The invention, as expressed in the heading of this descriptive report, refers to children's glasses as well as to their manufacturing process, providing advantages and novelty features that represent an improvement compared to what is currently known in the market.
More specifically, the purpose of the invention focuses on some glasses designed for children's use which have the peculiarity of being made in a flexible silicone-based material using a thermomoulding process. This material is very light but very strong and with very stable colours that appear transparent. These glasses are the type that allows the sidepieces to be swapped for an elastic strap that fits around the head. They also have an articulated part, also made from the aforementioned flexible material that advantageously allows the sidepieces to be bent in both directions so that they can bend both towards the inside of the glasses and also outwards without misshaping or breaking.
This invention's field of application is framed within the technical sector of the industry dedicated to the manufacture of glasses.
At present, and as a reference to the status of the technique, it should be noted that although there are multiple types and models of glasses on the market, but there are none known that have the technical characteristics of those proposed herein, as is claimed.
Specifically, the glasses in question have frames that are innovatively made in a flexible material which is silicone based and obtained by thermomoulding the aforementioned material which, known commercially as Siliflex™, consists of a thermomouldable polymer that is very flexible in nature and has maximum resistance to being misshaped, and at the same time being very light, similar to acetate but 35% lighter.
Frames produced in this way, in addition, show a clear appearance that provides the glasses a differentiated aesthetic character with a wide range of colours, which are obtained through the inclusion of the coloured pigments in the production thermomoulding process itself, thus forming part of the own mass of parts that make up that frame and, consequently, provides very stable colours that do not deteriorate with the passage of time.
Following on with the peculiarities of the invention, it should be noted, moreover, that the above-mentioned frames have an articulated system determined by zig-zag parts at both ends of the lenses, specially designed with the aim of increasing the flexibility of the glasses, as through these parts, in addition to the conventional folding of the sidepieces towards the inside of the glasses, they also allow them to be bent in the opposite direction without causing them any damage, i.e. the external part of the glasses, without there being any misshaping or damage, always coming back to their normal position in any of these directions, both because of the particular zig-zag structure of such parts as well as the siliflex material with which both the parts as well as the sidepieces and the rest of the frame are made from.
It is worth mentioning that the glasses have a terminal at each one of the ends of the sidepieces that, thanks to the flexible material with which they are made, can be manually adjusted to ensure they can be fastened better to the head behind the ears. In addition, these terminals can optionally have a hole to be able to fit some rings that serve as fastenings to the ends of an elastic strap so as to hold the glasses around the head at the back.
The possibility of replacing the above mentioned sidepieces with an elastic strap that completely surrounds the head is also envisaged, in which case the described rings are fitted immediately after the zig-zag parts of the elastic articulation.
In any case, the children's glasses described in this proposed invention therefore constitute an innovative structure of unknown constituents and technical features.
To complement the description that is being made of the invention, and to better understand the characteristics that distinguish it, this report is accompanied by some drawings sheets as an integral part of it, in which the following has been represented:
In view of the above-mentioned figures, and in accordance with the numbering adopted, a preferred production example can be seen, but not limited to children's glasses subject of the invention, which include the parts and elements that are listed and described in detail below. So, as can be seen in
It is important to emphasise that the articulated parts (4), as shown in detail in
In a preferred production example, each of these articulated parts (4) shows: at one of their ends, a first protuberance (4a) suitable to lodged inserted in a housing provided in the ends of the frame (2); in its central area, a winding shape determined by both entries (4b) on opposite sides of the it separated by a centre partition (4c); and in its opposite end a second protuberance (4d) that is inserted into a housing located at the end of the sidepieces (5).
As can be seen in
Having described the nature of this invention in detail, as well as the way of putting it into practice, it is not considered necessary to give a more extensive explanation for any expert in the field to understand its scope and the benefits that arise from it, noting that, within its essentiality, it may be implemented in other forms of manufacture that differ in detail to that indicated as an example, and which will also give the protection sought as long as its fundamental principle is not altered, changed or modified.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| P201331230 | Aug 2013 | ES | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/ES2013/070587 | 8/8/2013 | WO | 00 |