The present invention relates generally to hair accessories and hair styling devices, and more particularly to a unique device wearable in social settings to maintain an updo hairstyle, while imparting a styling action on the hair to leave a different hairstyle result in the user's hair once the device is removed.
Hair extensions are commonly used to add a unique look to a person's natural hair that differs in design, volume and thickness.
In addition, people with straight hair that want to change their hair's texture by forming curls or waves have conventionally relied on a curling iron, flat iron or other hot tool accessory, thereby imparting heat damage from such tools which essentially burn the hair into place. Prolonged exposure to hot tools causes hair to break off. These hot tools are not recommended for daily use as the damage to the person's natural hair is too severe, causing breakage split ends discoloration and, at times, even melting.
Professionals agree it is of paramount importance, to limit use of hot tools or accessories. Temperatures of hot tool devices can reach 450° F., and are most commonly set at 330-350° F. and up, which is literally destructive to natural human hair. These hot temperatures, applied to skin, would be instantaneously destructive. First degree burns start at 118° F., and at 162° F. human tissue is instantly destroyed on contact, yet people that want curls or waves expose their hair to 300 F every time they want to re-curl their hair.
Other methods include changing straight hair into curls by the use of chemical perms, which cause damage by breaking the hair's bonds apart, and reforming the bonds into the shape of the curl. Both curling methods cause excessive damage, and with exposure cause burnt hair, broken hair, melted hair, split ends and hair discoloration. The chemical perm method is also limited, as the user must grow their hair out for several months, before undergoing another perm. Hair already chemically damaged from the prior treatment is impossible to avoid when reapplying the next perm, which often leads to severed, broken hair.
Accordingly, there has arisen a desire for a completely safe, non-damaging method to create wavy or curly hair in a healthy way.
Recently there has been proposed a new solution in this regard. A curled or wavy look is imparted to a head of sufficiently long hair by donning a foam-filled headband or similar appliance in the evening, wrapping the hair in coiled fashion around the headband, and leaving the appliance and wrapped hair in place overnight during one's sleep, whereby the coiled condition of the hair around the headband imparts a curling action thereon, thus leaving behind a wavy/curled hairstyle when the appliance is removed in the morning. Commercially available products of this type include the Aurora Band Night Roller by Aurora Hair Products, as seen at http://www.aurorahairproducts.com/, and the GlamWaves Heatless Roller Band by UK Innovations GP Ltd., as seen at http://glamwaves.co.uk/.
While providing a useful alternative to curling irons and heated rollers whose high-heat metal-to-hair contact can be damaging, these headband products are, unsightly during use, and thus are used as “overnight” hairstyling appliances, whereby the appliance can be left in for a sufficiently long period to achieve the desired styling effect, without the user worrying about embarrassment of wearing the unsightly appliance outside the privacy of their home.
It would be desirable to instead provide a wearable hairstyling appliance or device that imparts a similar curling action to the hair, yet is usable in a stylistic manner enabling the user to wear it out in social settings. Applicant has developed a unique design accomplishing such functionality, and also improving on other aspects of such headband-based hairstyling products.
According to a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a hair styling device comprising:
a headband wearable in a working position lying along a hairline of a user's head to span around a crown of the user's head with a front portion of the headband spanning generally across a forehead of the user's head and a rear portion of the headband spanning across a back of the user's head behind the ears thereof;
the front portion of the headband comprising an ornamental appearance for display in a visible manner across the forehead along a front of the hairline in the working position of the headband; and
the rear portion of the headband comprising a flexible hair roller for wrapping of hair of the user upwardly around said flexible hair roller from therebehind to create an updo hairstyle at a rear of the hairline across the back of the user's head between the ears thereof;
whereby the ornamental appearance of the front portion and the updo hairstyle cooperatively impart a stylistic effect around the crown of the user's head in the working position of the headband, while a wound state of the hair around the rear portion of the headband imparts a styling action that leaves behind a different hairstyle effect than the updo hairstyle when the headband is removed.
The front portion of the headband may comprise auxiliary hair providing the ornamental appearance by complimenting the user's hair at the front of the hairline.
In such instance, the auxiliary hair may have a pre-set style.
The front portion of the headband may comprise one or more braids.
The one or more braids may be composed of non-hair material.
Alternatively, the auxiliary hair may be braided into said one or more braids.
The one or more braids may consist of a single braid.
Alternatively, the one or more braids comprise double braids.
The one or more braids may comprise a herringbone braid.
The front portion of the headband may comprise one or more jewel settings.
The front portion of the headband may comprise one or more items of jewelry strung thereacross.
The front portion of the headband may comprise a fabric band.
The front portion of the headband may comprise natural or synthetic leather.
There may be provided one or more hair clips attached to the front portion of the band for use in securing the headband in the working position at the front of the hairline.
The flexible hair roller may comprise a tubular cover enclosing a hollow interior space and one or more inserts received or receivable within said tubular cover.
The one or more inserts may be selectively removable from the tubular cover.
Each of the one or more inserts may comprise a moisture-absorbing material.
The one or more inserts may be heated or heatable.
There may be provided a separate heater operable to heat the one or more inserts.
Alternatively, the one or more inserts may comprise a self-heating insert.
Said self-heating insert may comprise a power cable exiting the tubular cover to connection to an external power supply.
According to a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of using the device comprising wearing the device in the working position imparting the stylistic effect in a social setting. The method may further involve removing the device from the working position, thereby removing the updo hairstyle from the user's hair and using the different hairstyle effect left behind to achieve a different hair aesthetic wearable in the same, or a different, social setting.
The styling action imparted to the hair in the wound state thereof around the rear portion of the headband may be a curling action, whereby the different hairstyle effect left behind is a curled effect by which the different hairstyle aesthetic achieved is curlier than a natural state of the user's hair.
Alternatively, if the user's hair is naturally frizzy, the styling action imparted to the hair in the wound state thereof around the rear portion of the headband may be a straightening action, whereby the different hairstyle effect left behind is a straightened effect by which the different hairstyle aesthetic achieved is straighter than a natural state of the user's hair.
According to a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a hair styling device comprising:
a headband wearable in a working position spanning around a crown of the user's head with a front portion of the headband spanning generally across a forehead of the user's head and a rear portion of the headband spanning across a back of the user's head behind the ears thereof for wrapping hair of the user into a wound state around said rear portion of the headband to impart a styling action on said hair;
a cover defined at the rear portion of the headband to enclose a hollow interior space within said cover;
one or more heated or heatable inserts received or receivable within said tubular cover to cooperate therewith to form a flexible a flexible hair roller for wrapping of hair of the user around said flexible hair roller to impart a curling action on said hair, whereby a heated state of the one or more inserts inside the tubular cover improves the styling action on said hair.
There may be provided a separate heater, wherein the one or more inserts are removably received or receivable in said cover of the headband and the heater is operable to heat the one or more inserts while outside the cover, thus warming the one or more inserts to a pre-heated state ready for insertion into the cover.
The heater preferably comprises a heating chamber in which the one or more inserts are receivable to perform a heating operation thereon.
The heating chamber may have an axial length shorter than the insert to leave a handling end of the insert outside said chamber during the heating operation.
The heater may be operable to disperse ions onto the one or more inserts.
According to a fourth aspect of the invention, there is provided a hair styling device comprising:
a headband wearable in a working position spanning around a crown of the user's head with a front portion of the headband spanning generally across a forehead of the user's head and a rear portion of the headband spanning across a back of the user's head behind the ears thereof;
the rear portion of the headband comprising a flexible hair roller for wrapping of hair of the user around said flexible hair roller to impart a styling action on said hair;
wherein the flexible hair roller comprises a moisture permeable outer cover and moisture absorbing material disposed within said outer cover.
In one embodiment, the outer cover of the hair roller comprises a tubular cover for enclosing a hollow interior space, and the hair roller further comprises one or more inserts that are received or receivable within said tubular cover and comprise the moisture absorbing material.
Each of the one or more inserts may comprise a moisture permeable outer casing in which the moisture-absorbing material is contained.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
In the drawings like characters of reference indicate corresponding parts in the different figures.
In the drawings, the tubular cover 20 is transparent or translucent in order to visually reveal the insert 18 placed within the hollow interior of the cover, but it will be appreciated from the described use of the device that the tubular cover need not be transparent, and can be made of an opaque material. The selected fabric of the tubular cover 20 is resiliently stretchable, at least in the longitudinal/axial direction of its elongated tubular shape spanning the respective half of the closed loop of the overall headband. This longitudinal stretchability of the rear half of the headband enables enlargement of the overall closed-loop shape of the headband to allow the headband to stretch over the top of the user's head into the working position spanning around the crown of the head at hairline level, whereupon the resiliency of the rear tubular cover 20 will self-tighten the headband 12 into secured circumferential relation to the user's head.
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When worn for a sufficient length of time by a user having naturally straight hair, later removal of the headband will inherently leave curls or waves in the areas of the user's natural air that were wound tightly around the roller-defining rear half 16 of the headband 12. In other words, at the rear half 16 of the headband, the tubular cover 20 and the insert 18 received therein effectively define a flexible hair roller that conformingly spans around the back of the user's head from one ear to the other in order to impart a curling action on the natural hair wound around this flexible roller. So while the headband serves as a curl/wave imparting hairstyle appliance leaving behind a curled/wavy hairstyle after removal, similar to the overnight hairbands of the prior art, it also has an entirely unique ornamental mode of operation serving to achieve and maintain a unique updo hairstyle while worn. Accordingly, the device is not limited to “overnight” applications, as it can be worn out of the house for any number of different outings, including special events or other social settings where the desire for a stylistic appearance is fulfilled by the unique updo achieved by the worn use of the device.
For optimal results, before winding the user's natural hair around the rear roller of the headband, the user's natural hair is first pre-dampened by spraying/misting thereof with water, a water-based spray primer or other suitable hair product. The natural hair is then rolled around the roller-defining rear half 16 of the headband, and set. Once the natural hair is wound on the headband, it is the drying process of hair from damp to dry that sets and forms the wave/curl in the naturally straight hair. In the case of the present embodiment, the drying of the hair is aided by the moisture absorbing material in the insert 18 of the roller-defining rear half 16 of the headband. This moisture absorption is effective on the user's dampened natural hair via the air and moisture permeable materials employed for the tubular cover 20 of the headband 12 and the casing 24 of the removable insert 18. This process, damp-to-dry setting of the natural hair, lasts much longer than any other form of curling hair, and will usually last at least two days, even without application of heat. However, applicant has also developed a unique variant of this process that further involves the use of heat to further contribute to the curling action of the device.
However, before turning to the heated variant, attention is given to potential variations on the design of the headband itself. As discussed above, the braided hair headband of
These are of course only two illustrative examples of jewelry chain configurations having one or more chains formed in a conventional manner by interlocking chain links. While the two illustrated chain examples include gem settings, other variants may lack such gems, and instead rely solely on the ornamental value of the chains, or may instead use charms or other ornamental attachments coupled to the chains instead of gem settings. Interlocking chain links are just one example of using jewelry ornamentation in place of braided material, and other examples may include one or more strings of pearls, or other strung jewelry items.
As another ornamental alternative to braids, chains or other strung jewelry at the front half of the headband, a simple band of fabric may span between the two ends of the rear tubular cover at the front of headband, and may carry one or more gems thereon, and/or have a printed or natural ornamental pattern thereon. This ornamental band may be resiliently stretchable, and thus contribute to the self-fitting self-securing resiliency of the overall headband, or may be made of a non-stretchable fabric. Cotton and spandex are just two examples of a larger variety of fabrics that may be employed for use in a jewelled, non-jewelled, printed or naturally patterned fabric band at the ornamental front half of the headband.
While the device is described above as useful to impart a curling or wavy effect to naturally straight hair, the device may alternatively be used to help smooth out naturally curly or frizzy hair. In such instance, the wrapping of the hair around the roller-defining rear half of the headband, where the thickness of the headband exceeds the diameter of the frizzy hair's tight natural curls, helps reduce the curliness/frizziness of the natural hair, as the radius of curvature imparted to the hair by its wound condition around the headband notably exceeds the much smaller radius of the tight natural curls. Most people with naturally curly hair tend to use a curling iron to reduce frizz and smooth their hair for a loose wave effect. Heat damage from such practices ironically causes so much damage that the user's hair gets exponentially more damaged, thus inducing more frizz, which then must be smoothed out every day by daily repetition of the same damage-inducing process. The conventional hot tool method is thus not a solution, but rather just a self-perpetuation of the problem. Unheated use of the presently disclosed headband thus provides the frizzy haired user's with a safe, non-damaging option for straightening or smoothing their natural curls.
As mentioned above, though the presently disclosed headband may be used in an entirely unheated fashion to fully avoid any and all possible heat damage, a heated variant is also disclosed herein that uses some heat to help set the natural hair, but without the direct, high temperature hair-metal contact of conventional hot tools.
This is illustrated in
The illustrated heater 40 features an electrical cord 44 with a conventional plug 46 for mating with a mains power socket, an on-indicator light 48 confirming the powered-up state of the heater when plugged in, and a ready-indictor light 50 that illuminates after completion of a heating cycle to inform the user the insert 18 has reached a pre-set temperature, for example 285 to 390 degrees Fahrenheit, and is ready for use.
Termination of the heating cycle may be determined by expiration of a timer, for example employing a heat cycle time of 75-seconds, or detected confirmation that a target temperature has been reached. The visually distinct cap 26 at one end of the illustrated insert 18 serves as a visual marker of safe handle end by which the insert 18 can be manually grasped after heating. The length of the heating chamber 42 of the heater is shorter than the axial length of the insert 18, whereby insertion of the insert 18 into the heater marker-side-up ensures that this visually marked end 26 of the insert remains cooler to the touch than the remainder of the insert that resides directly inside the heating chamber 42 during the heating cycle.
When the ready-indicator light illuminates, the user pulls the insert 18 from the heater by the cool handling end 26, and places the insert into the tubular cover 20 of the headband 12. The insert 18 may feature use of ionic energy which neutralizes the positive charges in the air that cause frizziness and static electricity. Ionization of hair rollers as part of a heating cycle is already known, for example as disclosed for example in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0118425, the entirety of which is incorporated herein, and so further details of the similar ionization of the headband insert of the present invention is not explicitly disclosed herein.
As an alternative to a removable insert that is heated up externally of the headband and then inserted into the tubular rear half of the headband,
The insert 18′ features an electrical cord 44 that exits the tubular cover via a smaller opening or slit therein, and that has a suitable power plug 46 for mating with a conventional AC mains power socket or other suitable power supply. With the user's hair wrapped around the roller-defining rear half of the headband, the electrical cord is plugged in, and the insert 18′ warms to a predetermined temperature, e.g. 385 to 390 degrees Fahrenheit, for example reaching this operating temperature in a heating-cycle time of approximately 75-seconds. The elevated operating temperature of the self-heated insert sets the hair within 1-2 minutes, causing the hair to take on the shape of the round cylindrical insert to form waves/curls in the hair, as described for the earlier removable-insert embodiment.
Once the hair is set, the self-heating insert is turned off, whether by unplugging of the power cable or by actuation of an optional on/off switch. In this unpowered state terminating the heating function the insert cools down, and the cooling allows the hair to set and lock further into place, rather than relying just on heat alone. The cooling closes the cuticle of the hair, which locks it into place in the form of the wave/curl, making the waves last much longer, than if heat alone was applied. This embodiment features a non-ornamental stretchy fabric span at the front half, as it is not intended be to worn for stylistic purposes. On the other hand, the power cord may be selectively detachable from the insert 18′ to allow the headband to be worn out as a style accessory, in which case the braided or jewellery-based front halves of the other embodiments may be employed.
It will be appreciated that the benefits of a removable heatable roller insert 18 and/or the benefit of using a moisture absorbent material in the insert may be employed for headband-type hair styling devices, regardless of whether they have an ornamental front half suitable for wearing during an outing or are less-aesthetic “overnight” products intended only for private use. Likewise, the front-ornamented headband need not necessarily employ moisture absorbent material in the rear roller-defining half of the headband or feature a removable/heatable insert in order to allow the headband to fulfill its ornamental, updo styling function.
Since various modifications can be made in my invention as herein above described, and many apparently widely different embodiments of same made within the scope of the claims without departure from such scope, it is intended that all matter contained in the accompanying specification shall be interpreted as illustrative only and not in a limiting sense.
This application claims benefit under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/512,137, filed May 29, 2017, the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62512137 | May 2017 | US |