1. Technical Field
This invention relates to jewelry and jewelry configuration. More particularly, the invention relates to providing a wide array of jewelry articles with widely varying appearances assembled from a consistent selection of individual components.
2. Related Art
Jewelry and its manufacturing have changed little over the years. To manufacture a ring, for example, molten metal is generally poured into a mold to form the ring. While the mold provides a convenient mechanism for defining the shape and size of the ring, the molding process is not flexible: the mold produces the same ring every time.
Rings are often manufactured with mounting prongs or receptacles which accept adornments such as precious or semi-precious stones, gems, birthstones or other adornments. A craftsman forms an arrangement of the adornments an integral part of the ring. However, when a customer desires an alternate arrangement or selection of adornments or an alternate ring shape or design, the customer must rely again on the expertise of the craftsman. Regardless of the craftsman's skill level, modifying a ring to meet the customer expectations often cannot be accomplished at all, and when the modification can be accomplished, the craftsman may takes weeks to recast or redesign the ring.
Jewelry is manufactured using a vast selection of different metals, stones, shapes, sizes, and designs. Furthermore, every individual will have their own tastes and preferences for any of the metals, stones, shapes, or other design parameters. As a result, customer interest in alternate designs is a growing and significant challenge for the jewelry industry.
There is a need for addressing the problems noted above and others previously experienced in the creation and modification of jewelry.
The present invention is defined by the claims which follow. This description summarizes some aspects of the configurable jewelry, but is not intended to describe every aspect. Accordingly, this summary does not limit the claims.
An article of jewelry is modularly assembled with prefabricated bounding elements (e.g., inner and outer rings) and fasteners. The bounding elements include channels which receive portions of adornments (e.g., an edge of a stone), and fastener apertures. The fasteners secure bounding elements together and at the same time secure the adornments in the channels. The channels may include a securing material such as an epoxy or low temperature solder to further secure the adornments in place.
In designing the jewelry article, a customer may select the adornments and bounding elements which interest them. The bounding elements include channels which receive portions of the adornments as well as fastener apertures. In addition, the customer may choose from a wide selection of fasteners, fastener caps, and other features. The fasteners are positioned between or through the fastener apertures of the bounding elements to secure the selected adornments in the channels between the bounding elements. All of the fasteners, caps, bounding elements, and/or other jewelry components may be interchangeable parts, thereby allowing extensive configuration and customization options for any given piece of jewelry.
In addition, a jewelry configuration system is disclosed. The jewelry configuration system comprises a processor and a memory coupled to the processor. The memory stores adornment records representing customer selectable decorative pieces, bounding element records, fastener records for fasteners that secure the adornments between the first and second bounding elements, and a configuration program. The configuration program is operable to display adornment selections based on the adornment records, bounding element selections based on the bounding element records, and fastener selections based on fastener records. An operator provides an adornment selection, a bounding element selections, and fastener selections. The configuration program then verifies manufacturing compatibility between the selections and initiates communication of a manufacturing order to a supplier.
a is an exploded view of the fastening parts of a configurable jewelry article.
b is an assembled view of a configurable jewelry article.
a is a cross-sectional illustration of an adornment and bounding element channels which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
b is a cross-sectional illustration of an adornment and bounding element channels which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
c is a cross-sectional illustration of an adornment and bounding element channels, and tension channels which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
d is a cross-sectional illustration of an adornment and bounding element channels, and a tension channel which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
a is a cross-sectional illustration of an alternate fastener, a spacer and bounding elements which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
b is a cross-sectional illustration of a second example of an alternate fastener, a spacer and bounding elements which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
c shows a top view of the fastener shown in
a is a cross-sectional illustration of an alternate fastener, corresponding spacer, and bounding elements which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
b is a cross-sectional illustration of a second example of an alternate fastener, corresponding spacer, and bounding elements which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
c shows alternate designs of a fastener.
a illustrates an alternate geometry for a bounding element which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
b illustrates an alternate geometry for a bounding element which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
c illustrates an alternate geometry for a bounding element which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
d illustrates an alternate geometry for a bounding element which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
e illustrates an alternate geometry for a bounding element which may be employed in a configurable jewelry article.
The elements illustrated in the Figures interoperate as explained in more detail below. Before setting forth the detailed explanation, however, it is noted that all of the discussion below, regardless of the particular implementation being described, is exemplary in nature, rather than limiting. For example, although selected aspects, features, or components of the implementations are depicted as pins, threaded fasteners, and embellishments, other types of fasteners, connecting members, embellishments or ornaments may be employed. Furthermore, although the jewelry article described below is a ring intended to be worn on a finger, the discussion below applies to other articles of jewelry, such as bracelets, earrings, and necklaces.
It is also noted that, although this specification describes specific components of a jewelry configuration system, methods, systems, and articles of manufacture consistent with this technology may include additional or different components, implemented with a wide range of circuitry. For example, a processor may be implemented as a microprocessor, microcontroller, digital signal processor (DSP), application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), discrete logic, or a combination of other types of circuits or logic acting as explained below. Programs may be a function, subroutine, or in-line code present in another program, may be a separate program, may be distributed across several memories and processors, or may be partially or wholly implemented without software as a hardware realization of the processing discussed below.
The jewelry article 10 also includes spacers or spindles 18 which axially engage the fasteners 16 while positioned between the bounding elements 12. The bounding elements 12 are characterized by an inner diameter 20 which may be manufactured in different sizes to fit a finger (when the jewelry article 10 is a ring), a user's wrist (when the jewelry article 10 is a bracelet), or any other size appropriate for jewelry articles for other parts of the body.
The channels 24 may be formed in the inner surfaces 26 of the bounding elements 12. The channels 24 may be sized and positioned to receive portions of the adornments 14. The channels 24 may be formed in proximity to the outer edges of the corresponding bounding elements 12 so that the adornments are readily visible. However, the channels 24 may be formed at any point on the inner surfaces 26 of the bounding elements 12. Accordingly, the jewelry allows the adornments to be positioned at a wide variety of positions within the jewelry itself, in contrast to traditional designs which limit the position of the adornments to the surface of the jewelry only.
a shows an exploded view of a section of the jewelry article 10 which illustrates the engagement of the fastening parts of the jewelry article 10. The exploded view of the jewelry article 10 shows that the spacers 18 are aligned axially with the corresponding apertures 22 and the corresponding fasteners 16. The apertures 22 are shown as through-holes which include recesses 28 for fasteners having cylindrical heads.
In other designs, the countersinks 28 may accept bezels 30, as shown in
The spacers 18 may be chosen from a set of pre-fabricated selections, or may be manufactured to match a customer's desired shape or style. With regard to length, the spacers 18 may provide targeted or desired post-assembly distances between the inner surfaces 26 of bounding elements 12 so that the adornments 14 are fixedly positioned. The spacers 18 may include or may omit internal threads which engage fastener screws or rivets, for example.
a-6c show cross-sectional illustrations of the engagement of an adornment 14 with alternate bounding element channels 24. The bounding element channels 24 may receive portions of adornments 14 (e.g., the edge of a gemstone). The channels 24 are further configurable with respect to both size and depth to provide a secure point of contact with the selected adornments 14 and spacers 18. A resin, epoxy, or other suspension material 34 (e.g., a silicone material) may be present in the channels 24.
a shows that the channel 24 has a rectangular cross-section, while
c and 6d show an alternative implementation in which the inner surface 26 of the bounding element includes a primary channel 24 and tension channels. The tension channels may be provided above or below the primary channel 24.
In addition, the prongs 40 may include flanges 44 which engage the bounding element outer surfaces 25 or their respective recesses 28. Each pin 38 may have a length which provides any specified post-assembly pressure when the pin 38 and bounding elements 12 are secured together. The cap 42 may cover the prongs 40, and may offer a substantially smooth surface or other appearance configuration options for the jewelry article 10. The caps 42 may be snap fit caps, threaded caps, or may be secured in other manners.
b shows an example in which the caps 702 and 704 provide multiple locking positions for the fastener 38. The caps 702 and 704 have material removed internally to define mating positions for the flanges 44. The cap 702 defines a first mating position 706 and a second, deeper, mating position 708. The cap 704 defines a first mating position 710 and a second, deeper, mating position 712. Any number of mating positions may be provided in any of the caps added to the jewelry article. The fastener tension may be increased by pressing the fastener 18 deeper into one or both of the caps 702 and 704.
The fastener 38 with prongs 40 may be used in other applications. For example, the fastener 38 may be used to secure together machine parts or other mechanical elements. To that end, the fastener 38 and prongs 40 may vary widely in size (e.g., from a few millimeters in length for jewelry applications to many tens or hundreds of millimeters or more for other applications) to accommodate the parts which it will secure. Suitable materials for the fastener 38 include steel, titanium, hardened aluminum, or other hard materials which provide a degree of spring to the prongs 40.
The caps 702 and 704 may also include release apertures. The release apertures may be implemented as slots or other openings through which a portion of a tool may pass to compress the prongs 40. When the prongs 40 are compressed, the cap may then be removed from the fastener 38.
c shows a top view of the fastener 38 shown in
In
b illustrates a spacer 902 which includes multiple mating positions 904, 906 for the fastener 908, and multiple mating positions 910, 912 for the fastener 914. The multiple mating positions 904, 906, 910, and 912 provide adjustable fastener tension as described above with regard to
c shows alternate designs of a fastener. In
a-10e show alternate geometries of the bounding elements 12 which may be employed in an assembly of the jewelry article 10.
The bounding elements 12 may have smooth, rough, decorated, or engraved outer surfaces 25, and may either have a hollow or solid core. Moreover, the spacers 18 may be adapted to receive adornments 14, and may further increase the configuration options around the periphery of the jewelry article 10. To that end, the spacers 18 may include receptacles 30 for additional adornments 14. The fasteners, spacers, caps, bounding elements, and/or other jewelry components may be selected from a set of interchangeable parts. Any or all of the parts may be precision manufactured to provide excellent fit and assembly characteristics. The interchangeability provides extensive configuration and customization options for any given piece of jewelry. For example, a customer may reconfigure their existing jewelry by selecting an interchangeable cap or spacer to replace an existing cap or fastener. Thus, any piece of jewelry may change at any time using any desired interchangeable part, without extensive time consuming and expensive labor.
The configuration data 106 may further include records specifying available configuration options for any other aspect of the jewelry article 10, such as spacer records, cap records, bezel records, or other records. The records specify the configuration options by storing the name, sizes, shapes, cost, channel options, availability, materials, and any other characteristic data for available adornments 14, bounding elements 12, fasteners 16, and any other configuration element. The records may further include image data 116 representing each configuration option (e.g., images showing each available bounding element, fastener, cap, bezel, spacer, or other available parts).
The system 100 may further include a display 118. The display 118, under control of the configuration program 108, may display selections from the records 110-114. The resulting configuration display 120 provides one or more views (e.g., 3 dimensional models) of each selected, available, or compatible configuration option, an exploded view of the resulting jewelry article, an assembled view of the jewelry article, or other graphical representations on the display 118 for the operator.
The configuration program 108 displays bounding element selections, fastener selections, adornment selections, and other configuration selections to the operator on the display 118. For example, the operator may be a store owner who interacts with a customer to design a jewelry article. Alternatively, the operator may be the customer who interacts with the configuration program 108 at a store, or at home via a network connection through a user interface provided by a web browser on their personal computer. In the later case, the customer's personal computer provides the display 118.
The configuration program 108 accepts bounding element selections, fastener selections, adornment selections, and other configuration selections from the displayed selections. The configuration program 108 may then verify manufacturing or assembly compatibility between the selections and alert the operator to any incompatibilities that may exist. For example, if a customer selects a fastener with a diameter too large to secure selected bounding elements, the configuration program 108 may alert the operator. In addition, the configuration program 108 may search the records for compatible fasteners to show the operator.
The jewelry configuration program 108 may also include instructions which initiate communication of a jewelry article order 128 to a manufacturing system 110 or other assembly location. The jewelry article order may include one or more fields specifying the selected bounding elements, fasteners, spacers, caps, bezels, finishes, materials, adornments, and any other configuration option for the jewelry article, as well as customer name and address, store name and address, and other order data. The system 100 may transmit the jewelry article order through the communication interface 122 to a manufacturing system 124, a craftsman who assembles the jewelry article, or other recipient. The communication interface 122 may be connected to a network 126 (or interconnection of networks) which communicates the jewelry article order to the manufacturing system 124.
The configuration program 108 verifies the selections for compatibility (Act 210). A verified jewelry article 128 order may be prepared with the configuration selections (Act 212). In addition, the configuration program 108 may communicate the jewelry article order 128 to the manufacturing system 110 (Act 214).
In other words, the user is guided by the jewelry configuration system 100 during the configuration process for a custom jewelry article. The configuration system 100 verifies the manufacturing compatibility of the configuration selections which specify the jewelry article 10. Thus, the jewelry configuration system 100 provides an efficient mechanism for creating a specific piece of modular jewelry despite the vast range of possible configurations.
It is therefore intended that the foregoing detailed description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that it be understood that it is the following claims, including all equivalents, that are intended to define the spirit and scope of this invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070044509 A1 | Mar 2007 | US |