Wearable child carriers for carrying a baby or child are often designed for carrying the child on either the front or the back of a person, without the versatility of doing both. Carriers often have bulky components like shoulder straps that are padded similar to a hiking backpack in an effort to increase comfort for the user. However, such padding can be bulky and cumbersome, often resulting in a large carrier that is difficult to carry or stow when not in use with a child.
Moreover, providing head support is important for infants and sleeping children, but less important with older children. Most conventional carriers are specifically designed either for infants requiring head support or for older children who do not require head support. If a conventional carrier has a removable head support, the head support is often bulky, which again creates a carrier that is not compact for carrying or stowage when not in use. Various embodiments of the present child carrying system recognize and address the foregoing considerations, and others, of prior art devices.
A child carrying system according to various embodiments is configured to be worn by a person to enable the person to carry a child. The child carrying system includes: a carrier portion comprising: a top portion; a middle portion having a pair of tabs extending away from a center of the middle portion in a lateral direction; a pair of adjustment mechanisms, each adjustment mechanism fixedly attached to a respective tab of the pair of tabs; and a bottom portion. The child carrying system also includes a pair of straps, each strap having a first end and a second end, wherein: each first end is fixedly attached proximate a respective top corner of the top portion; each second end is detachably connected to an adjustment mechanism of the pair of adjustment mechanisms; and a width of each strap of the pair of straps is wider than a conventional shoulder strap on a backpack.
In further embodiments, a child carrying system includes a carrier portion; a first strap and a second strap both fixedly attached to the carrier portion; a first adjustment mechanism and a second adjustment mechanism both fixedly attached to the carrier portion; and a waist belt. The child carrying system is adapted to be donned by a user by: adjusting the carrier portion based on the child's size by wrapping the carrier portion around the waist belt; wrapping the waist belt around the user's waist; buckling the waist belt at the user's back; securing the first strap to the first adjustment mechanism, the first adjustment mechanism being on an opposite side of the carrier portion in a lateral direction from an attachment point of the first strap; securing the second strap to the second adjustment mechanism, the second adjustment mechanism being on an opposite side of the carrier portion in the lateral direction from an attachment point of the second strap; lifting the first strap and the second strap over the user's head; inserting a first arm of the user between the first strap and the second strap; inserting a second arm of the user between the first strap and the second strap; and adjusting the carrier portion by pulling on a free end of the first strap and a free end of the second strap.
A child carrying system, according to further embodiments, includes a first means for supporting a child's bottom; a second means for transferring a weight of the child to a wearer's shoulders and substantially covering the wearer's shoulders; a third means for selectively securing the second means to the first means; and a fourth means for supporting the child's head, wherein the fourth means is secured to the first means, wraps around the second means, and is adjustable in a vertical direction relative to the first means.
Various embodiments of the invention are described below. In the course of the description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
Various embodiments will now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings. It should be understood that the invention may be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
Conventional child carriers vary greatly in structure and configuration. Child carriers may be configured with a rigid framework to provide support for the carrier and to distribute the child's weight. These carriers are often bulky, heavy, and cumbersome. Other soft carriers provide for carrying the baby or child on the user's back or on their front. Most carriers have limitations as they are designed for a specific placement of the child on the user's back or front, which, while useful for that particular use, does not provide allow for flexibility in carrying position and comfort as the child grows. Carriers often include numerous straps and buckles to provide for optimum fit and positioning of the child's weight while being carried. Similarly, straps are often padded and bulky in an attempt to provide comfort. The result is a bulky, cumbersome carrier that is difficult or inconvenient to carry while not in use and uncomfortable due to the numerous straps, buckles, and traditional mesh and plastic materials used in the carriers.
Various concepts and technologies described herein utilize a child carrying system that includes a carrier portion that encompasses the child that is made of soft fabric material. Instead of padded “backpack style” straps that secure conventional carriers to the user, various embodiments described herein may include wide fabric straps that may be positioned around the user's shoulders and threaded through large D-rings (which are a specific example of an “adjustment mechanism”) that are attached to the carrier portion to allow for easy adjustment. In various embodiments, the entire child carrying system is manufactured from one or more soft fabrics, without any internal or external framing, and without any bulky padding (although alternative embodiments may include some internal or external framing and/or padding). Because of the nature of the fabric, the configuration of the straps and carrier portion, and the manner in which the carrier is worn, various embodiments of the child carrying system described herein provide a significant improvement over conventional carriers in terms of comfort and versatility.
Various child carrying systems described herein allow for the child to be worn on the user's back or on the user's front. When the child is carried on the user's back, the wide fabric straps extend from the carrier portion, over the user's shoulders, and directly down through the D-rings attached to the carrier portion. In various embodiments, the wide fabric straps are of a length that allows for extended “tail” portions of the straps to hang below the D-rings after being threaded through. These tails may be pulled away from the carrier portion to pull the straps through the D-rings and tighten the carrier portion against the user, or pushed back through the D-rings towards the carrier portion to loosen the carrier portion from the user when putting the child carrying system on or taking it off. Because the tails are wide and long, they may be tied across the user's chest as desired for aesthetic purposes, or allowed to hang by the user's side, according to the user's preference.
When the child is carried on the user's front, the wide fabric straps extend from the carrier portion, over the user's shoulders, and cross across the user's back to the D-rings on the opposite side of the carrier portion from where the straps begin. As noted above, the wide fabric straps may be of a length that allows for extended tails to hang below the D-rings after being threaded through.
Various embodiments of the child carrying system described herein provide a head support that is comfortable, provides exceptional support, and is easily configured according to the user's preference and/or the child's needs. The respective lateral sides of the head support may, for example, be wrapped around the two fabric shoulder straps in a manner that allows the head support to slide up and down the straps between lowered and raised configurations. In certain embodiments, the respective lateral sides of the head support may each slide independently of each other between a retracted and an extended position along a respective one of the fabric shoulder straps. In alternative embodiments, the head support may be slideably connected to the respective shoulder straps using any other type of slideable fastener and/or slideable fastening connection (e.g., suitable plastic loops, ties, etc.). The head support may be made from fabric having an elasticity that allows the head support to be pulled up and over the child's head and/or any particular portion of the child's head, as desired. In various embodiments, when not needed, the head support may be lowered, and/or pushed down toward and against a top edge of the carrier portion, to a position at or below the child's neck (e.g., as shown in
Referring now to
Specifically,
Finally, the bottom edge of the head support 112 may be sewn or otherwise coupled to the top edge of the carrier portion 102 to maintain the proper positioning of the head support 112 when it is pulled upward to the raised configuration. According to other embodiments, the head support 112 may be wrapped or looped around the fabric shoulder straps 104 but without being attached to the carrier portion 102. According to one embodiment, the head support 112 may be manufactured from a single piece of material with the opposing ends detachably connected rather than sewn together. In this embodiment, the head support 112 may be purchased separately from the child carrying system 100 and fitted onto any traditional child carrier by wrapping the head support 112 around the existing shoulder straps and connecting the ends to one another (e.g., via hook-and-loop fastening straps such as Velcro straps, snaps, or buttons).
As seen in the various embodiments, the child carrying system 100 includes a carrier portion 102 that supports the child's body. The carrier portion 102 may be selectively secured to the user using a waist belt 110 and a pair of shoulder straps 104. The shoulder straps 104 are each coupled at a first end to the carrier portion 102 proximate to a top corner of the carrier portion 102 and uncoupled at a second end opposite the first end. As mentioned above, the second end of each shoulder strap 104 is referred to herein as a tail 108. The tails 108 of the shoulder straps 104 may be left hanging down the user's side when the child is secured within the carrier portion 102 and the child carrying system 100 is being used. The length of the tails 108 allow for easy access for adjustments. Because the tails 108 are generally long enough to hang below the carrier portion 102, the user has various options for the tails 108 while carrying a child. One option is to allow the tails 108 to hang generally straight down, as shown in most of the drawings. Another option when the child is carried on the back of the user is to tie or wrap the tails 108 together across the user's chest, as shown in
The fabric shoulder straps 104 are generally wide, significantly wider than a conventional shoulder strap on a backpack or typical child carrier. In doing so, the shoulder straps may be bunched up or folded to a narrower configuration where the shoulder straps 104 meet the carrier portion 102 or where the head support 112 loops around, and able to expand to a wider configuration where the shoulder straps 104 traverses the user's shoulder and back. By widening the fabric shoulder straps 104 to encompass substantially the user's entire shoulder, the child carrying system 100 is fully supported in a manner that is substantially more comfortable to the user than a conventional strap that has a minimal contact surface area and may “dig in” or irritate the user's shoulder after prolonged wear. Maximizing the contact surface area on the shoulders distributes the weight of the child, while the fabric of the shoulder straps 104 adapts to the contours of the user's body and moves with the shoulders and arms, maximizing comfort.
The fabric shoulder straps 104 are routed through D-rings 106 or any other suitable attachment mechanism (e.g., adjustable attachment mechanism) connected to the carrier portion 102.
The child carrying system 100 includes a waist belt 110 that is attached to a bottom edge or portion of the carrier portion 102. The waist belt 110 is preferably fabric, but may be any material. The waist belt 110 has waist belt tails 116 that thread through a fastener mechanism 114 and are adjustable to various waist sizes. The waist belt 110 is most clearly shown in
In various embodiments, the child carrying system includes a first, “3 to 6 months” indicia printed on the inside of the carrier portion 102, which is used to help a user configure the child carrying system for use with a small (e.g., 3 to 6 month old) child, and a second, “6 months and up” indicia to help a user configure the child carrying system for use with larger children (e.g., those that are older than 6 months old.
In particular embodiments, to prepare the child carrying system for front wear, a user first orients the child carrying system 100 so that the first, “3 to 6 months” indicia is facing them. The user then crosses the shoulder straps 104 and threads the distal end of each shoulder strap 104 through a fastener mechanism 114 on an opposite lateral side of the child carrying system 10 as the proximal end of the shoulder strap 104 as shown in
To prepare the child carrying system for back wear, in various embodiments, the user first orients the child carrying system 100 so that the first, “3 to 6 months” label is facing the user. The user then threads the distal end of each shoulder strap 104 through a fastener mechanism 114 on the same lateral side of the child carrying system as the proximal end of the shoulder strap 104, as shown in
In various embodiments, the child carrying system in configured to allow the user to selectively adjust the operable length of the carrier portion 102 by wrapping a lower portion of the carrier portion 102 around the waist belt 110 before fastening the waist belt 110 around the user's waist. This may be useful, for example, when using the child carrying system 100 to carry younger and/or shorter children.
For example, in one embodiment, to use the child carrying system 100 with a child that is 3-6 months old, the user first shortens the carrier portion 102 by wrapping the bottom of the carrier portion around the waist belt 110 twice before wrapping the waist belt 110 around the user's waist and fastening it together (e.g., like a belt)—See
To front carry a child, a user may follow the following steps, which are illustrated in
Next, the user adjusts the carrier portion to position the child where the user wishes them to be held adjacent the user's body). The user then pulls the distal end “tail” of each should strap 104 at each fastener mechanism 114 toward the user's back to tighten the carrier portion 102 and to secure the child against the user's body (See
To back carry a child, the user may follow the following steps. First, the user wraps the waist belt around their waist and attaches it so that the buckle is on their front (e.g., adjacent their navel)—See
It is noted that, in various embodiments, the head support 112 has two layers. It may be advantageous to use both layers to support the child's head while they are sleeping. As mentioned above, in various embodiments, the head support is slideably attached on each lateral side to a respective one of the fabric shoulder straps 104. As a result, in such embodiments, it is possible to raise and lower each side of the head support independently. For example, the user may raise the left side of the head support into a fully extended position and only partially raise the right side of the head support so that the back side of the child's head is fully supported, but so that the child's face is visible while the child is sleeping (See
To remove the child, the user may first loosen one or more of the shoulder straps 104 from the respective fastener mechanisms 114. The user may do this, for example, by pushing the two rings of the fastener mechanism 114 forward with one hand while pulling out some fabric, creating slack, with the other. The user then simply reverses the steps of how they put the baby on. For example, for front wear, the user may lift the fabric shoulder straps 104 back over the baby's head and the user's head. For back wear, the user balances and supports the child on the user's back while the user takes their arms out of the fabric shoulder straps 104. Finally, the user releases the buckle of the waist belt 110 and stows the unit for next time.
To stow the child carrying system, as shown in
Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which this invention pertains having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. For example, as will be understood by one skilled in the relevant field in light of this disclosure, the invention may take form in a variety of different mechanical and operational configurations. Therefore, it is to be understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed herein, and that the modifications and other embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended exemplary concepts. Although specific terms are employed herein, they are used in a generic and descriptive sense only and not for the purposes of limitation.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 17/501,949, filed Oct. 14, 2021, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 63/092,836, filed Oct. 16, 2020, the disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63092836 | Oct 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 17501949 | Oct 2021 | US |
Child | 17838836 | US |