The invention generally relates to cribs for babies and infants, and more particularly relates to a crib bumper.
A crib bumper is a device used with cribs for providing resilient cushioning material adjacent the crib walls to prevent a baby or infant from hitting his or her head on the hard crib walls. Crib bumpers also help prevent arms or legs from poking out between the spaced slats and getting stuck. A typical crib bumper comprises four flexible, resiliently cushioning panels of generally rectangular configuration, connected end-to-end. The panels usually have a core of resilient foam or other cushioning material such as fiber, and a fabric or plastic covering. Traditional designs for a crib bumper utilize ties for securing the panels to the slats or corner posts of the crib. This arrangement works well for crib designs that employ spaced-apart wooden slats along all sides.
A number of crib designs have solid end walls, while other cribs have one side wall that is solid. Depending on the placement of the solid side and/or end walls, securing one or more of the panels of a conventional crib bumper to the crib can present a challenge.
The invention addresses the above needs and achieves other advantages. A crib bumper in accordance with one embodiment of the invention comprises flexible, resiliently cushioning bumper panel material defining a plurality of downwardly opening pockets spaced apart along a length of the bumper panel material, and a generally L-shaped insert for each pocket, each insert defining a horizontal leg structured and arranged to be slipped beneath a crib mattress and a vertical leg that projects upwardly alongside the mattress. The vertical legs of the inserts are structured and arranged to be received into the pockets in the bumper panel material, such that the inserts position the bumper panel material in a vertical orientation adjacent the crib mattress.
The bumper panel material can comprise a string of four interconnected bumper panels, each bumper panel structured and arranged to extend along a respective one of four sides of a crib mattress. One or more of the panels can define one or more downwardly opening pockets.
In one embodiment of the invention, each of the inserts is convertible from a first position to a second position, the first and second positions having different heights of the vertical leg relative to the horizontal leg. Accordingly, by converting the inserts from one position to the other, the height of the bumper panels relative to the mattress can be varied. The inserts can be made convertible in various ways. In simplest form, one leg of the insert is longer than the other; the shorter leg is employed as the vertical leg when the bumper panels are to be in a relatively lower position, and the longer leg is employed as the vertical leg when the panels are to be in a relatively higher position. In this simple form, the two legs can be rigidly connected to each other if desired. To convert the inserts from one position to the other, they must be removed from the pockets and from beneath the mattress, and then must be reinserted in the other position.
In a preferred embodiment, however, the inserts are convertible without having to remove them from the pockets or from beneath the mattress. In this embodiment, each insert includes an intermediate portion between the vertical leg and the horizontal leg, a first hinge connecting the vertical leg to one edge of the intermediate portion, and a second hinge connecting an opposite edge of the intermediate portion to the horizontal leg. Each of the hinges is structured and arranged to allow the intermediate portion to be pivoted between coplanar and perpendicular positions relative to the respective legs. Thus, the first position of each insert has the intermediate portion coplanar with the horizontal leg and perpendicular to the vertical leg, and the second position of each insert has the intermediate portion coplanar with the vertical leg and perpendicular to the horizontal leg. Stated differently, the process of converting the insert from one position to the other entails shifting the break point between the horizontal portion and the vertical portion from one hinge to the other. This can be accomplished while the inserts are installed.
The inserts can be formed of molded plastic and the hinges can comprise living hinges. Alternatively, the inserts can comprise panels of stiff cardboard or the like covered with a plastic or vinyl covering, similar in construction to a 3-ring binder. The inserts advantageously have length and width dimensions that are substantially greater than the thickness dimension.
The crib bumper can also include ties for securing the bumper to structural members of a crib.
Having thus described the invention in general terms, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, which are not necessarily drawn to scale, and wherein:
The present inventions now will be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which some but not all embodiments of the invention are shown. Indeed, these inventions 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 satisfy applicable legal requirements. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
The particular embodiment of the invention described below and shown in the drawings may be referred to as a “universal” crib bumper, in that it is configured to be usable with a variety of different crib types commonly sold. Briefly, some cribs have spaced vertical slats or bars along all four sides of the crib. Other cribs, however, employ one or more solid sides, which do not provide any locations for securing a conventional crib bumper via the ties that are typically employed for this purpose.
The crib bumper 30 shown in the drawings addresses these and other shortcomings of existing crib bumpers. The crib bumper 30 comprises an elongate rectangular strip of flexible, resiliently cushioning bumper panel material 32. The bumper panel material 32 can comprise a resiliently cushioning core of foam and/or fiber fill (not shown), and an outer covering of fabric. The particular construction of the panel material 32 is not important to the present invention. The panel material 32 can comprise one long continuous and uninterrupted strip of the panel material, or can comprise a string of four serially connected bumper panels, the bumper panels comprising a first end panel 32a, a first side panel 32b, a second end panel 32c, and a second side panel 32d for respective positioning along the crib end wall 20, side wall 12, end wall 18, and side wall 14. The crib bumper includes ties 34 attached to upper and lower edges of the panel material 32 at a number of spaced locations along the length of the panel material. For example, as shown, the ties 34 can be located so that when the panel material 32 is positioned to extend along the four sides of a standard-sized crib mattress (typically 27 to 28 inches wide by 51 to 52 inches long), the ties are located at each of the four corners and at the midpoints of the long side panels 32b, 32d.
As noted, when the crib bumper 30 is used with a crib having solid end walls as in
To address these problems, the crib bumper 30 includes a number of downwardly opening pockets 36 in the panel material 32, and a number of generally L-shaped inserts 38 that act in cooperation with at least some of the pockets 36 to secure the panel material in a vertical orientation. More particularly, there is a pocket 36 positioned approximately at a midpoint of each of the end panels 32a, 32c, and there are two spaced pockets 36 positioned along the side panel 32d. The pockets can be formed in various ways. In one embodiment as shown, a patch of material 37 is sewn or otherwise affixed to the panel material 32 along three sides but is left unattached along its lower edge for the insertion of an insert 38.
As shown in
When the crib bumper 30 is used with a crib of the type shown in
When the crib bumper is used with a crib of the type shown in
Another feature of the invention is the ability to adjust the height of the crib bumper 30 relative to the crib via a specially configured insert 38. With reference to
The embodiment of an insert 38 shown in
The inserts 38 can be made of various materials and by various processes. As one example, the inserts can be molded from plastic material; the hinges 40, 42, if present, can comprise living hinges. Alternatively, the inserts can be formed of plastic- or vinyl-covered cardboard or the like; the portions 38h, 38v, 38i can comprise separate pieces of cardboard held together by the plastic or vinyl covering, with the hinges 40, 42 formed by the covering material. This construction is similar to that of a 3-ring binder.
The inserts 38 and associated pockets 36 in the crib bumper can have various dimensions. Suitably, the horizontal width of the insert can be about 15 to 30 cm (6 to 12 inches), and more preferably about 28 to 30 cm (11 to 12 inches). Each of the legs 38v, 38h can have a length of about 22 to 25 cm (8.5 to 12 inches), and more preferably about 24 cm (9.5 inches). The intermediate portion 38i has a length of about 2.5 to 5 cm (1 to 2 inches). The pockets, correspondingly, can have a horizontal width slightly greater than the width of the inserts to allow the inserts to fit into the pockets with minimal side-to-side play. The vertical height of the pockets can vary depending not only on the height dimensions of the inserts but also on the intended position of the crib bumper panel material 32 relative to the upper surface of the mattress. For instance, the crib bumper can be designed to be tucked between the edges of the mattress and the adjacent crib walls, with the lower edge of the panel material being at about the same height as the lower surface of the mattress. In this case, the panel material 32 has a vertical height exceeding the mattress thickness by a suitable amount, such as about 6 to 9 inches (e.g., for a 4- or 5-inch thick mattress, the panel material can have a height of about 10 to 14 inches), and the pockets 36 can have a height approximately the same as the length of the legs of the insert. Alternatively, the crib bumper can be designed so that the lower edge of the bumper abuts the upper surface of the mattress as in
Many modifications and other embodiments of the inventions set forth herein will come to mind to one skilled in the art to which these inventions pertain having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. For example, while the illustrated and described crib bumper 30 has a plurality of pockets 36, it is within the scope of the invention to include a single pocket, such as one relatively long pocket along one long side panel of the crib bumper; a crib bumper of this configuration may be specifically designed for use with a crib having one solid side wall as in
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