This invention relates generally to hair coloring appliances and methods, and more particularly concerns a hair coloring appliance which permits the user to select and control the particular hair color formulation to be provided by the appliance.
Coloring of hair, particularly by a user at home, while it can produce satisfactory results, can be cumbersome and can sometimes lead to unpredictable or unsatisfactory results. It is also time-consuming and requires significant cleanup. The process usually involves a sequence of specific steps, including the user opening one or more containers and mixing the contents to produce the advertised color formulation. The formulation is then applied by the user to the hair, including rubbing it in to the hair area and then combing it in. The hairline is done first, then the hair roots, and then the remaining bulk of the hair. The tools must then be cleaned and put away. The overall process and particularly the unpredictability of the results leads to a general lack of confidence on the part of most users, particularly home users. Accordingly, a hair coloring system useful at home which provides reliable, predictable results and has the capability of a wide variety of coloring is desirable.
Accordingly, in one arrangement, the hair coloring system comprises: a hair color packet assembly having at least one coloring material chamber and one or none developer material chamber; a pump for each of the coloring material chambers and the developer material chamber; a control assembly operable to control the pump members to produce a selected color following mixing; a mixing assembly operable to mix the color material or the color material and developer material; a brushhead/distributor connected to the mixer by a connecting line; and a handle for holding the brushhead/distributor.
Another arrangement is a single use hair color consumable assembly for use with a hair coloring system, comprising a hair color packet assembly having at least one chamber or packet for a hair coloring formulation and one or none chamber for a developer; a separate pump for each color and developer chamber, wherein the pump is responsive to a control signal for directing selected amounts from each color chamber and developer chamber into a mixing assembly, wherein the mixing assembly produces a formulation having a color selected by a user; and a brushhead/distributor member connected to the mixing assembly by a fluid directing element, the brushhead/distributor including openings through which the formulation is delivered.
In a further arrangement, the hair coloring system comprises a hair color packet assembly having at least one coloring chamber and one or none developer material chamber; a pump for each of the coloring chambers and the developer material chamber; a control assembly operable to control the pump members to produce a selected color following mixing; a mixing assembly operable to mix the coloring material or the coloring and developer material; a brushhead/distributor connected to the mixing assembly by a connecting line; a handle for holding the brushhead/distributor, wherein the brushhead/distributor is adapted to move in the handle; and a motor in the handle to move the brushhead back and forth in a linear oscillation.
The operation of the appliance is controlled by an on/off switch 36 which initiates the operation of the pumps, for dispensing the hair color formulation through the brushhead. The handle 34 also includes a driver motor 37 which provides a controlled movement of the brushhead to assist in the application of the color formulation to the hair. This action is controlled by switch 38 which can be separate from the on/off pumping switch 36, although both functions can be controlled by a single switch. The movement of the brushhead can be synchronized with the pumping action of the color formulation.
The individual pumps 48-51 are separately controlled by a microprocessor and motor arrangement, also referred to as a control assembly, to produce the final desired color from the three color packets and the developer packet. This arrangement is shown at 59 in more detail in
The microprocessor can be controlled in various ways by a user to produce the desired color, shown at 78 in
In operation, the preferred formulation flow rate in connecting line 63 in
Referring to
Each pump in the embodiment shown has 20 separate distinct steps in pumping rate. With three color packets, the various combinations of the three colors and the developer will result in a total of 210 different color combinations possible.
Other control/interface combinations can be used, including a bar code on a card and associated reader or an RFID tag and an associated reader, or by a wireless command. Also, it would be possible to program the microprocessor using voice commands, both for color and to control the pumping action, i.e. the flow rate. As discussed above, the individual pumps can be controlled to produce the desired flow rate, as well as the particular color composition.
The apparatus, in the embodiment shown, is powered by a battery, with a sealed closed-path construction so that the appliance can even be used safely in the shower. One advantage to a closed path is to protect the user from exposure to the coloring fluid, except on the hair. The disposable assembly portion of the system, shown in
The handle 86 (
When the hairline and roots coloring functions are completed, an optional coarser brushhead can be used with wider tine spacing to glide through the hair, with fluid being continually dispensed at a selected rate to coat the hair. An adjustment can be made to dispense fluid to each tine, thus conveniently providing fluid to the bulk of the hair. Fairly long strokes are used to dispense the formulation along the hair so that slight variation in color programmed into the mixing portion of the appliance can provide an improvement to the appearance of natural color variation verses single color systems.
It should be understood that natural color variation is important to a high quality coloring result. Since the color is mixed in real time in the present system, the color composition can be made to vary to any degree over time to produce color variation, by simply programming the microprocessor. For instance, each brush stroke through the bulk of the hair can produce a slightly different tint or shade. Further, a multi-tube connecting arrangement could be used for transfer of a different color to different tines of the brushhead, so that small individual hanks of hair can receive a different color when compared to the neighboring hanks. Conventionally, color variation requires coloring of small hanks of hair and protecting them by aluminum foil to prevent bleeding through from one hank to the next and to prevent premature drying of small hanks of hair with such a relatively unfavorable volume-to-volume ratio. With the present system, there are two ways of eliminating the foil process. One is to provide slight color variation as described above so that a bleed-through from one hank to the next is not noticeable. The results of using this method or technique will be less natural than a salon treatment, but an improvement over single color approaches. Another way is to provide separately fed tines in the brush so that the individual tines can dispense different color formulations, to permit meaningful color transfer from one hank of hair to the next.
Accordingly, the present invention is convenient to use, with high performance, providing significant confidence for the user in the results. With the closed fluid path, there is no need to pour and shake separate containers. The present system can be used in the shower, which enhances cleanliness and further eliminates the required care and time of cleaning components, gloves and the need for manual manipulation of the hair roots and hairline necessary with conventional hair coloring systems. The present system results in a significant improvement in both reliability and color variability of home use hair coloring systems.
Although a preferred embodiment has been disclosed for purposes of illustration, it should be understood that various changes, modifications and substitutions may be incorporated in the preferred embodiment without departing from the spirit of the invention as defined by the claims which follow:
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