This invention is concerned with protection and comfort of babies and young children. In particular, the invention is concerned with a pillow, suitable for use with a car seat and with a cushion, suitable for use with a shopping cart or trolley.
It is common in many countries to require babies and young children to be transported in vehicles using an especially-designed car seat. For ease of reference, these car seats are referred to below as “children's car seats”.
Children's car seats are fastened to the vehicle, normally using especially-designed anchor points. Transportation of a child in a children's car seat is usually adequate while the child is awake. However, children frequently fall asleep during transportation in vehicles. Existing children's car seats do not provide adequate support for a child's head when asleep. As a result, in most cases the head of a sleeping child is not properly supported and falls sideways at an awkward angle. It is undesirable that a child's head is not properly supported in a children's car seat, when the child is asleep.
Inserting a conventional pillow behind the child's head is not a suitable solution, because such a pillow does not stay in place behind the child's head, but tends to slip down behind the child's back.
In addition, it is desirable that any support for the child's head is easy to remove quickly when not required.
It is an object of the present invention, in a first aspect, to provide a pillow for use in connection with a children's car seat, which overcomes or substantially alleviates this problem.
Accordingly, in a first aspect, this invention provides a pillow for a children's car seat when installed on a vehicle car seat, the pillow adapted in use to support a child's head without the pillow lying behind the child's back, the pillow being divided into three portions:
The pillow of the invention may be used with a variety of children's car seats, including with a car seat booster cushion.
The pillow of the invention may have a textile cover made of a material with a suitable degree of comfort for use by babies and young children. Cotton is an example of a suitable material. If desired, the part of the pillow of the invention which is not intended to contact the baby or child may be made of a different material, such as vinyl or any other suitable material.
The first and second padded portions are intended to be positioned on either side of the child's head when the pillow of the invention is in use. Consequently, it is preferred that the first and second padded portions have a relatively high level of padding, so as to provide the required level of cushioning to the child's head.
It is not intended that the pillow of the invention lies behind the back of the child to any significant extent, when the pillow is in use. However, to accommodate children of different heights, the pillow of the invention may be adjustable, especially via the retaining means.
Because most children's car seats have inclined sides in the region of the child's head, the first and second padded portions of the pillow of the invention will normally lie along the inclined sides, to embrace the head of the child in use.
The intermediate portion is preferably either lightly padded or has no padding, so that the child's head is not pushed forward within the car seat to any appreciable degree. Omission of padding on the intermediate portion may also enhance air circulation and help to prevent the child's head from becoming hot.
The means for retaining the pillow on the car seat may take various forms. Children's car seats are made in many variations. For example, some use “V” anchor harnesses and some use a central anchor harness, anchoring the children's car seat from the top. The car seat pillow of the invention may be specifically designed for a particular children's car seat or it may have a more general application.
For example, in one embodiment of the car seat pillow of the invention, the means for retaining the pillow on the car seat comprises a flap designed to depend from the top of the children's car seat, to be trapped between the children's car seat and the vehicle car seat. It will be appreciated, however, that this embodiment may not be suitable where the children's car seat is secured by a centre anchor strap or “V” anchor harnesses.
As another example, the retaining means may comprise ties which could attach the pillow to, for example, a harness for the car seat.
In an especially preferred embodiment, the retaining means of the car seat pillow of the invention has a pair of flaps and means to attach each flap to itself. Preferably, means are included to attach one flap to the other, in addition.
The attaching means may be of any suitable construction and include buttons and buttonholes, press-studs and hook and loop closures, such as those sold under the trade mark VELCRO. Other attaching means will be apparent to one skilled in the art and are within the scope of this invention.
When means are provided to attach one flap to the other, these means may be integral with one or each flap, or may be separate, being joined to the flaps by appropriate attaching means.
Preferably, the retaining means is of sufficient length to allow for adjustment of the first and second padded portions and the intermediate portion upwardly or downwardly in use, to adjust for different child heights.
It will be appreciated that the car seat pillow of the invention may enable the head of the child to be properly supported in a car seat, even when the child is asleep, and can prevent discomfort and possible injury to the child through improper posture while asleep.
In addition, the pillow of the invention may be designed so that it can be flipped upwardly when not in use, without the need to detach it from the car seat.
The second aspect of the invention is concerned with the transportation of babies and young children in supermarket carts or trolleys. Most supermarkets provide steel trolleys for use by customers. Many of these include an area in which a child or infant can sit during the shopping expedition. However, in most cases, the seat area in the supermarket trolley provides little or no degree of comfort to the child or infant and may even offer sharp edges or snags which may injure the infant or child.
It is an object of this invention, in the second aspect, to provide a cushion, for a cart or trolley of the type used in supermarkets and the like, which can overcome or substantially alleviate the situation described.
Accordingly, in a second aspect, this invention provides a cushion for a trolley or cart of the type which includes a seat, a backrest and apertures for the legs of an occupant, wherein the cushion includes a seat portion, a backrest portion, a pair of leg portions and means for retaining the cushion in the trolley.
The cushion of this second aspect of the invention may be made of any suitable material, preferably a textile material, such as cotton, which will be of a sufficient level of comfort for the child or infant who is to sit on it. Each of the portions of the cushion of the invention may be padded with suitable wadding, as desired. Each portion may be padded to a different extent from other portions, if desired. For example, the seat portion and the back portions may include more padding than the leg portions.
It will be appreciated that the cushion of the invention need not contain any padding at all, if it is made of a sufficiently robust and comfortable material.
The leg portions are preferably designed so that in use they pass through the apertures on the trolley or cart for the legs of an occupant and depend from those apertures. In this way, the leg portions may provide protection and comfort for the occupant's legs, to minimise the likelihood that the legs of the occupant will be injured by the trolley, even if the occupant were to swing the occupant's legs during the shopping expedition.
The retaining means may take any desirable form. Most conveniently, the retaining means is in two parts. The first part comprises a pair of straps, preferably located on either side of the backrest portion and close to the junction of the backrest and seat portions. Preferably, the straps can be secured to bars of the trolley or cart in a simple and efficient manner. In the preferred embodiment, each of the straps has a hook or loop strip which can mate with a corresponding loop or hook strip on the rear of the backrest, after wrapping round a convenient trolley bar.
The second part of the restraining means is preferably a flap or a pair of flaps attached to or extending from the top end of the backrest. Preferably, the flap or pair of flaps includes, on the rear, hook or loop fastener strips, which are intended to mate with corresponding loop or hook strips on the rear of the backrest. Hook and loop fasteners are preferred because they permit a certain amount of adjustment during fastening and thus enable the cushion of the invention to be used with different sizes or designs of trolleys or carts.
It will be appreciated that the cushion of the invention, especially in the form of the preferred embodiment, can be rolled into a relatively small package for transport to and from the supermarket. At the supermarket, it can be simply installed in a trolley or cart. It is even possible to install the cushion of the invention with one hand, leaving the other hand free to hold the infant or child. During the shopping expedition, the infant or child may be well protected from injury by the cushion of the invention, which also substantially increases the comfort of the infant or child installed in the trolley or cart.
Some supermarket trolleys or carts provide safety harnesses for children occupying the seat. It is preferred that the cushion of the invention is designed so that it does not interfere with the use of such safety harnesses.
The invention will now be described in connection with certain non-limiting embodiments thereof, in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Turning first to the first embodiment illustrated in
In this embodiment, the retaining means takes the form of two flaps 26 and 28. Each flap 26 and 28 includes press studs 30 and 32. Each of flaps 26 and 28 may thus be folded over at fabric tabs 34 and 36 respectively. Flaps 26 and 28 can be inserted behind the child's car seat (not shown) to be retained by friction between the back of the car seat and the vehicle seat. Alternately, each flap 26 and 28 may be looped over a vehicle seat restraint (not shown) or other appropriate element and press stud 30 connected to press stud 32. In this way, pillow 10 may be secured to the vehicle or children's car seat. It is preferred that flaps 26 and 28 do not contain any filling. It is also preferred that intermediate portion 16 does not contain any filling.
Turning now to the embodiment illustrated in
As can be seen in
Behind flap 42 is a third flap 54, the edge of which can be seen in
In order to convert pillow 40 for use with a booster seat or a vehicle which has “V” anchor harnesses for the car seat, press studs 56 and 58 are detached from press studs 46 and 48 and attached instead to press studs 50 and 52, as shown in
Although third flap 54 is shown as a separate piece in
As will be apparent to one skilled in the art, press studs 46, 48, 50, 52, 56 and 58 may be replaced by other suitable closures, such as buttons and button holes, for example.
The third embodiment of the pillow of the invention shown in
In
It will also be noted from
Reference is now made to the embodiment of the cushion for a trolley or cart, illustrated in
Cushion 80 has seat portion 88, back rest portion 90 and a pair of leg portions 92 and 94. In this embodiment, leg portions 92 and 94 are in fact an extension of seat portion 88.
Cushion 80 also includes means for retaining cushion 80 in trolley 96. The retaining means is in two parts. The first part comprises straps 98 and 100. These are shown as relatively short in
The second part of the restraining means includes flaps 106 and 108, attached to or forming an extension of backrest portion 90. As can be seen from
In this embodiment, seat portion 88, backrest portion 90 and leg portions 92 and 94 are lightly padded by suitable wadding.
Cushion 80 may be rolled into a cylinder or folded to a relatively small size for transport to the supermarket. It may then be unrolled or unfolded and attached to trolley 96 by laying seat portion 88 on trolley seat 82 and annexing backrest portion 90 to trolley backrest 84. Flaps 106 and 108 may then be flipped over trolley bar 114 and hook and loop closures 110 pressed into loop and hook closures 112. Leg portions 92 and 94 are then pulled through apertures 86.
At this stage, the infant or child (not shown) may be placed on seat portion 88 and the infant or child's legs inserted into apertures 86. The carer will then have two hands free to join straps 98 and 100 through buckle closure 102. Alternately, if cushion 80 has short straps with hook and loop closures (110, 112), the carer can attach these using one hand.
If trolley 96 includes child restraint straps, these may then be attached to the child, to restrain the child in trolley 96.
As can be seen particularly from
Referring now to
It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that various changes may be made to the embodiments disclosed herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention and that such changes are within the scope of the present invention.
Many people use children's car seats or trolleys for transportation of their babies and children. The disclosed invention provides a pillow to support a child's head and alleviate the problem of the child's head being at an awkward angle, while sleeping. Further the invention discloses a cushion to improve the comfort and safety of a child when transported in a trolley.
The invention, therefore, provides a product which is likely to be of great benefit to parents and children around the world.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005906726 | Dec 2005 | AU | national |
This application claims priority from PCT/AU2006/001800 filed Nov. 30, 2006, the contents of which are incorporated herein fully by reference, and which in turn claims priority from AU Ser. No. 2005906726 filed Dec. 1, 2005.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/AU2006/001800 | 11/30/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/27/2008 |