This invention relates generally to articles of clothing and more specifically to such articles which a person can wear to keep himself cool in hot weather and warm in winter.
The object of this invention is to provide, in combination, a neck scarf and a plurality of gel packs which, when activated and mounted within the scarf, transfer heat energy from or, alternately, to the wearer's body, the heat transfer having an effect, which can last for hours, on the body temperature of the neck scarf wearer.
A further object is to provide such a combination in which cooling gel packs, when the scarf is used for cooling, can be activated by placing them in a freezer. Alternately, when the scarf is used for warming, warming gel packs can be activated by heating them in a microwave oven or the like.
The improved scarf, made of two layers of cloth and a heat-reflective, nonwoven liner, defines a series of pockets, each of which is dimensioned in such a way that a gel pack of conventional size can be slip-fitted into the pocket. The scarf's outer cloth layer is preferably fabricated of a waterproof cotton, nylon or polyester fabric. Contiguous with the outer cloth layer is the liner which functions as an insulator. The liner is employed to conserve some of the stored energy of the gel packs. A description of this insulator is found in U.S. Pat. No. 7,452,833. The innermost layer, which in use is positioned next to the wearer's body, is preferably made of the same waterproof fabric as is the outer cloth layer. Closure of each individual pocket, once its gel pack is in place, is achieved with the use of a Velcro® fastener or equivalent such as a zipper, buttons or snaps. Alternately, each of the pockets can be sewn shut after its gel pack has been mounted within it.
Sized to fit around the neck, the scarf's elongated mid-section is the preferred location for the series of pockets in which the gel packs are mounted. Generally rectangular in shape, the pockets are preferably aligned end-to-end, forming an array which extends longitudinally for substantially the entire length of the mid-section.
Further, in the preferred embodiments, the mid-section itself terminates distally in end closure sections which can be fastened together in use, not only holding the mid-section in place about the wearer's neck but also positioning at least one of the gel pack-filled pockets contiguous with the back of the neck. Moreover, when the gel-filled pockets are odd in number (three, preferably), the middle one of them, disposed mid-way between the mid-section's distal ends, tends to be centered on the back of the neck. So centered, the gel pack. in the middle pocket activates the hypothalamus, the gland which regulates an individual's body temperature, and thus magnifies the effect of heat transfer between the improved scarf and the wearer's body. Indeed, one of the reasons why the neck scarf with three gel packs works so well is that the middle gel pack in its array is centered on the back of the neck.
In the drawings, the improved scarf is indicated generally by the reference numeral 10 (
Each pocket 11-13 is sized so that a gel pack 30 such as the Ice-Brik Model IB3, which measures 5 inches long by 2.5 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick, and which is manufactured by Polar Industries, Inc., can be slip-fitted into the pocket. To accommodate an end-to-end array of three pockets 11-13, into each of which a gel pack such as the Ice-Brik Model IB3 can be slip-fitted, the mid-section 14 itself measures about 18 inches in length by 3 inches in width, with each of the pockets 11-13 being about 6 inches long.
For warming, a set of gel packs 30 such as the Model HH2 made by Heatmax Co. of Dalton, Ga. has been found to give good performance for hours when these gel packs are mounted within the pockets 11-13 of the scarf 10 (
Each of the pockets 11-13 includes two waterproof cloth layers 19, 21 and a layer of insulator 18 (
As is best illustrated in
Generally, the gel packs must be charged just prior to each use. Activation of cooling gel packs, whether or not they are removably housed in the pockets 11-13 of a scarf 10, entails placing them in a freezer. Likewise, activation of warming gel packs such as the Model HH2 requires that they be heated in a microwave oven or the like. Each of the HotHands gel packs, on the other hand, is charged by shaking it vigorously so as to mix the gel pack's contents, causing them to react chemically and release heat.
The end closure sections 15, 16, fastened together by interlocking the Velcro® strips 20, 24 on the back side of these sections, can be used to hold the scarf 10 snugly around the neck (
Importantly, the general symmetry of the scarf 10 with respect to an imaginary line transversely bisecting the center pocket 12 and a gel pack 30 housed within it facilitates a wearer's routinely positioning the latter gel pack in such away that it is both worn in close contact with the back of the neck and close enough to the wearer's hypothalamus that it is stimulated when heat energy is transferred between the center pocket's gel pack and the user's body, thereby magnifying, usually for hours at a time, the scarf's effect on the hypothalamus' regulation of the body's temperature.
This application is a non-provisional application of the earlier filed provisional application, Ser. No. 61/573,899, filed Sep. 14, 2011, and claims the benefit of the priority of the filing date of Sep. 14, 2011, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. Sec. 119(e).
Number | Date | Country | |
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61573899 | Sep 2011 | US |