The present invention, in some embodiments thereof, relates to head covers and, more particularly, but not exclusively, to head covers with brims.
Head covers may include hats, caps, and visors which serve to protect a user's head and/or face from exposure to the sun. These head covers generally include a brim which may serve to protect the wearer's face from the sun, and optionally other upper body sections such as the shoulders and the upper back. Emblems, symbols, figures, writing, numbers, and other design patterns, hereinafter referred to as “logo”, may sometimes be attached to the brim, generally for promotion or advertising purposes, among other possible uses. These may be woven onto the brim, especially when the brim includes a fabric, or may be adhered usually in the form of a sticker, as is frequently the case when the brim is plastic.
There is provided, in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, a head cover including a brim formed from a plastic sheet suitable to project an image of a logo on the brim onto a distant surface. The plastic sheet may include a first area having a material with a first degree of transparency to light, and a second area at least partially surrounded by the first area and having a material with a second degree of transparency to light different from the first area, and further including a shape of the logo. At least one of the first area and the second area may project an image of the logo onto the distant surface when a light impinges on the brim. The head cover may be a cap, a visor, or a hat.
In some embodiments, the material in the second area may include a higher transparency to light relative to the first area. Alternatively, the material in the first area may include a higher transparency to light relative to the second area. The light may be solar light or electrical light. Optionally, the first area and the second area may be on an underside of the plastic sheet.
In some embodiments, the plastic sheet may include UV filtering in a range between 80%-99%.
In some embodiments, the first area may be opaque. Alternatively, the second area may be opaque.
In some embodiments, the logo shape may include a digitally printed shape, a flexographic printed shape, or a silk screen printed shape.
In some embodiments, the projected image of the logo on the distant surface may be an illuminated image. Alternatively, the projected image may be a shadow of the logo.
In some embodiments, the material on the first area may include an ink color different from that on the material on the second area. Optionally, the material on the first area includes a different thickness compared to the material on the second area.
In some embodiments, the second area may include a removable logo.
Some embodiments of the invention are herein described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings. Details shown are for exemplary purposes and serve to provide a discussion of embodiments of the invention. The description and the drawings may be apparent to those skilled in the art how embodiments of the invention may be practiced.
Before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not necessarily limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components and/or methods set forth in the following description and/or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments or of being practiced or carried out in various ways.
Applicant has realized that the teachings described in the now allowed parent application, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/575,366, and in U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/163,465 from which the parent application claimed the benefit of priority and which is also incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, may be equally applied to head covers, for example, to hats, visors and caps. By using the printing methods described therein, Applicant is able to provide a head cover which provides a wearer with the required protection from the sunshine while allowing use of sunlight, optionally light from other light sources, to project an image of a logo on the head cover onto a distant surface. Accordingly, the present invention relates to a head cover including a logo on the brim which may be projected onto a remote surface when light impinges on the brim. The remote surface may include a body section of a wearer of the head cover, a garment section worn by the wearer, a body section or a garment section of a non-wearer (i.e. proximal to the user), an object, among other remote surfaces.
In some embodiments, the brim may be divided into a background area and one or more logo areas (each logo area may include a logo). The background area may be partially transparent or translucent, or alternatively opaque, with the one or more logo areas being substantially transparent to allow sunlight to pass through to cast the projected image of the logo as an illuminated image. Alternatively, the one or more logo areas may be partially transparent or translucent, or alternatively opaque, with the background area being substantially transparent to allow casting of the projected image of the logo as a shadow image. Optionally, the background area and/or the one or more logo areas may be colored to allow casting of colored projected images.
In some embodiments, the brim of the head cover may be formed from a plastic material which may include any suitable flexible, semi-flexible, or rigid plastic which may be printed on such as, for example, PVC, Polyethylene, and Polypropylene. Optionally, only sections of the brim may be formed from plastic, for example, the background area or alternatively the one or more logo areas, in order to allow these areas to cast the projected logo image while the other areas may be formed from other materials, for example, cardboard, fabric, and paper, among other materials.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the printing method may include digital printing to print onto a transparent plastic sheet which may be used to form the brim of the head cover. The size of the ink drops may range from 0-60 Pico liters or greater, for example 30 Pico liters. Ink coverage may range from 10-100%, depending on the degree of shading required surrounding the projected image or images, for example, 75%. A preferable thickness of the ink coat layer may range from 10-50 microns, although other thicknesses may be possible.
In some embodiments of the present invention, the printing method may include using flexographic printing. The flexographic printing may apply one or more coating of ink depending on the degree of shading and the color of the shading required for the brim and optionally for the projected image when the logo is formed using a negative print technique, for example, 3 coatings. Other printing methods may include silk screen printing.
In some embodiments, the logo may include letters, number, figures, symbols, colors, patterns, or any combination thereof. The printing may be applied to a side of the transparent plastic which will not be directly exposed to the UV radiation from the sun when used as the sunshade cover, for example, to the underside of the transparent plastic. Optionally, the plastic sheet may be UV-treated. UV filtering may range from 0%-99%, although preferably around 90%, for example, 80%, 82%, 86%, 89%, 90%, 92%, 94%, 95%.
Reference is now made to
Background area 12 and logo area 14 may be formed from a plastic sheet, optionally UV-treated, which may be a same sheet or sections from different sheets which may be attached together. Background area 12 may be printed with an amount of ink to achieve a degree of transparency different from that of logo area 14. Optionally, background area 12 may be translucent. Ink printing may include use of digital printing techniques, flexographic printing techniques, or silk screen printing techniques.
In some embodiments, logo area 14 may include an amount of ink, or optionally none at all, so that the area is substantially transparent to allow the light to pass through and project an image of logo 16 onto a remote surface. In some embodiments, logo area 14 may be formed with ink of a different color than that used for background area 12 to allow the projected image to have a different color from that which may be projected by the background area. In some embodiments, background area 12 may be opaque. In some embodiments, background area may include a fabric or other non-plastic material, and logo 16 may be formed by cutting the logo area 14 onto the fabric or other non-plastic material and covering the logo area with the plastic.
In some embodiments, background area 12 may include an amount of ink, or optionally none at all, so that the area is substantially transparent to allow the light to pass through. Logo area 14 may be printed with an amount of ink to have a lower transparency compared to background area 12, and may be optionally opaque, to prevent light from passing through. Alternatively, logo area may not include printing and may be, for example, a sticker including a logo which may be adhered to the brim and may substantially prevent light from passing through. The effect of having the background area with a higher degree of transparency relative to the logo area may cast an image of the logo as a shadow.
Reference is now made to
Background area 22 and logo area 24 may be substantially similar to background area 12 and logo area 14 shown in
In some embodiments, the inclusion of inner area 28 may allow the sun to pass through a frame 25 formed between background area 22 and the inner area. In this case, inner area 28 may cast a shadow and the projected image of logo 26 may include the shadow. The projected image of logo 26 may be in contrast with the method of
Reference is now made to
As may be appreciated from the figure, logo areas 108 may include square shapes and may be distributed throughout the background area 106 in a checkerboard arrangement. Logo areas 108 may allow the sun rays to substantially pass through while background area 106 may partially or wholly prevent the sunrays from passing through, allowing visor 100 to cast a shadow which may include a projection of an image of the visor including the logo areas onto a remote surface, as may be seen by visor shadow 150.
As may be further appreciated from the figure, visor shadow 150 may include a brim shadow 152 having an edge shadow 154 and a background shadow 156 due to the partial or whole blocking of light impinging on brim edge 104 and background 106. Light passing through logo areas 108 may project logo images 158 on the remote surface, so that the combination of the background shadow 156 with the logo images 158 may generate a projected image of the checkerboard arrangement on brim 102.
Any one of the methods described in
Reference is now made to
As may be appreciated from the figure, logo areas 208 may include square shapes and may be distributed throughout the background area 206 in a checkerboard arrangement. Logo areas 208 may allow the sun rays to substantially pass through while background area 206 may partially or wholly prevent the sunrays from passing through, allowing cap 200 to cast a shadow which may include a projection of an image of the visor including the logo areas onto a remote surface, for example, on the chest of a wearer 201, as may be seen by cap shadow 250.
As may be further appreciated from the figure, cap shadow image 250 may include a brim shadow 252 having a shadow edge 254 and a background shadow 256. Light passing through logo areas 208 may project logo images 258 on the remote surface, so that the combination of background shadow 256 with logo images 258 may generate a projected image of the checkerboard arrangement on brim 202 onto the chest of wearer 201.
As previously described in relation to
Reference is now made to
As may be further appreciated from the figure, cap shadow 350 may include a brim shadow 352 having an edge shadow 354 and a background shadow 356. Light passing through first frame 308 may project a first logo image 358. Light passing through second frame 312 may project a second logo image 360 which may include a frame image 362 surrounding an inner area shadow 364 on the remote surface. Consequently, an image of brim 302 including the first logo area 308 and the second logo area 310 is projected onto the remote surface (i.e. the back of wearer 301).
Any of the methods described with reference to
Reference is now made to
In
In
The foregoing description and illustrations of the embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the above description in any form.
Any term that has been defined above and used in the claims, should to be interpreted according to this definition.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/575,366 filed on 19 Nov. 2017 as a 35 U.S.C. 371 national stage application of international application number PCT/IB2016/052932 with international filing date 19 May 2016; and additionally claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/857,275 filed on 4 Jun. 2019. The contents of all the above applications are incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62857275 | Jun 2019 | US | |
62163465 | May 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15575366 | Nov 2017 | US |
Child | 16893064 | US |