The present invention relates to hair pieces, or wigs, in particular to a novel wig cap and method of assembly thereof.
Hair pieces are worn by men and women who have lost or are losing their own hair, wish to hide their natural hair, or desire to change their look. Certain women, who are obligated to cover their hair in accordance with their faith, but who still want or need to appear as having hair, wear hair pieces that often match their natural hair colors and styles. The latter category of wearers often wears wigs for the duration of the day, and to many different circumstances and occasions. Most wig users have more than one hair piece, with each styled or cut in a specific fashion.
It is highly preferable that a wig piece appears as natural as wearer's own hair. This appearance is usually preserved when a wearer styles the hair piece in a manner for which the wig was intended by the manufacturer. Any deviation from the intended use causes the artificiality of the wig to become more evident to an onlooker. Therefore, if a wig is layered naturally or with hair “down” and a wearer then makes the wig into a Fall Wig by adding a headband, the hair layering may become frizzed or flared at the sides. If a “down” hair wig is made into a ponytail, the hair in some areas may appear lumpy or bubbling. The conspicuousness of a hair piece increases when a “down” wig is turned into a Band Fall or a Ponytail.
A Regular Wig or “Down” wig is a wig that is produced to be worn with hair naturally arranged as “falling” by the side, or in a specific hair style.
A Band fall or a Fall Wig is a wig that is intended to be worn with a headband in the front. Such wigs frequently do not have hair bangs.
A Pony wig or Hat Fall is a wig intended to be worn in a pony, with majority of the hair oriented to be tied into a ponytail or directed to fall down the back of the wearer's head, with or without a hat fashioned at the top.
The disclosed invention is a novel wig cap and a method of making the same. The disclosed wig cap is comprised of a base cap section and a top lace section. The top lace section is configured to correspond to the top portion of a wearer's head. For the sake of the instant description, the top lace section is subdivided into two parts. The first part is the first lace section, which is comprised of only lace to which a plurality of hair strands has been securely fastened. The purpose for the first part is to replicate a wearer's parting of the heir at the top of the head, otherwise known as the “part.” The part is the second lace top section, which comprises of a plurality of hair wefts that are oriented parallel to the wearer's forehead and perpendicular to the plurality of hair wefts comprising the base cap. With respect to a wearer's forehead, the first section would be adjacent to the forehead, separating the forehead from the second part of the wig cap.
The individual hair strands on the hair wefts are generally oriented to fall perpendicular to the direction of the weft. Therefore, if a weft is installed from the left side to the right side (or from the right side to the left side) of the wig cap, or across the top of wearer's head, the hair on the weft will generally fall either down the front or down the back portions of a wig cap. Therefore, the hair of the second section that is installed from left to right across the top lace section will be oriented to fall down the back and rearward sides of the wearer's head, and if brushed forward, it will also lay naturally down across the first section of the wig cap. The arrangement of the hair strands to be biased toward the back of the head works well for a Band Fall and Pony Wigs that naturally cluster hair strands towards the back part of the head. When hair strands are biased toward the back of the head, there is no lumping when hair is clustered at the back for the Band Fall or Pony styles. The hair of first and second portions will also work well for a Regular Wig, where the stands are allowed to fall naturally.
It is the object of the present invention to create a wig cap that may be worn as a Band Fall or as a Pony Wig without sacrificing the natural appearance of the wig. It is another object of the present invention to create a wig cap where hair strands are directed to fall down the back of a wearer's head without appearing out of place or lumpy as a Regular Wig. It is still another object of the present invention to create a wig cap where the top lace portion is faster and easier to make, and is more durable, without sacrificing the natural appearance of a wig piece having a lace part.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the drawings. Identical elements in the various figures are identified with the same reference numerals.
Reference will now be made in detail to embodiment of the present invention. Such embodiments are provided by way of explanation of the present invention, which is not intended to be limited thereto. In fact, those of ordinary skill in the art may appreciate upon reading the present specification and viewing the present drawings that various modifications and variations can be made thereto.
Reference will be made in detail to the embodiments of the disclosure, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. The presentation of reference numerals within parentheses indicates that the mentioned reference numeral appears in a figure other than the figure(s) under discussion. As will be described below in connection with the drawings, the invention enables a wig 10 to be worn (a) as a full wig (see
Base cap section 12 corresponds to at least a crown and nape regions of a user's head, along with right and left temporal regions 13a and 13b respectively, when the wig cap 8 is worn by a user. First lace top section 14 corresponds to at least a user's forehead region and frontal scalp region when wig 10 is worn by the user. First top lace section 14 has an anterior edge, a posterior edge, and right and left side edges. Second lace top section 16 corresponds to the user's mid-scalp region when wig 10 is worn by the user.
Second top lace section 16 has an anterior edge 18, a posterior edge 20, a right side edge 22 and a left side edge 24. Base cap section 12 is coupled to the side edges of first lace top section 14. Base cap section 12 is coupled to the posterior edge 20 and right and left side edges 22 and 24 of second lace top section 16. The posterior edge of first portion 34 of the top lace section 14 is coupled to the anterior edge 18 of second top lace section 16. Anchoring rim 26 is coupled to the side edges of first lace top section 14 and to the posterior edge 20 and right and left side edges 22 and 24, respectively of the second lace top section 16.
In the embodiment shown, top hair ribbons or weft 28 comprises a weft of wig hair sown together in a ribbon, usually using a machine. In one embodiment, the plurality of top hair ribbons 28 are arrayed in parallel rows of varying lengths stretched across the top section 16 from the left edge 24 to the right edge 22, filling the space of the second lace top section 16 between the anterior edge 18 and the posterior edge 20, along about the same horizontal plane.
In one embodiment, top hair ribbons 28 are secured to anchoring rim 26. A first end of each of the top hair ribbons 28 is secured to a side of anchoring rim 26 proximate to the right side edge 22 of second lace top section 16, and a second end of each of the top hair ribbons 28 is secured to a second side of anchoring rim 26 proximate to the left side edge 24 of second lace top section 16.
The plurality of top hair ribbons 28 may be attached to the base cap section 12, or to a section of the first lace top 14 that overlaps with the second lace top section 16, in a number of different ways and sequences. For instance, in one embodiment, anchoring rim 26 is integrally formed with base cap section 12. In this embodiment, the plurality of top hair ribbons 28 are either attached individually to anchoring rim 26 or as part of a unitary sheet of fabric or lace that is attached to anchoring rim 26 as a single component. In another embodiment, anchoring portion 26 is added to the base cap section 12 at a later stage, when all wefts 28 or 30 and hair 9 are arranged. In this embodiment, the plurality of top hair ribbons 28 are attached to anchoring rim 26 either before or after anchoring rim 26 is attached to base cap section 12, or the top hair ribbons 28 and or base cap hair ribbons 30 are attached directly to a point or points along the wig cap 8. Further in this embodiment, the plurality of top hair ribbons 28 are either attached individually to anchoring rim 26 or as part of a unitary sheet that is attached to anchoring rim 26, or the wig cap 8 as a single element, as described above.
The wig hair 9 is oriented to flow perpendicular to the direction of the top weft 28. In connection with the embodiments shown in
In one embodiment, the plurality of base cap hair ribbons 30 contain machine weft wig hair, which are secured directly or indirectly onto base cap 12 in concentric semi-circles (or other patterns) of varying lengths. In one embodiment, similar to the above description regarding the top hair ribbons 28, the machine weft wig hair of the base cap hair ribbons 30 is also oriented to flow perpendicular to the direction of the length of base cap hair ribbons 30. As described above in connection with
In one embodiment, the first lace top section 14 is provided with excess lace material. In the examples of
In one embodiment, headband 36 is detachably coupled to wig 10. In another embodiment, headband 36 is integrally formed with wig 10. It is preferred however that the headband 36 is a separate component mounted onto wearer's hair after or contemporaneously with the donning of the wig by its wearer.
The embodiments for attaching the plurality of top hair ribbons (28) to the base cap section (12), described above in connection with
The embodiments for attaching the plurality of top hair ribbons (28) to the base cap section (12), described above in connection with
Although this invention has been described with a certain degree of particularity, it is to be understood that the present disclosure has been made only by way of illustration and that numerous changes in the details of construction and arrangement of parts may be resorted to without departing from the spirit and the scope of the invention. While various inventive aspects, concepts and features of the inventions may be described and illustrated herein as embodied in combination in the exemplary embodiments, these various aspects, concepts and features may be used in many alternative embodiments, either individually or in various combinations and sub-combinations thereof. Unless expressly excluded herein all such combinations and sub-combinations are intended to be within the scope of the present inventions. Still further, while various alternative embodiments as to the various aspects, concepts and features of the inventions—such as alternative materials, structures, configurations, methods, devices and components, alternatives as to form, fit and function, and so on—may be described herein, such descriptions are not intended to be a complete or exhaustive list of available alternative embodiments, whether presently known or later developed. Those skilled in the art may readily adopt one or more of the inventive aspects, concepts or features into additional embodiments and uses within the scope of the present inventions even if such embodiments are not expressly disclosed herein. Additionally, even though some features, concepts or aspects of the inventions may be described herein as being a preferred arrangement or method, such description is not intended to suggest that such feature is required or necessary unless expressly so stated. Still further, exemplary or representative values and ranges may be included to assist in understanding the present disclosure, however, such values and ranges are not to be construed in a limiting sense and are intended to be critical values or ranges only if so expressly stated. Parameters identified as “approximate” or “about” a specified value are intended to include both the specified value and values within 10% of the specified value, unless expressly stated otherwise. Further, it is to be understood that the drawings accompanying the present disclosure may, but need not, be to scale, and therefore may be understood as teaching various ratios and proportions evident in the drawings. Moreover, while various aspects, features and concepts may be expressly identified herein as being inventive or forming part of an invention, such identification is not intended to be exclusive, but rather there may be inventive aspects, concepts and features that are fully described herein without being expressly identified as such or as part of a specific invention, the inventions instead being set forth in the appended claims, as currently written or as amended or added in the future. Descriptions of exemplary methods or processes are not limited to inclusion of all steps as being required in all cases, nor is the order that the steps are presented to be construed as required or necessary unless expressly so stated.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20240341385 A1 | Oct 2024 | US |