The present invention relates generally to display devices. More particularly, disclosed herein is an illuminated cylindrical animation device for displaying a plurality of coded images in a crisp and clear manner by a relative rotation of a coded image sleeve and a concentrically disposed shutter element sleeve.
Devices permitting the sequential display of a plurality of coded images by movement of an image member relative to a shutter member have been known for many years. In a typical arrangement, the image member retains a plurality of interposed coded images while the shutter member retains a plurality of shutter elements that are separated by a plurality of viewing elements. The shutter elements perform dual functions. They selectively block from view all but one of the interposed coded images, and they bridge the gaps between the coded strips that cooperate with the shutter elements to form what can be termed an active image. With this, the plurality of shutter elements decode the active image so that it appears to be a complete, coherent image.
When the image member and the shutter member undergo relative movement by a predetermined amount, the strips of the previously active image become concealed and the next succeeding coded image assumes the fleeting position as the active image. This transition from image to image will continue through a cycle of the coded images that are disposed on the image member. Once the cycle is complete, the first coded image will again appear thereby starting a new, identical cycle. The coded images can be sequential, such as a series of images of a horse galloping. Alternatively, the coded images can be related, such as a related series of words or graphics. Still further, the plurality of coded images could be unrelated.
The present inventor advanced the art of coded animation with, among other things, the teachings found in his U.S. Pat. No. 5,901,484 for a Manually-Operated Moveable Display Device, U.S. Pat. No. 6,286,873 for a Visual Display Device with Continuous Animation, U.S. Pat. No. 7,151,541 for a Moveable Animated Display Device, and U.S. Pat. No. 7,331,132 for a Rotatable Animation Device. The disclosure of each patent is incorporated herein by reference.
The '484 patent presented solutions to many deficiencies of the prior art by providing inner and outer sleeves having coded images and shutter elements respectively printed thereon whereby a contact pressure is exhibited that provides close contact between the sleeves and, as a result, crisp, sharply animating images. With the '873 patent, the inventor disclosed a transparent panel with coded images and shutter elements on opposite sides thereof to achieve continuous animation without relatively moving parts. In the '132 patent, rotatable animation is created through a flexible substrate member having a bowed central portion for ensuring effective contact with a second substrate member. Even further, the '541 patent represented a marked advance in the art by ensuring effective contact between coded images and shutter elements through a biasing formation in a pressure plate of resiliently deflectable material.
In a clear demonstration of the advances that these inventions represented in a relatively crowded art, embodiments of the animation devices have achieved worldwide commercial success. The inventions have been embodied in self-animating toys, cards, and best-selling children's books. Indeed, books taking advantage of the invention of U.S. Pat. No. 7,151,541 and other contributions of the present inventor have millions of volumes in print in over sixteen languages as of the writing of this document. The popularity of the self-animating books, cards, and other structures is advantageous in that, among other things, observers are able to enjoy a uniquely effective and entertaining form of artwork.
The prior art has also disclosed illuminated coded image animation devices wherein first and second tubular sleeves are retained in a generally concentric manner with coded images on the first sleeve and shutter elements disposed on the second sleeve. Relative rotation of the first sleeve relative to the second sleeve will thus tend to produce animation. The devices are typically illuminated from within, such as by an electric bulb designed to simulate a candle's flame or by an actual candle.
Disadvantageously, however, it has apparently been found difficult under such prior art constructions to achieve crisp and clear animation of the coded images. The present inventor has realized that the deficiency has resulted largely from the lack of close contact between the first and second sleeves and the coded images and shutter elements retained thereon. For example, motorized prior art devices are disclosed by the prior art where an inner cylinder is spaced from the outer cylinder, apparently to prevent hindering of rotation of one cylinder relative to the other. Indeed, the illuminated cylindrical coded image devices of the prior art tend to teach away from having direct contact between the inner and outer cylinders since rotation is often induced by the heat from a bulb or candle flame and any frictional resistance will entirely prevent rotation. However, the inventor has appreciated that the same spacing that permits free rotation is what prevents crisp and clear animation; where the coded images are not in close proximity or contact with the shutter elements, blurring and other deleterious display characteristics result as is evidenced by the devices of the prior art.
Based on this knowledge, the inventor has realized that crisp and clear animation could be achieved in relation to such animation devices by achieving close engagement or contact between first and second sleeves and, as a result, realizing crisp and clear animation, while permitting smooth and efficient rotation of the first sleeve relative to the second sleeve.
Accordingly, the present invention was founded on the basic object of creating an illuminated animation device with inner and outer cylindrical sleeves that animates in a crisp and clear manner. A related object of the invention is to provide such an illuminated cylindrical animation device wherein close contact between first and second sleeves is realized while smooth and efficient relative rotation between the first and second sleeves is nonetheless permitted and achieved.
These and further objects and advantages of embodiments of the invention will become obvious not only to one who reviews the present specification and drawings but also to those who have an opportunity to enjoy the use of an embodiment of the animation device disclosed herein. However, it will be appreciated that, although the accomplishment of each of the foregoing objects in a single embodiment of the invention may be possible and indeed preferred, not all embodiments will seek or need to accomplish each and every potential object and advantage. Nonetheless, all such embodiments should be considered within the scope of the present invention.
In one practice of the invention, the animation device for producing animation of interlaced coded images has an inner sleeve and an outer sleeve retained for concentric rotation relative to the inner sleeve. The inner and outer sleeves have proximal portions and distal portions. A plurality of interlaced coded images are retained by the inner sleeve or the outer sleeve, and a plurality of spaced shutter elements and interposed viewing elements are retained by the other of the inner sleeve and the outer sleeve. The inner and outer sleeves can be retained by a base structure with either the inner sleeve or the outer sleeve rotatable in relation to the base structure and the other of the inner sleeve and the outer sleeve fixed against rotation relative to the base structure. A light source can be disposed within the inner sleeve, and a motor can be engaged to rotate the inner or outer sleeve that is rotatable.
Embodiments of the animation device can have the sleeve that is fixed against rotation relative to the base structure fixed against rotation by a fixation member that has a proximal portion fixed to the base structure and a distal portion fixed to the distal portion of the sleeve that is fixed against rotation. By way of example, the fixation member could be a sleeve, such as a frusto-conical sleeve, that at least partially encases the inner and outer sleeves.
To contribute to the stable retention of the sleeves and the cylindrical configuration thereof, a substantially rigid annular ring can be retained by the fixation member, and the sleeve that is fixed against rotation relative to the base structure can be fixed relative to the annular ring at the distal portion of the sleeve that is fixed against rotation. Moreover, where a rotatable platform is retained by the base structure, the sleeve that is rotatable in relation to the base structure can be retained by and fixed relative to a substantially rigid annular ring retained by the rotatable platform.
The interlaced coded images or the spaced shutter elements retained by the inner sleeve can be applied to an inwardly facing surface of the inner sleeve. The spaced shutter elements or interlaced coded images retained by the outer sleeve can be applied to an outwardly facing surface of the outer sleeve.
Manifestations of the animation device can have the inner sleeve and the outer sleeve formed from rectangular, flat panels. Each flat panel can have a first end, a second end, and opposed longitudinal edges with the shutter elements parallel to the first and second ends of the panel on which they are disposed and the coded images having image slices that are parallel to the first and second ends of the panel on which they are disposed. In such constructions, the first and second ends of the flat panel that forms the inner sleeve are fixed together to form the inner sleeve, and the first and second ends of the flat panel that forms the outer sleeve are fixed together to form the outer sleeve.
While the shutter elements and the interlaced coded images could be applied in numerous different ways, it is possible for the shutter elements to be applied to the panel on which they are disposed by printing, potentially by passing the panel through a printer in longitudinal alignment with the shutter elements. In a similar manner, the coded images can be applied to the panel on which they are disposed by printing, potentially by passing the panel through a printer in longitudinal alignment with the slices forming coded images.
Animation devices according to the invention can be formed, for instance, by providing first and second rectangular, flat panels with each flat panel having a first end, a second end, opposed longitudinal edges, and registration apertures adjacent to the first and second ends thereof. Shutter elements can be applied to one of the panels parallel to the first and second ends of that panel, and coded images can be applied to the other of the panels with coded image slices parallel to the first and second ends of that panel. The registration apertures of the first end of the first panel can be aligned with the registration apertures of the second end of the first panel, and the first and second ends of the first panel can be fixed together to form the inner sleeve. Similarly, the registration apertures of the first end of the second panel can be aligned with the registration apertures of the second end of the second panel, and the first and second ends of the second panel can be fixed together to form the outer sleeve. With the sleeves so formed, the inner sleeve can be disposed inside the outer sleeve. The inner or the outer sleeve can be fixed against rotation relative to the base structure, and the other of the inner and outer sleeves can be retained for rotation relative to the base structure.
Practices of assembling the sleeves can be carried forth with a peg board with registration pegs in locations corresponding to the registration apertures in the first and second panels. In such a method, the step of aligning the registration apertures of the first end of the first panel with the registration apertures of the second end of the first panel can be carried forth by applying the first panel to the peg board with the registration pegs received through the registration apertures of the first end of the panel, rolling the panel into a sleeve, and passing the registration pegs through the registration apertures of the second end of the panel. The step of aligning the registration apertures of the first end of the second panel with the registration apertures of the second end of the second panel can then be practiced by applying the second panel to the peg board with the registration pegs received through the registration apertures of the first end of the panel, rolling the panel into a sleeve, and passing the registration pegs through the registration apertures of the second end of the panel.
One will appreciate that the foregoing discussion broadly outlines certain goals and features of the invention to enable a better understanding of the detailed description that follows and to instill a better appreciation of the inventor's contribution to the art. Before any particular embodiment or aspect thereof is explained in detail, it must be made clear that the following details of construction and illustrations of inventive concepts are mere examples of the many possible manifestations of the invention.
In the accompanying drawings:
The present invention for an illuminated cylindrical animation device is subject to widely varied embodiments. However, to ensure that one skilled in the art will be able to understand and, in appropriate cases, practice the present invention, certain preferred embodiments of the broader invention revealed herein are described below and shown in the accompanying drawing figures.
Turning more particularly to the drawings, an illuminated cylindrical animation device according to the present invention is indicated generally at 10 in
As is shown and described further herein, the coded image sleeve 16 has a base portion fixed relative to a rotatable platform 34 of a base structure 12. The platform 34 is rotatable, whether by manual operation, by motorization, or by any other rotational drive mechanism or method that might now exist or hereafter be developed. In this example of the invention, the rotational drive mechanism comprises a motor 62 that actuates reduction drive gearing 66. The drive gearing 66 can be engaged to drive the platform 34, such as by frictional engagement, a ring gear, or any other engagement. The motor 62 can be powered by a power source of any effective type, including, by way of example and not limitation, mechanical winding, direct current as by one or more batteries 64, alternating current, or any other source of power. The motor 62 can be fixed or variable in speed.
The shutter element sleeve 14 is supported relative to the base structure 12 but is fixed against rotation, such as by being supported and restrained at its upper or distal end by a frusto-conical sleeve 18 that has a base or proximal end fixed to a non-moving portion of the base structure 12 and an upper or distal end fixed to the upper end of the shutter element sleeve 14. The frusto-conical sleeve 18 surrounds and encases the shutter element sleeve 14 and the coded image sleeve 16. The frusto-conical sleeve 18 can be founded on a translucent, preferably transparent, substrate. Where desirable, images 20 can be retained by the frusto-conical sleeve 18 as seen in
Except as the invention might be expressly limited by the claims, the sleeves 14 and 16 could be oppositely disposed. Moreover, the frusto-conical sleeve 18, which can alternatively be referred to as a fixation member, could be otherwise disposed, such as by being interior to the shutter element sleeve 14. Still further, the fixation member 18 need not be frusto-conical or a continuous sleeve or member at all. Indeed, the fixation member 18 could take the form of an arm or other structure, or multiple structures could fix the shutter element sleeve 14 against rotation relative to the base structure 12
Under this construction, the coded image sleeve 16 is fixed to rotate with the rotatable platform 34, and the shutter element sleeve 14 is fixed against rotation in relation to the base structure 12. Therefore, a rotation of the rotatable platform 34 will rotate the coded image sleeve 16 while the shutter element sleeve 14 is prevented from rotating even where a measurable frictional force is imparted between the sleeves 14 and 16. Accordingly, the sleeves 14 and 16 can be disposed in full, cylindrical contact as illustrated in
Cylindrical animation devices 10 pursuant to the invention can, for example, be constructed as is illustrated in
It will be appreciated that the sleeve 18 could be otherwise configured, such as in the form of a cylindrical sleeve with a distal disk that projects inwardly. Moreover, it would be possible for some other restraint mechanism to be employed, such as, but not limited to, one or more upstanding members with proximal ends fixed to the base structure 12 and distal ends fixedly retaining the upper end of the shutter element sleeve 14, or the coded image sleeve 16 if the sleeves 14 and 16 are otherwise disposed.
The coded image cylinder 16 can be fixed to rotate with the rotatable platform 34 of the base structure as depicted in
With the shutter element sleeve 14, the coded image sleeve 16, and the frusto-conical sleeve 18 so assembled relative to the base structure 12 and one another, the shutter element sleeve 14 can be slid over the coded image sleeve 16 as shown in
Under this construction, the coded image sleeve 16 can be rotated by the platform 34 in relation to the shutter element sleeve 14 without producing a movement of the coded image sleeve 14 even with a snug relationship between the sleeves 14 and 16. Particularly when the animation device 10 is illuminated from within by the light source 60 as seen in
The present inventor has additionally found that image resolution and relative angular velocity of the sleeves 14 and 16 is important to optimal animation. Such relative angular velocity could be achieved by rotation of the coded image sleeve 16 as in the present embodiment, by rotation of the shutter element sleeve 14, or by some combination of different rotational speeds of both the shutter element sleeve 14 and the coded image sleeve 16. To present a convincing animation, the subject presented should be of sufficient resolution to be seen clearly in some detail, and it should appear to move with a realistic cadence or speed. Accordingly, these two aspects—resolution and subject cadence—can be viewed as being inextricably linked.
The resolution of a display image is effectively determined by the size of the individual shutter elements 42. To achieve maximum resolution of a coded image 46 through the shutter elements 42, it is desirable to make the shutter elements 42 as narrow as possible: the more shutter elements 42 per inch, the higher the resolution of the subject depicted. The inventor has determined that, in consideration of industrial printing and manufacturing tolerances, individual shutter elements 42 not substantially narrower than 3/32nd of an inch (2.38 mm) are desired. Such a width yields about 10.5 shutter elements 42 per inch (2.54 cm).
The cylindrical animation device 10 incorporates two cylindrical sleeves 14 and 16 of similar diameter—the shutter element sleeve 14 and the coded image sleeve 16, one nested snugly within the other, one stationary, and one rotating. This combination of the two sleeves 14 and 16 can be referred to as a tandem cylinder.
With shutter elements 42 spaced as above, a shutter element sleeve 14 with a 2.5 inch (6.36 cm) diameter tandem cylinder would therefore contain approximately 80 shutter elements 42. Alternatively, a larger cylindrical animation device 10 employing a tandem cylinder four times larger or 10 inches (25.4 cm) in diameter would have a shutter element sleeve 14 retaining approximately 360 shutter elements 42.
As explained herein, to achieve the effect of animation in the tandem cylinder arrangement, one cylinder 14 or 16 may rotate while the other cylinder 16 or 14 remains fixed. In the example shown in the drawings, the inner sleeve 16 retaining the coded images 46 rotates while the outer sleeve 14 retaining the shutter elements 42 remains fixed in place. The speed with which the coded image sleeve 16 turns must naturally affect the speed and cadence of the subject being depicted.
One may consider, for example, an image of a walking human figure. The natural cadence of a walking figure may be conventionally described as approximately two steps per second. From an animator's perspective, a six-phase cycle of walking may be created in which the figure completes one complete step. When this walk cycle is repeated, the figure appears to take two, three, four or more successive steps without a break in rhythm. Under the present invention, the rotation of the coded image sleeve 16 behind the stationary shutter element sleeve 14 achieves one complete walk cycle by travelling only the distance of the width of one shutter element, such as 3/32 inch (2.38 mm) under one contemplated embodiment. Thus, to achieve a realistic cadence of two steps per second in a 2.5 inch (6.36 cm) diameter tandem cylinder arrangement, the coded image sleeve 16 must rotate a distance of 3/16 inches (4.76 mm) per second such that the coded image sleeve 16 must rotate at a rate of approximately one revolution every 40 seconds. To achieve the identical subject walking cadence in a larger diameter tandem cylinder display device 10, such as one with a 10 inch (25.4 cm) diameter, with similarly sized shutter elements 42, the coded image sleeve 16 would have to rotate at half that speed: one revolution every 80 seconds.
If the shutter element size from display to display remains the same as described above, to achieve similar image resolution, it will be desirable, depending on the desired speed and cadence of the particular animated subject being depicted, that the relative speed of rotation of the coded image sleeve 16 be faster or slower. For example, in the 2.5 inch (6.36 cm) diameter tandem cylinder display device 10 discussed above, for instance, it may be desirable to depict a galloping horse completing three gallops, namely three consecutive gallop cycles, per second. In this instance, the coded image sleeve 16 would need to rotate the distance of three shutter element widths, or 9/32 inch (7.14 mm) per second with shutter elements 42 that are 3/32 inches (2.38 mm) wide, meaning it would be rotating at approximately one revolution every 30 seconds.
Alternatively, if it is desired that the subject's cadence or speed be much slower and only complete, for instance, one animation cycle every second, a tandem cylinder animation device 10 with a shutter element sleeve 14 containing 80 shutter elements would require a coded image sleeve 16 rotating at a distance of 3/32 inches (2.38 mm) per second for a rate of 80 seconds per revolution.
As one knowledgeable in the art will appreciate, the shutter element sleeve 14 and the coded image sleeve 16 could be formed from a wide variety of materials and under a variety of methods, and each such method and material should be considered to be within the scope of the invention except as it might be expressly limited by the claims. In one embodiment, the shutter element sleeve 14 can begin in panel form with ink shutter elements 42 printed or otherwise applied onto a panel 40 of clear or translucent material, such as acetate, as is illustrated in
The ink for the shutter element panel 40 can be printed such that it will be on the outside of the formed shutter element sleeve 14, and the ink for the coded image panel 44 can be printed such that it will be on the inside of the formed coded image sleeve 16. Other configurations are possible, but this may be preferable as the inks will avoid frictional contact and any potential damage as a result thereof. As indicated in
In presently preferred practices of the invention, the shutter element sleeve 14 and the coded image sleeve 16 can begin as flat panels as depicted in
As shown in
The above-described formation method has been found to be highly advantageous in producing shutter element sleeves 14 and coded image sleeves 16 not only with the shutter elements 42 and coded images 46 in perfect orientation but also in ensuring that the sleeves 14 and 16 have the consistent, predetermined circumferences necessary to proper function and clear animation. The inventor has recognized that, to make an active displayed image 30 cohesive throughout a rotation cycle, the shutter element sleeve 14 must have an exact circumference such that the last shutter elements 42 and coded images 46 at the seams 24 and 26 of the sleeves 14 and 16 as seen in
The registration pegs 54 and the registration apertures 48 and 50 in this embodiment give the sleeves 14 and 16 exact, predetermined circumferences. The apertures 50 in the coded image sleeve 14 are slightly closer together than the apertures 48 in the shutter element sleeve 16. With this, when the registration apertures 48 and 50 are caused to overlie the registration pegs 54 and the ends of the sleeves 14 and 16 are secured together as described, a desired circumferential difference is achieved, and the shutter elements 42, the viewing elements 43, and the coded images 46 are consistently spaced, even over the seams of the sleeves 14 and 16. The present embodiment further ensures the proper orientation and spacing of the shutter and viewing elements 42 and 43 and the circumference of the shutter element sleeve 14 by having the last shutter elements 42 at the ends of the shutter element sleeve 14 overlap one another such that precise location and orientation can be confirmed.
With certain details and embodiments of the present invention for a cylindrical animation device 10 disclosed, it will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that changes and additions could be made thereto without deviating from the spirit or scope of the invention. This is particularly true when one bears in mind that the presently preferred embodiments merely exemplify the broader invention revealed herein. Accordingly, it will be clear that those with certain major features of the invention in mind could craft embodiments that incorporate those major features while not incorporating all of the features included in the preferred embodiments.
Therefore, the following claims shall define the scope of protection to be afforded to the inventor. Those claims shall be deemed to include equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention. It must be further noted that a plurality of the following claims may express certain elements as means for performing a specific function, at times without the recital of structure or material. As the law demands, any such claims shall be construed to cover not only the corresponding structure and material expressly described in this specification but also all equivalents thereof.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
294430 | Ames | Jul 1860 | A |
697907 | Wilder | Apr 1902 | A |
725567 | Ives | Apr 1903 | A |
762519 | Farrand | Jun 1904 | A |
829492 | Spiegel | Aug 1906 | A |
829902 | Urry | Aug 1906 | A |
RE13109 | Spiegel | May 1910 | E |
1150374 | Kanolt | Aug 1915 | A |
1259297 | Russell | Mar 1918 | A |
1260682 | Kanolt | Mar 1918 | A |
1285753 | Lowenstein | Nov 1918 | A |
1474572 | Whitstock | Nov 1923 | A |
1475430 | Curwen | Nov 1923 | A |
1804260 | Kerr | May 1931 | A |
1838173 | Chretien | Dec 1931 | A |
1918705 | Ives | Jul 1933 | A |
2045129 | Farrand | Jun 1936 | A |
2058581 | Fegan | Oct 1936 | A |
2085803 | Harrison | Jul 1937 | A |
2151301 | Percy et al. | Mar 1939 | A |
2177417 | Eggert | Oct 1939 | A |
2182325 | Tucker | Dec 1939 | A |
2246001 | Powers | Jun 1941 | A |
2350733 | Drotning | Jun 1944 | A |
2367967 | Schwartz | Jan 1945 | A |
2374371 | Morch | Apr 1945 | A |
2398257 | Schwartz | Apr 1946 | A |
2482947 | Swarbrick | Sep 1949 | A |
2528765 | Lindberg, Jr. | Nov 1950 | A |
2551188 | Wagner | May 1951 | A |
2645047 | O'Gorman | Jul 1953 | A |
2876570 | Swarbrick | Mar 1959 | A |
2915843 | Pabst et al. | Dec 1959 | A |
2917854 | Swarbrick | Dec 1959 | A |
2918743 | Swarbrick | Dec 1959 | A |
2959872 | Rodgers | Nov 1960 | A |
3000125 | Elvestrom | Sep 1961 | A |
3082560 | Elvestrom | Mar 1963 | A |
3145250 | Vargady | Aug 1964 | A |
3235987 | Yates | Feb 1966 | A |
3268238 | Finkel | Aug 1966 | A |
3314179 | Leach | Apr 1967 | A |
3365350 | Cahn | Jan 1968 | A |
3370371 | Swarbrick | Feb 1968 | A |
3484969 | Newland | Dec 1969 | A |
3589045 | Rakowsky | Jun 1971 | A |
3643361 | Eaves | Feb 1972 | A |
3683525 | Fukui | Aug 1972 | A |
3745966 | Seager | Jul 1973 | A |
3826028 | Shaw | Jul 1974 | A |
3862504 | Ringelheim et al. | Jan 1975 | A |
3961434 | Sampon | Jun 1976 | A |
4118879 | Simon | Oct 1978 | A |
4263737 | Simon | Apr 1981 | A |
4622769 | Friedman | Nov 1986 | A |
4789573 | Jenkinson | Dec 1988 | A |
4885193 | Head | Dec 1989 | A |
5152089 | Bellico | Oct 1992 | A |
5197886 | Sekiguchi | Mar 1993 | A |
5525383 | Witkowski | Jun 1996 | A |
5588526 | Fantone et al. | Dec 1996 | A |
5695346 | Sekiguchi et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5695415 | Docherty et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5782026 | Capie | Jul 1998 | A |
5901484 | Seder | May 1999 | A |
6286873 | Seder | Sep 2001 | B1 |
6385875 | Santorsola | May 2002 | B1 |
6781761 | Raymond | Aug 2004 | B2 |
6886280 | Spodek et al. | May 2005 | B2 |
7000343 | Teichman | Feb 2006 | B1 |
7151541 | Seder | Dec 2006 | B2 |
7331132 | Seder | Feb 2008 | B1 |
20020105808 | Ting Yup | Aug 2002 | A1 |
20030070333 | Usher et al. | Apr 2003 | A1 |
20040229193 | Wittmeyer et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61770141 | Feb 2013 | US |