized in width and breadth to substantially match the width and breadth of each cooling unit pocket interior, and cooling units are required to completely fill a given pocket, for substantial cooling scarf flexibility.
The cooling scarf preferably additionally includes a closure fastener for closing the tube open end. The flexible tube and partition preferably are formed of fabric. The chamber partition preferably extends substantially diametrically across the internal chamber, so that the first and second cooling unit pockets are of equal with and breadth and length. The cooling units preferably are one of cooling packs and ice cubes. The closure fastener preferably a zipper extending across the tube open end substantially the full width of the flexible retaining tube and generally perpendicular to the partition.
The cooling scarf preferably additionally includes a cover flap secured to the tube side wall adjacent to the tube open end and pivotable across the tube open end to cover the closure fastener. The cooling scarf preferably additionally includes a flap fastener for releasably securing the cover flap in a position covering the closure fastener. The cover flap preferably forms a cuff that can be turned inside out to releasably secure the cover flap over the closure fastener. The flexible tube, the partition, and the cover flap preferably are formed of fabric.
Various other objects, advantages, and features of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following discussion taken in conjunction with the following drawings, in which:
Prior Art
Prior Art
As required, detailed embodiments of the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed embodiments are merely exemplary of the invention which may be embodied in various forms. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a basis for the claims and as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention in virtually any appropriately detailed structure.
Reference is now made to the drawings, wherein like characteristics and features of the present invention shown in the various FIGURES are designated by the same reference numerals.
Referring to
The closure fastener 26 preferably is a zipper 26 extending across the tube open end 24 the full width of the flexible retaining tube 20 and generally perpendicular to the chamber partition 32. A cover flap 42 preferably is fastened to the tube side wall 22 adjacent to the tube open end 24, and flap 42 is sewn or otherwise connected along tube open end 24 and connected along opposing flap sides 42A and 42B such as by stitching, so that only the flap free end 42C opposite open end 24 is not connected, so that half cuff in the form of a flap pocket 44 is formed. Cover flap 42 is pivoted to wrap over and around the tube open end 24 to cover zipper 26 when zipper 26 is closed by pulling flap free end 42C toward tube open end 42 and essentially turning the flap pocket 44 inside out around and over the tube open end 24. See
While the invention has been described, disclosed, illustrated and shown in various terms or certain embodiments or modifications which it has assumed in practice, the scope of the invention is not intended to be, nor should it be deemed to be, limited thereby and such other modifications or embodiments as may be suggested by the teachings herein are particularly reserved especially as they fall within the breadth and scope of the claims here appended.
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