1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method of forming the canopy of an umbrella, such as but not limited to large outdoor/recreational umbrellas, so as to display a selected pattern on the canopy. The method of this invention allows for a variety of pleasing and/or intricate patterns to be created on fabric and then displayed in alignment, despite there being a plurality of fabric pieces used to form the umbrella canopy, such that the resulting canopy has a finished look. Compared to the few known ways of creating an umbrella canopy, the method of the present invention offers significant savings in terms of production and assembly time, and other associated costs.
2. Description of the Related Art
It seems there have traditionally been only a limited number of ways to create the canopy of fabric that makes up an umbrella, and in particular, the fabric which covers the ribs of the umbrella frame that allow it to open and close. Perhaps the most common way of creating the canopy is to take a single large piece of fabric and to form it into a circle or other shape suitable matched to that of the umbrella frame in the open position. Of course, if the umbrella is of the type used at outdoor cafés, pool areas and the like, the canopy may be so large as to require stitching together of two or more pieces of fabric together. This generally does not present any problems when the canopy is made of a single solid color, although when it is desired to make the canopy with a fabric having a pattern, greater effort is required to ensure that the pattern will line up once the fabric pieces have been assembled into the canopy. This may be the primary reason that most outdoor recreational umbrellas are seen to have a canopy of a single color, whether blue, green, red, etc.
Of course, umbrella canopies can and do incorporate fabric having a pattern thereon. For instance, some hand-held umbrellas have a canopy with plaid patterns, stripe patterns, polka dots, etc. Due to their relatively small size, however, and the ability to create their canopies with significantly less fabric, the additional effort required to achieve a pleasing finished appearance is not great. As such, the canopy formation of hand-held umbrellas will not be considered further with regard to this application, as the invention described subsequently herein will primarily be discussed in connection with large, outdoor recreational umbrellas, where much more fabric is needed, including typically several pieces of fabric that must be stitched together.
It is also possible for even these larger umbrellas to have canopies made with fabric having a pattern thereon, although due to the time and extra effort required to assemble such fabric correctly, including the extra fabric needed, they are not common. For instance, if a canopy made of a striped fabric is desired, it will require cutting the fabric into different pieces, arranging those pieces so that the stripes will line up and then assembling them together to keep that sequence in order to offer a finished look to the canopy once it is formed. In this process, more fabric is used and/or wasted to achieve the desired result of pattern alignment, with more time and labor involved as well. This, in turn, leads to a higher cost for such umbrella canopies than that associated with canopies made of a single solid fabric. In short, many would like to see and/or purchase outdoor recreational umbrellas with a wider variety of canopy fabrics and styles, and especially, canopies with interesting patterns thereon, but the costs associated with creating such canopies has traditionally been an obstacle to same.
Accordingly, there is a need in this field of art for a method of forming the canopy of an umbrella especially, but not necessarily exclusively, for large outdoor/recreational umbrellas, so as to have a pattern thereon which saves on the production time and other costs associated therewith. Any such method should involve the steps of cutting the fabric that will be used to make the canopy into different pieces, arranging those pieces so that the desired pattern will line up in the shape called for by the canopy, and then assembling them together in a manner which both offers the resulting canopy with a pattern having a finished look and with an ability to withstand the sometimes harsh outdoor elements to which it will be subjected. Any such method would ideally incorporate a planning step for the decorative pattern to repeat in sync despite the use of a plurality of pieces to make up the canopy, and also, the method would ideally be suited for creation of the fabric, including the pattern, by using advanced technology machines that incorporate looms, etc. and which are used in the industry of producing fabric.
The present invention is directed to a method of producing or forming an umbrella canopy specifically, but not exclusively, of the type used in combination with the larger, outdoor recreational umbrellas found at various public and private locations. More specifically, the method of the present invention is directed to the producing of an umbrella canopy which has a predetermined, substantially continuous decorative pattern on an outer exposed surface thereof. Further, the type of decorative pattern referred to is arranged in a continuously aligned orientation regardless of the size or shape of the umbrella canopy or the intricacies or the decorative details of the pattern itself. Moreover, the method of the present invention facilitates the formation of the decorative pattern on the umbrella canopy in a manner which simplifies the assembly of the pieces or “canopy sections” without the need for detailed, labor intensive, and time-consuming “matching” of the pattern segments in order to accomplish the greatly preferred continuous alignment of the pattern, when displayed on the completed umbrella canopy. In typical fashion, umbrella canopies of the type referred to herein are formed from a plurality of canopy sections each having a portion of the display pattern formed thereon. The assembly of the finished umbrella canopy product is accomplished by joining or attaching the plurality of canopy sections into a collective array which corresponds to or defines the intended size and configuration of the finished canopy.
Therefore, the method of the present invention comprises the forming of an elongated sheet of canopy material having a preselected decorative pattern appearing on at least one exposed surface thereof. The material from which the sheet and canopy are formed may, of course, vary greatly dependent upon the intended application, location, environment and/or use of the umbrella and possibly a variety of other factors. Such materials can include fabric, canvas, flexible synthetic materials including a variety of plastics or plastic coated materials of the type well known in the umbrella industry. The decorative pattern extends continuously along a sufficient length of the sheet to assure the accurate and intended formation of an adequate number of canopy sections. The number size and configuration of the canopy sections are such that, when assembled, they collectively form the umbrella canopy of the intended size and configuration. Therefore, both the length and the width of the sheet may vary dependent upon the intended dimensions and configuration of the final umbrella canopy product.
Formation of the elongated sheet or roll of fabric with the intended decorative pattern appearing thereon further involves defining the decorative pattern by a plurality of pattern segments. Moreover, the pattern segments are successively displayed along a continuous length of the sheet, wherein adjacent ones of the pattern segments are disposed in an inverted orientation relative to one another. As will be explained in greater detail hereinafter, additional preferred embodiments of the method of the present invention also involve the consecutively arranged pattern segments being disposed in a non-coaxial alignment with the central longitudinal axis of the sheet. As such, adjacent ones of the pattern segments are offset or displaced laterally or transversely in opposite directions from the central longitudinal axis of the sheet. Such prearranged orientation and disposition of the plurality of pattern segments, and in particular, adjacent ones of the pattern segments relative to one another facilitates the “automatic” continuous alignment of the various details of the decorative pattern, once the canopy sections are separated from the canopy material sheet and joined into the finished umbrella canopy product.
As indicated above, the method of the present invention also comprises the separating of the canopy material sheet into the requisite number of canopy sections. As such, the canopy sections are formed into predetermined sizes and configurations by means of a plurality of bias cuts extending transversely across the entire width of the sheet. Further, the various bias cuts are disposed at predetermined angular orientations relative to the length or longitudinal axis of the sheet. As such, the bias cuts extend substantially between each of the adjacent pattern segments and therefore define contiguous borders of adjacent pattern segments while accomplishing separation of the sheet into the plurality of canopy sections, as set forth above.
It is emphasized that the bias cuts do not necessarily pass precisely between each of the pattern segments but instead pass through and/or along a path which may interrupt the decorative details of one or both of the correspondingly positioned, adjacent pattern segments. Therefore, adjacently positioned ones of the separated canopy sections may not have a whole or complete pattern segment appearing thereon. However, the precise location of each of the plurality of bias cuts used to form the canopy sections by separating the pattern segments, in the manner set forth herein, facilitates the continuous alignment of the details of the decorative pattern once the canopy sections are joined into the final umbrella canopy product.
As will become more evident from the description of the method of the present invention as hereinafter provided, the decorative details and/or intricacies of the decorative pattern may vary greatly and are not limited to more simplistic patterns or patterns of a specific category such as stripes or other geometric figures. Also, the size, configuration and number of canopy sections required to form the finished umbrella canopy product may also vary greatly depending on the intended size and shape of the finished canopy. Further, the method of the present invention may be used to produce products, other than umbrella canopies, having decorative patterns contained thereon with minimal or no modifications to the various procedures involved.
Accordingly, the present invention overcomes many of the problems and disadvantages associated with the formation of umbrella canopies, as well as a variety of other products, such as but not limited to pillows, etc., which are intended to display any of a wide variety of a decorative patterns by alleviating the necessity to subjectively match sectional components of the product being formed in order to facilitate decorative pattern having continuously aligned details.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more clear when the drawings as well as the detailed description are taken into consideration.
For a fuller understanding of the nature of the present invention, reference should be had to the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
Like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the several view of the drawings.
As shown in the accompanying drawings, the present invention is directed to a method of forming a canopy generally indicated as 10 for an umbrella such as, but not limited to, relatively large outdoor and/or recreational umbrellas. As such, the canopy 10 is typically formed by interconnecting a plurality of canopy sections designated by reference numerals 1 through 6 in
With primary references to
Moreover, the present invention is directed to a method of forming or producing the umbrella canopy 10 such that the plurality of canopy sections 1-6 are individually formed in a manner which accomplishes “automatic” alignment of the pattern segments and/or decorative details of the pattern, in a continuous manner once the canopy sections 1-6 are assembled in the manner schematically demonstrated in
By way of example only, the canopy structure 10 represented in
Referring now to
The method of the present invention further comprises the formation of each of the plurality of canopy sections 1-6 by separating each canopy section from one another and from the elongated sheet 12 of canopy material. This is accomplished by the extension of a bias cut 36 schematically represented in
With reference to
Other features associated with the forming and/or separation of the individual canopy sections 1-6 and/or 1′-6′ comprise the extending of each of the bias cuts 36 and/or 36′ at a predetermined angle relative to the longitudinal axis 30 of the sheet 12. This angular relationship between the respective bias cuts 36, 36′ and the axis 30 is dependent, at least in part, upon the intended size, and possibly the preselected configuration of each of the canopy sections 1-6 and/or 1′-6′. However, in any of the preferred embodiments of the present invention, the respective bias cuts 36 and 36′ extend completely along the width and/or transverse dimension of the sheet 12 in order to accomplish complete separation as also clearly demonstrated in
Also, in at least one preferred embodiment, such as that demonstrated in
Once separated in the manner set forth above, the canopy sections 1-6 or 1′-6′ are arranged in a substantially common orientation so as to collectively correspond to or conform with the intended configuration of the finished umbrella canopy product 10 or 10′. With reference to
The present application is based on and a claim to priority is made under 35 U.S.C. Section 119(e) to provisional patent application currently pending in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office having Ser. No. 60/533,196 and a filing date of Dec. 30, 2003.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2745421 | Russell | May 1956 | A |
4368749 | Lindler et al. | Jan 1983 | A |
4832304 | Morgulis | May 1989 | A |
4993445 | Dubinsky | Feb 1991 | A |
5020557 | Apple | Jun 1991 | A |
5193566 | Chen | Mar 1993 | A |
5218981 | Lai | Jun 1993 | A |
5355903 | Haddad et al. | Oct 1994 | A |
5488966 | Baldwin et al. | Feb 1996 | A |
5640984 | Dubunsky | Jun 1997 | A |
5836328 | Lee | Nov 1998 | A |
7063029 | Tsui et al. | Jun 2006 | B1 |
20030005952 | Chen | Jan 2003 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60533196 | Dec 2003 | US |