The present invention relates to lampshade frames which are covered with a flexible material and can be collapsed to occupy less space during shipping and storage. More specifically, the present invention is a strut-free, collapsible lampshade with a cover, a removable upper and lower ring, and a mounting spider with a mounting hub for mounting the lampshade on a lamp base.
A significant part of the sales price of a table lamp arises from the cost of transporting the lamp from the manufacturing plant to the retail sales store or to the purchaser and the cost for inventory space, shelf space and storage space. Because the bulky shape of the shade comprises a substantial portion of the lamp's total packaging volume, the assembled shade often disproportionately affects the shipping, display and storage cost and ultimately the sales price of the lamp.
Prior art contains examples of collapsible shades, which depend on the stiffness of a removable frame to hold the shape of the shade after assembly. Prior art frames contain support rings, radial struts and vertical struts. The frame contributes a significant cost to the overall shade and in certain embodiments, it can be quite difficult to assemble. The present invention is designed to trim the ultimate cost of the lampshade by reducing the structural components in the frame. The frame reduction will also simplify the lampshade's assembly.
A collapsible lampshade is disclosed having an upper ring and a lower ring, and a flexible cover, such as cloth, fabric or paper removably attached to the upper and lower rings. The cover is made from a thin sheet of material, generally flexible, but relatively stiff when formed into a taught cylindrical or conical shape. The upper and lower rings comprise circular-shaped bands, which fit snugly into respective upper and lower edges of the shade. With the rings installed, the upper and lower edges of the cover are stretched taught and the cover stiffens into its assembled lampshade shape. The rings are removed from the shade to allow the shade to be collapsed. A mounting spider assembly spans either the upper or lower ring to facilitate mounting the lampshade onto a variety of lamps. The mounting spider comprises a plurality of legs and a mounting hub, and is manufactured as either a planar or conical-shaped structure. All embodiments of the invention include either socket or clip-type ring holders at the top and bottom inside edges of the lampshade to fix and hold the rings in place when the shade is assembled.
Each of the components of the lampshade as discussed above comes in one or more embodiments. A great number of embodiments of the composite lampshade may be obtained from mixing various embodiments of each of its components.
In a first embodiment of the cover, it is comprised of a thin sheet of material of a generally flexible nature, but becoming relatively stiff when formed into a cylindrical or conical lampshade-shape. Affixed to the inside of the upper and lower edges of the cover are a plurality of ring holders, used to hold the respective upper and lower rings in place at their respective edges. In this embodiment, the cover is manufactured as a single unit with a permanently locked seam running longitudinally between its upper and lower edges.
In a second embodiment, the cover comprises one or a plurality of cover segments separated along longitudinal seams. The segments are connected together, forming a complete cover, via a seam joining mechanism, such as an alternating, opposing flap interlocking system.
A first embodiment of the ring holders comprise a plurality of socket-type attachments affixed at equidistant intervals to the inside of the upper and/or lower edges of the cover. The sockets are affixed with their socket openings facing inward, toward the center of the edge of the shade.
In a second embodiment, the ring holders comprise clip-type attachments affixed at equidistant intervals to the inside of the upper and/or lower edges of the cover. The clips generally comprise a pair of jaws, running parallel to the plane of the top and bottom of the assembled shade, and spaced apart and configured to accept either an upper or lower ring in a non-slip manner.
In a third embodiment of the ring holders, they comprise a combination of both the socket and clip holders.
In a first embodiment of the upper and lower rings, the circular band is deformed with indentations at regular intervals. Permanently affixed within the depression of the indentation is a fixing nub, comprising a solid ball or other shape of material, sized to seat securely into the sockets of the socket-type ring holders. This embodiment of the rings is designed for use with either the socket-type ring holders alone, or with the combination of socket and clip-type ring holders. In either application, the rings are pressed into the inside edges of their associated upper or lower cover edges with the fixing nubs oriented into the socket openings of the socket-type holders. In the case of the combination holder embodiment, the rings are simultaneously pressed in between the jaws of the clips.
In a second embodiment, the rings have no indentations. In this embodiment, the rings are used with the clip-type ring holder attachments alone.
In a third embodiment of the rings, the first two embodiments may be designed such that the lower ring is comprised of a plurality of radially curved sections. Each section of the ring is connected to the others through the use of a ring connector, such as a plastic tube of an inner diameter suited to tightly fit the outer diameter of each end of two ring sections to be joined.
In a first embodiment of the mounting spider, the spider comprises a central mounting hub and a plurality of legs extending radially outward therefrom. The hub and legs exist in a single plane. The legs are attached to the upper ring at the inside edge of the ring's circular band. In the case of rings with indentations, the legs may be attached to the rings at those points, opposite the mounting nubs.
In a second embodiment of the spider, the legs may be oriented conically relative to the mounting hub. The legs of the spider in this embodiment may be attached to either the upper or lower rings in a similar manner to those of the first embodiment.
In a third embodiment of the spider, the legs may extend for a distance in a plane away from the mounting hub before bending into a truncated conical arrangement.
In the cases of either conical or truncated conical spider arrangements, the tip (small end) of the cone projects into the interior of the assembled shade.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are discussed hereinafter in reference to the drawings, in which:
The lampshade of the present invention comprises a plurality of arrangements consisting of combinations of various embodiments of the invention's primary and secondary constituent parts. The primary parts, as shown in
In a first embodiment, as shown in
In a second embodiment, as shown in
As shown in
A first embodiment of the ring holders comprise a plurality of socket-type attachments 4A affixed at equidistant intervals to the inside of the upper and/or lower edges of the cover. As shown in
In a second embodiment, the ring holders comprise clip-type attachments 4B affixed at equidistant intervals to the inside of the upper and/or lower edges of the cover. As shown in
In a third embodiment of the ring holders, as shown in
In a first embodiment of the upper and lower rings 2 or 3, as shown in
In a second embodiment, rings 2 and 3 have no indentations. In this embodiment, as shown in
In a third embodiment of the rings, the first two embodiments may be designed such that the lower ring 3 is comprised of a plurality of radially curved sections 16. This embodiment is shown in
In a first embodiment, as shown in
In a second embodiment, spider 5B, as shown in
In a third embodiment, as shown in
In an example of an arrangement of a composite shade utilizing combinations of the above primary and secondary components, as shown in
The invention is described above in terms of various embodiments of its primary and secondary components and describes an arrangement of the invention comprising a composite lampshade utilizing a single combination of those embodiments. As will be appreciated by one skilled in the art, many other combinations of the described cover, rings, ring holders and mounting spiders may be utilized to produce a series of different composite lampshades without departing from the teachings of the invention.
Because many varying and different embodiments may be made within the scope of the inventive concept herein taught, and because many modifications may be made in the embodiments herein detailed in accordance with the descriptive requirements of the law, it is to be understood that the details herein are to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 11/111,377 filed Apr. 21, 2005, now pending. This application is also related to U.S. application Ser. No. 10/615,496 filed Jul. 8, 2003, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,851,836 issued Feb. 8, 2005; and No. 10/274,699 filed Oct. 18, 2002, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,685,344 issued Feb. 3, 2004.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2819386 | Linderoth | Jan 1958 | A |
3764801 | Mainieks | Oct 1973 | A |
3780287 | Fauri | Dec 1973 | A |
3787676 | Korach | Jan 1974 | A |
4055760 | Weisbrod | Oct 1977 | A |
4383291 | Gall | May 1983 | A |
4745532 | Mo | May 1988 | A |
6561682 | Juang | May 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060239011 A1 | Oct 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11111377 | Apr 2005 | US |
Child | 11146634 | US |