The disclosure relates generally to a method for tufting bristles and brushes using same, and more particularly, to a method for tufting bristles into a cushion of a brush and a cushioned brush.
Hair brushes and the tufting of hair brushes are generally known in the art. For example, most standard tufted brushes are manufactured by first drilling holes into a brush frame, and then filling the holes (mechanically) with bristles. The bristles are anchored in the holes and hence the brush frame, by forcing a metal fastener into the holes with the bristles, thereby compressing and anchoring the bristles in the hole. This process results in brush frames that are rigid and that do not deform or deflect to match the contour of the user's head.
Brushes having flexible cushion pads have been developed to flex and/or conform to the user's head during use. Most tufted cushion pads for these brushes on the market today are first fabricated with holes (through injection molding or die cutting) and are then fitted with bristles. The bristles are anchored in the cushion pad with an epoxy or fabric on the back side of the pad. Since the cushion pads are flexible by nature, the bonding of the bristles to the flexible cushion pad is extremely difficult, and results in frequent quality problems.
In accordance with one aspect of the disclosure, a hair brush a receiving portion at a first end of a body is disclosed. The hair brush further includes a plurality of bristle anchors, a cushion pad, and a plurality of bristles. The bristle anchors are disposed in the cushion pad and each include an aperture. The cushion pad includes an inner surface and an outer surface, and is disposed in the receiving portion. A plurality of bristles is tufted into each of the apertures.
In accordance with another aspect of the disclosure, a hair brush having a receiving portion at a first end of a body is disclosed. The hair brush further includes a plurality of bristle anchors, a cushion pad, and a plurality of bristles. The bristle anchors are disposed in the cushion pad and include a bore, a first end, a second end, and a groove. The groove is disposed between the first end and the second end, and the bore is oriented generally perpendicular to the groove. The cushion pad includes an inner surface, an outer surface, and a plurality of apertures. The cushion pad is disposed in the receiving portion, and the plurality of apertures engages the grooves in the plurality of bristle anchors. A plurality of bristles is tufted into each of the bores.
In accordance with another aspect of the disclosure, a method of tufting bristles is disclosed. The method includes molding a plurality of bristle anchors from a first material, and providing an aperture in each of the bristles anchors. The method further includes molding a cushion pad from a second material, and tufting a plurality of bristles in the apertures.
The advantages of the present invention will be apparent upon reading the following description in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
While the invention is susceptible to various modifications and alternative constructions, certain illustrative embodiments thereof have been shown in the drawings and will be described below in detail. It should be understood, however, that there is no intention to limit the invention to the specific forms disclosed, but, on the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, alternative constructions, and equivalents falling within the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
Referring now to the drawings, and with specific reference initially to
In one exemplary embodiment as illustrated in
In one exemplary embodiment as shown in
In operation, the cushion pad 24 may be tufted with the bristles 28 in a two-step process. First, the bristle anchors 26 may be imbedded into the cushion pad 24 using several techniques and technologies. In one exemplary embodiment, the cushion pad 24 may be injection molded such that the bristle anchors 26 are embedded within the cushion pad 24. For example, the cushion pad 24 may be manufactured using a two-shot injection molding process or an insert molding process. In a first part of such a process, the bristle anchors 26 may be molded first. In a second part of such a process, the cushion pad 24 may be molded around the bristle anchors 26. Depending upon the process, the anchor can either be molded in place and then the pad can be subsequently molded, or the anchors can be molded and then inserted into a second mold for molding the pad. Such a process may promote a covalent bond between a propylene material used for the bristle anchors 26, and the thermoplastic elastomeric used for the cushion pad 24.
There are many other processes, however, that can accomplish disposing the bristle anchors 26 in the cushion pad 24. The bristle anchors 26 may include features that allow for a mechanical connection between the cushion pad 24 and the bristle anchors 26, such that the bristle anchors 26 may simply be snapped or pressed into an aperture of the cushion pad 24. For example, as seen in
The grooves 60 may be created during the molding processes, or may be created in a separate machining operation. Regardless of the process in which the grooves 60 are created, the grooves 60 may be engaged with the cushion pad 24, and more specifically, may be engaged with the apertures 43 in the cushion pad 24.
The bristles 28 may be added to the bristle anchors 26 using several methods including, but not limited to, an automated Boucherie bristling machine known to those skilled in the art. In adding the bristles 28, apertures 48 are first created in the bristle anchors 26 either during or after the molding process and/or through a drilling operation. In the drilling operation, apertures 48 may be created in the bristle anchors 26 using a drill bit, or the like. A tuft of bristles 28 is then disposed in the aperture 48 of the bristle anchors 26 such that the second end 52 of the bristles 28 are located within the apertures 48. The tuft of bristles 28 can be forcibly inserted creating a tight tolerance fit in the apertures 48. To further secure the tuft of bristles 28 in the aperture 48, a metal staple, or other rigid dense object, may be disposed within the aperture 48 along with the bristles 28. The dense object may compress the second ends 52 of the bristles 28 in the aperture 48, such that the bristles are secured therein.
Many other tufting processes exist and are known in the art that can accomplish disposing the bristles 28 in the bristle anchors 26. For example, the bristles 28 can be manually placed within the aperture 48 such that no machine is required at all. Similarly, the bristles 28 may be added to the bristle anchors 26 during the molding or manufacturing process of the cushion pad 24 and/or the bristle anchors 26. The bristles 28 may also be disposed within the bristle anchors 26 without the use of the dense object. As such, the tight fit, i.e., the bristles being compressed in the aperture 48 of the bristle anchors 26, may be enough to retain the bristles 28 in the apertures 48 during use. Similarly, the bristles 28 may be glued, or otherwise anchored in the aperture 48.
Along with the above disclosed embodiments, the hair brush 20 and the cushion pads 24 may include initial and/or alternative features. For example, the cushion pad 24 need not be oval, but could be any shape desired, including round, square, triangular, or any other shape adaptable for the intended methods. Similarly, the bristle anchors 26 may be any shape able to accomplish the intended purpose. The bristles 28 also need not be poly-filament bristles 28, but could also be mono-filament bristles 28. The bristle anchors 26 are also not limited to the embodiment disclosed herein. For example, the bristle anchors 26 may have a cylindrical, triangular, square, circular or oval shape, or any other shape adaptable for the intended purpose. The aperture 48 in the bristle anchors 26 may also vary. For example, the aperture 48 need not be round, but could be square, oval, triangular, etc. Similarly, the aperture 48 may be through holes, blind holes, slots, or any other type of aperture able to receive the bristle 28.
The material from which the hair brush 20, the cushion pad 24, the bristle anchors 26, and the bristles 28 are constructed may also vary from the materials disclosed above. For example, the body 22 can be fabricated from relatively light weight, durable, and sturdy plastic materials such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene, or other suitable plastic materials. The body can also be wood, metal, or the like, or may not include the handle 34. Similarly, the body 22 can be injection molded, blow molded, continuously molded, extruded, vacuum formed, or the like. The manufacturing process or processes and materials can be selected based on feasibility, cost, tooling concerns, as well as other factors for a given application. The cushion pad 24 may be fabricated from relatively resilient and flexible materials such as rubber, fabric, plastic with high pliability, or plastic connected by joints to enable movement, paper-like material such as vellum, mylar, acetate, metal with high pliability in sheets or connected by joints, wooden pieces connected by joints to enable movement, or other suitable flexible material, or any material joined or designed to create flexible movement.
While the above has been described with reference to specific examples which are intended to be illustrative only and not to be limiting of the invention, it will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that changes, additions or deletions may be made to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application is a divisional application claiming the priority benefit of U.S. non-provisional application Ser. No. 10/807,940 filed on Mar. 24, 2004, now abandoned which claims the priority benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/482,425 filed on Jun. 25, 2003, the entire scope and content of both of which are expressly incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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1957363 | Snell | May 1934 | A |
2718024 | Maynard | Sep 1955 | A |
4244076 | Meyer | Jan 1981 | A |
5352025 | Huang | Oct 1994 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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809 459 | Jul 1951 | DE |
3927728 | Feb 1991 | DE |
2307493 | Nov 1976 | FR |
2466216 | Apr 1981 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20080315670 A1 | Dec 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60482425 | Jun 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10807940 | Mar 2004 | US |
Child | 12200453 | US |