The invention relates to chairs for supporting children, and in particular to high chairs.
It is well known that as children grow from infants to toddlers, many of their needs change. They grow in size, and their ability to support themselves and control their movements also increases. For example, infants generally require a great deal of support, particularly when in a somewhat upright position, such as when eating. While feeding an infant, a parent typically holds the infant for support, or places the infant in a seat designed for infants that supports the back and head and secures the infant snugly in position, not allowing substantial freedom of movement. In order to place the seated infant at a height that allows for easy feeding, the infant seat is usually placed on a tabletop near where the feeding parent is seated. This arrangement takes up table space and generally doesn't allow the feeding parent to eat also.
When the child reaches a more advances stage of development, upright seating is possible with much less support, and better control of movement makes it more appropriate to allow more freedom of movement to the child. At this stage, the child is typically fed while seated in a high chair. The transition from an infant seat that requires placement on a table top to a high chair frees up room on the table, allowing a parent to perform other tasks, such as eating, while feeding the child. It would be beneficial to provide a high chair that also allows feeding of an infant who isn't ready for a high chair, so that the advantages of highchair use can be realized at an earlier point in the child's development.
A chair includes a base portion, and a seat portion supported by the base portion. The seat portion is configurable in at least two modes. In the first mode, the seat portion is raised to a highest level and includes a frame that is adapted to arrange the seat portion in an upright position. In the second mode, the seat portion is lowered to a level that is lower than the highest level.
The seat portion can be configurable in a third mode, in which the seat portion is stowed in a non-seating position.
The seat portion can include a tray on which the frame is disposed in the first mode.
In the second mode, the seat portion can include a backrest that is adapted to recline. For example, the chair can include a backrest locking mechanism for selectable locking of the backrest in one of a plurality of reclining positions. The backrest locking mechanism can be manipulable to unlock the chair from the second mode for positioning in the first mode.
The can also include release buttons on the seat portion that are manipulable to enable changing of the chair from the second mode to the first mode.
The chair can also include a mechanism for changing a height of the seat portion when the seat portion is in the second mode.
The seat portion can include a tray disposed toward a front of the seat portion in the second mode. The seat portion can include a seat back, and the tray can engage the seat portion in an adjustable manner such that the distance between the seat back and the tray can be adjusted.
The invention is a high chair that converts from a configuration suitable for use by an infant to a configuration suitable for use by an older child, such as a toddler. The invention provides an infant seat on a raised surface so that a tabletop footprint is not necessary. The same apparatus can then be converted to a more conventional high chair configuration, allowing for developmental growth of the child without the need to purchase an additional piece of furniture. In either operational mode, the other configuration is stored underneath the seat being used. The chair also has a storage configuration in which both seats are stowed.
As also shown in
As shown in
The tray 8 is also adjustable to a number of different positions, for ease of entry and exit, and for the comfort and convenience of the child in the seat in toddler mode, as well as to provide a stable and convenient platform for the infant-mode seat. The underside of the tray 8 is shown in
The present invention has been described by way of example and in terms of preferred embodiments. However, it is to be understood that the present invention is not strictly limited to the disclosed embodiments. To the contrary, various modifications, as well as similar arrangements, are included within the spirit and scope of the present invention. The scope of the appended claims, therefore, should be accorded the broadest possible interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and similar arrangements.
This claims priority from U.S. Provisional Application for Patent No. 61/037,852, which was filed on Mar. 19, 2008.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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61037852 | Mar 2008 | US |