1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to custom ordered furniture and the packaging of such furniture for shipment and storage. More particularly, the invention relates to fully upholstered, ready-to-assemble furniture which may be custom ordered by a consumer, packaged by the seller for shipment to the consumer by a parcel delivery service, and then assembled by the consumer from the packaged components.
2. Description of the Related Art
Ready-to-assemble furniture is furniture which is packaged for shipment and storage in disassembled form, with assembly to be done by the consumer or end user. Examples of existing ready-to-assemble non-upholstered furniture include bookcases, television stands, and simple chairs and benches. Furthermore, mass merchandised ready-to-assemble furniture is expected to be rather less expensive to the consumer than comparable pre-assembled furniture or to have distinctive functional features generally not available with its pre-assembled counterpart.
The genre of ready-to-assemble furniture packaged for mass merchandising retail sale and home delivery has generally been limited to pieces of furniture which are utilitarian or hard-surfaced, and which are available in only limited colors or surface finishes. As such, prior ready-to-assemble furniture does not satisfy the need for primary pieces of fully upholstered furniture which may be custom ordered by the consumer, and either delivered to the household of the consumer by a parcel delivery service, or taken home by the consumer from a retail location.
What is needed is comfortable, fully upholstered, ready-to-assemble, and inexpensive furniture of high quality which may be packaged in a compact, easily storable and transportable way, for distribution by mass merchandising and home delivery channels and which can be custom ordered by the purchaser to accommodate a wide variety of consumer decorating tastes.
The present invention provides fully upholstered, ready-to-assemble furniture which may be custom ordered by a purchaser, shipped directly to the home of the purchaser by a parcel delivery service, and then easily and quickly assembled by the purchaser. The furniture includes a frame having a plurality of planar frame members which are interconnected by interlocking protrusions and cutout portions, as well as by threaded fasteners received in push-in connector elements which are held in recesses within the frame members. A first plurality of upholstery covers cover the frame and are attached to one another by hook and loop fasteners. A second plurality of upholstery covers cover padding elements to form cushions for the article of furniture. For shipment, the article of furniture may be packaged such that the frame members, connector elements, and fasteners are packaged in a first container, the padding elements are packaged in a second container; and the upholstery covers are packaged in a third container. Each one of the first, second, and third containers weigh about 70 pounds or less to allow them to be delivered directly to the home of a consumer by a parcel delivery service.
Further, the present invention uses reduced volume padding in a method of making a kit which provides high quality, ready-to-assemble upholstered furniture. The kit includes a lightweight, compact, easy to handle package or packages well-suited to the shipping, storage and display needs of the mass merchandising industry. The kit, when assembled, provides an article of comfortable, fully upholstered furniture which can match a variety of decors. Interchangeable, fitted decorative coverings are separately provided to cover the furniture and provide continued flexibility and variety in accommodating the consumer's decorating tastes.
The lightweight, compact and maneuverable package or packages are advantageous because they can be efficiently stocked on the display or inventory shelves of mass merchandising retailers, and additionally, the packages meet the size and weight limitations of parcel delivery service to allow home delivery of the furniture.
Accommodating various consumer decorating tastes by having a variety of interchangeable, fitted upholstery covering fabrics for the furniture is another advantage associated with the present invention. The upholstery covers are custom selected by the consumer, and can be also sold separately alongside the package containing the article of furniture. Further, the upholstery covers may be returned separately from the other components if the customer desires a different covering. Also, individual pieces of the upholstered covering, if damaged or stained for example, may be selectively ordered by the consumer and shipped to the consumer for replacement.
The ease of transportation of the compact kits by merchants or carriers reduces shipping costs and/or labor. Further, the compact nature of the kits allows consumers the option of either receiving home delivery of the furniture by a parcel delivery service, or to easily take the furniture home from a retail location at the time of sale in their own vehicles, rather than requiring them to wait for much later delivery by the retailer.
Conventional, pre-assembled upholstered furniture can be generally classified as having high quality and high cost, or low quality and low cost. The present invention provides ready-to-assemble upholstered furniture of high quality and low cost. In addition, the above advantages enable the novel approach to the sale of fully upholstered furniture involving the custom ordering of furniture by a consumer over an internet website for quick home delivery by a parcel delivery service.
In one embodiment, an article of furniture is provided, including a frame having a plurality of planar frame members; one of said frame members including a recess; and a connector element disposed in the recess, the connector element adapted to receive a fastener for interconnecting the frame members.
In another embodiment, an article of furniture is provided including a frame having a plurality of planar frame members, the frame including a seat back panel and an arm panel; and an upholstery cover covering the frame, including a seat back cover slidably disposed over the seat back panel, and an arm cover slidably disposed over the arm panel.
In a further embodiment, a method of packaging a ready-to-assemble article of furniture is provided, including providing an unassembled frame including a plurality of planar frame members; packaging the frame members in a first container; providing a padding element adapted to form a cushion for the article of furniture; packaging the padding element in a second container; providing an upholstery cover adapted to attach to the frame; and packaging the upholstery cover in a third container.
A still further embodiment provides a method of assembling a ready-to-assemble article of furniture, including providing a disassembled frame including a plurality of planar frame members, the frame members including interlocking portions, recesses and apertures; a plurality of push-in connector elements; and a plurality of fasteners; pushing the connector elements in the recesses; connecting the interlocking portions of the frame members; and securing the frame members by inserting the fasteners through the apertures and into the connector elements.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides a method of packaging disassembled upholstered furniture by disposing individual frame members, reduced volume padding and the requisite fasteners into a kit which can be easily shipped, stored, displayed on retail shelves, and transported by the consumer. This embodiment contemplates a variety of fitted covers separately available alongside the kit containing the disassembled furniture.
In another embodiment, the present invention provides an article of upholstered furniture assembled from the components which are disposed in the above-described kit via the present invention method.
The above mentioned and other features and objects of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention itself will be better understood by reference to the following description of embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. Although the drawings represent embodiments of the present invention, the drawings are not necessarily to scale and certain features may be exaggerated in order to better illustrate and explain the present invention. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate embodiments of the invention in alternative forms, and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
The embodiments disclosed below are not intended to be exhaustive or limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed in the following detailed description. Rather, the embodiments are chosen and described so that others skilled in the art may utilize its teachings.
Referring now to the drawings and particularly to
The number, size and shape of frame members 22–30 will vary depending on the article of furniture to be produced from the kit of the present invention, but in all embodiments, the frame members are a suitable supporting material, such as pre-finished plywood. Alternative frame member embodiments using materials such as solid wooden boards, laminated particle board, preformed plastic or metal pieces, varieties of fiberboard or strandboard, structural cardboard or honeycombed paperboard. Further, fasteners may not be required for interconnecting the frame members. For example, frame assembly may instead consist of interconnecting frame members which include slots allowing their mutual engagement, or adhesives may be used to join the frame members. Still further, that frame members may or may not be pre-finished. For example, the frame members may consist of unfinished wooded pieces that the consumers may stain and varnish or paint to suit their individual tastes.
One frame 70, corresponding to an embodiment further described below, is shown in
Frame members 72 may be cut from large sheets of MDF using widely-available machinery such as computer-controlled cutting saws and routers, for example. As shown in
Frame members 72 also include projections 80 and cutout portions 82, which are insertable into one another to connect adjacent frame members 72. As shown in
Additionally, some frame members 72, such as interior side panels 72b, 72c as shown in
Frame 70 is shown assembled in
Individual padding elements appropriate to the article of furniture to be produced from kit 33 are reduced in volume, such as by being vacuum-packed or by being compressed between plates, or by a combination of these methods, into compressed form which greatly reduces the volume otherwise necessary to package kit 33. The padding should be reduced by approximately two thirds (⅔) from its original, expanded size to properly practice one embodiment of the present invention, but further reduction is desirable and the amount of volume reduction achievable may vary by padding material. By the above-mentioned volume reduction methods, the volume of urethane foam padding, for example, can be reduced to approximately one sixth (⅙) of its natural, expanded size. Although the padding elements may be made from urethane foam, Dacron or any other suitable, compressible materials may be used. Further, different materials may be used for different cushions. For example, in a given article of furniture the seat cushion(s) may be made of urethane foam, while the back and/or arm cushions may be made of Dacron.
The amount of compression foam padding undergoes affects its ability to subsequently expand to its original size. For example, in experiments in which a 12 inch cubic block of urethane foam material having an indentation load deflection (ILD) rating of 35 (i.e., 35 pounds of force is required to deflect the foam by 25 percent) and a density of 1.5 pounds per cubic foot was compressed into a 12 inch square slab 1.5 inches thick, the material expanded to 96 percent of its original volume after 24 hours. Further expansion beyond that time was negligible. In an otherwise identical experiment using urethane foam having a density of 1.2 pounds per cubic foot, the material expanded to 90 percent of its original volume. Compression to a lesser extent would have resulted in each of these samples expanding more nearly to its original volume. Furthermore, where heavy compression takes place in a high humidity environment, plastic deformation in the shape of the expanded urethane foam cushions may result. Therefore, it should be noted that to ensure the foam expands properly to its final shape and size, its compression should take place in a low humidity environment.
Furthermore, compression of the foam material adversely affects its quality. For example, the 1.5 pound per cubic foot urethane foam block subjected to the above described compression test incurred a 2 pound degradation in its ILD rating, dropping from 35 to 33. The 1.2 pound per cubic foot sample had its ILD drop from 35 to 28 under the same conditions. Thus it can be seen that a denser urethane foam better retains its load bearing capability after compression than its lighter weight counterpart. Compression to a lesser extent would have resulted in each of these samples exhibiting a less pronounced degradation in its ILD rating. This degradation in quality manifests itself primarily through reduced longevity of the padding's resilience, and does not necessarily affect the initial comfort it provides.
For urethane foams of a given ILD rating and chemical composition, a denser foam costs more than a lighter weight foam. From the foregoing it can then be understood that, because the cushions' post-expansion sizes, upon which the proportions of the finished article of furniture are determined, and longevity are dependent on their original densities and the extent to which they are compressed, there are tradeoffs to be made between their cost, quality and package. Also, it must be emphasized that the intended post-expansion size of each cushion and its desired life are factors which must be considered in developing the component padding elements of the present invention.
As the compressed padding elements are unpackaged and allowed to expand, each will take on a size and shape appropriate to upholster frame 36 (
One embodiment of the present invention contemplates having each cushion covered by a porous, protective cover (not shown) made of a material such as muslin or denim, which may or may not be decorative, prior to the cushion's volume being reduced. Each piece of reduced volume padding in the kit would include such a protective cover. The porosity of the protective cover allows air to exit the cushion during the reduction of the cushion's volume, prior to its being packaged, and to enter the cushion during its expansion, upon unpacking it. The porous protective cover would be fitted to envelop the cushion and be permanently sewn closed or closed thereon with a fastener. Fasteners appropriate for closing the protective cover include, for example, zippers or hook and loop fasteners. As the cushions are expanded during final assembly of the article of furniture, the protective cover would remain on the cushion and may subsequently be covered by the separately provided decorative fabric covers as described below. Further, where foam padding is used, the protective cover will make installation of the decorative fabric covers easier due to the protective cover's surface having a lower coefficient of friction vis-a-vis the surface of the uncovered foam. Installation of the decorative covers will also be made easier where a protective cover is used over padding material having a loose, fibrous composition, such as Dacron. Further still, the protective cover provides the additional advantages of retaining any cushion material debris which accumulates due to normal padding wear or due to fragmentation of loose, fibrous padding material.
Another aspect of the present invention, exemplified in the figures as relating to seat cushion 40 although it is applicable to each cushion, contemplates cushions having flexible bladder 50 (
Accommodating a variety of consumer tastes without requiring excessive warehouse or shelf space is an object of the present invention. Therefore, it will be noted that kit 33 contained in carton 31, which includes frame members 22–30 and reduced volume padding 32, assembles to produce an unupholstered article of furniture. Finished fabric covers to fit each individual padding element, or matching sets thereof to outfit an entire article of furniture, are packaged and can be made available separately for use with kit 33 contained in carton 31. In this way, a stock of kits can be conveniently warehoused or displayed at retail facilities which, when purchased with one of several different and separately available fabrics, can accommodate a variety of decorating tastes.
The separately available fabric covers, designed to fit over the expanded padding elements from kit 33, are installed by the consumer. Referring to
The fabric covers may be secured around the foam pieces by zippers, hook and loop fasteners, adhesives or by merely folding excess material of the fabric under the foam piece itself or into the slotted portion 48 (
Once the fabric is applied, each upholstered piece is applied to the frame 36. As shown in
For example, a first set of upholstery covers 100 may be attached to frame 70, described in
The lower portions of arm covers 100a, 100b seat back cover 100c, as well as front cover 100d each include flaps 106 having hook and loop fasteners 108 which overlap and fasten to one another to define skirt 114 around the lower portion of chair 98. Skirt 114 has a clean, stitched appearance which appears identical to the stitched skirt seen on conventional furniture. The lower portions of arm covers 100a, 100b, seat back cover 100c, as well as front cover 100d each further include a weighted beading 116 stitched therein to provide a decorative finish for skirt 114 and to maintain skirt 114 flat around the lower portion of chair 98. As shown in
Arm pads 122a, 122b are inserted into arm covers 128a, 128b, which additionally include large opening 132. Flaps 136 of arm covers 128a, 128b are attached to one another by hook and loop fasteners 108 and then stuffed into envelope slits 138 of arm pads 122a, 122b to form arm cushions 103a, 103b. Arm cushions 103a, 103b are then mounted onto arm panels 72d, 72e such that arm panels are received within envelope slits 138 of arm cushions 103a, 103b.
In this manner, chair 98 may be packaged in three separate containers 144, 146 and 148, each of which may weigh less than 70 lbs., for example, to allow containers 144, 146, and 148 to be shipped for home delivery by a parcel delivery service. In addition, the shipment of chair 98 in separate containers eases packaging, such that separate sets of custom selected designs of upholstery covers 100 may be shipped with standard frame members 72 and pads 120, 122a, 122b, and 124. Additionally, upholstery covers 100 may be easily returned, without necessitating the return of all of the components of chair 98, if found not suitable to the customer's liking or if later damaged.
As shown in
As an example of the improved packaging efficiency of an upholstered ready-to-assemble article of furniture provided by the present invention vis-a-vis that which has been pre-assembled, an upholstered sofa measuring 85 inches long by 33 inches high by 33 inches deep (53.6 cubic feet) would, if pre-assembled, require a box of at least these dimensions, whereas by the present invention only a frame box 77 inches by 3.5 inches by 26.5 inches (4.1 cubic feet), a reduced volume padding box 34.5 inches by 10 inches by 29.5 inches (5.9 cubic feet) and a coverings box 4.75 inches by 33.5 inches by 22 inches (1.1 cubic feet) would be required.
While this invention has been described as having exemplary methods and designs, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains.
This application is a Divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/588,000, filed on Jun. 6, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,568,058, which claims the benefit under Title 35 U.S.C. §119(e) of Application Ser. No. 60/185,581, filed Feb. 28, 2000.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20030173814 A1 | Sep 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60185581 | Feb 2000 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09588000 | Jun 2000 | US |
Child | 10360160 | US |