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1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to furniture whose function is to enhance sexual pleasure (U.S. CL. 5/929), and specifically to a supportive structure enhancing the function of a bed (U.S. CL. 5/503.1; 128/845).
The desire to enhance the pleasure inherent in sexual intimacy has given rise to many products. Among them are suspensory apparatus designed to increase mobility and improve positioning. Some of these apparatus require suspension from the ceiling or a specialized frame, for example U.S. Pat. No. 4,825,855, Kundson, Jr., May 2, 1989, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,782,243, Bisyak, Jul. 21, 1998 (marketed successfully as The Love Swing®). Others depend on tubular supporting structures that do not readily lend themselves to placement over a bed, for example U.S. Pat. No. 5,280,794, Degen, Jan. 2, 1994, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 20030126686, Nash, Jul. 10, 2003 (marketed as The LoveRocker).
No simple and aesthetically pleasing means for supporting these or similar apparatus is available. The apparatus themselves are not furniture in a traditional sense. Most are difficult if not impossible to utilize over a bed. This invention provides an attractive supportive structure, which allows the use of the above-mentioned suspensory apparatus over a bed without the need for a separate and obtrusive frame.
2. Prior Art
Sexually Assistive Apparatus
Previously patented sexually assistive apparatus rarely represent inventions that a typical consumer would classify as furniture. Most are contraptions that appear mechanical, resembling joined bicycle frames (U.S. Pat. No. 6,745,774, Fessler, Jun. 8, 2004). Some appear more suitable for torture than pleasure or romance (U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,453,080, Mitchum, Jr., Sep. 26, 1995, and 5,875,779, Fuhrman, et al., Mar. 2, 1999). The following are but a few of the available examples: U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,926,006, Black, Aug. 9, 2005; 6,698,431, Harris, et al., Mar. 2, 2004; 6,030,039, Essler, Feb. 29, 2000; 4,373,222, Wolfe, et al., Feb. 15, 1983; 4,099,773, Chang, Jul. 11, 1978; 3,971,592, Farley, Jul. 27, 1976. Most people would not buy such contraptions for fear of embarrassment. In general, they do not satisfy a need for furniture that is at once functional, aesthetically pleasing, and acceptable for public display. There are a few exceptions. U.S. Pat. No. 3,855,652, Nicholson, Dec. 24, 1974, is a couch placed at the foot of a bed that provides support for one individual's feet and for their partner's knees. U.S. Pat. No. 4,884,842, Finkelstein, Dec. 5, 1989, is a design for a curved stool that allows access to the genitalia of the person seated on it. U.S. Pat. No. 6,338,344, Sinohui, Jr., Jan. 15, 2002, is a variation of a common chair design. It can be used to achieve several sexual positions that may not be as comfortable on a standard chair.
However, there remains a long-felt and incompletely solved need for furniture that is able to provide greater freedom in sexual activity yet does not need to be hidden from view when not in use.
Prior Art:
Designs that Enhance the Function of a Bed
Beds, or their accessories, have been specifically designed to help us read more comfortably, to watch TV, work on computers, or eat there. However, when two adults are known to share a bed, it is not generally assumed that they do so to eat, or to work on their computers. Rather, the assumption is that they will both sleep on the bed as well as participate in sexual activity on the bed. In our society, our beds are where we perform the majority of our sexual acts. Even so, beds do not particularly serve this function well.
The following is a sampling of the many attempts to design beds, or bed accessories, with the goal of enhancing sexual pleasure or positioning. Perlin (U.S. Pat. No. 4,571,761, Feb. 25, 1986) and Hanson (U.S. Pat. No. 4,122,567, Oct. 31, 1978) among others designed mattresses that allow for more variety in body positioning during sexual intercourse. These designs present significant impediments to the use of bed linens. U.S. Pat. No. 6,925,669, Friedman, et al., Aug. 9, 2005 comprises a system of supportive cushions, typically placed on a bed. These cushions support the hips of their user off the surface of the bed. This system is currently marketed successfully as The Liberator®. Libby (U.S. Pat. No. 677,672, Jul. 2, 1901), Matern, Jr. (U.S. Pat. No. 6,101,652, Aug. 15, 2000) and Dawes (U.S. patent application Ser. No. 2005/0081296 A1, Apr. 21, 2005) attached stirrups to a standard bed. These must be positioned at the edge of the mattress, which limits their utility. U.S. Pat. No. 3,668,722, Gallant, Jun. 13, 1972 is self-described as a “cradle” that can be placed on a bed to hold the weight of one partner over the other. Though it is possible that it will actually perform its stated function, this item does not appear particularly comfortable or easy to use, and may collapse on its users.
The above examples suggest that the USPTO declaration that a “conventional bed” is “inherently adapted to facilitate sexual relations” is an assumption that needs reconsideration. There are some positions for sexual relations that cannot be achieved comfortably, or cannot be maintained comfortably on a regular bed. It is a cultural phenomenon, coupled with convenience, that has determined that our beds are where most of us experience the majority of our sexual activity. However, the fact that we use our beds for sex does not mean that they are particularly well designed for this activity. With minimal imagination, it is possible to identify multiple ways for a couple to interact sexually that would be difficult or uncomfortable in a conventional bed. The plurality of inventions for enhancing sexual activity speaks to a widely held desire for a functional enhancement over what is inherently provided by a conventional bed.
Prior Art: Supportive Element over a Bed
Supportive structural elements over a bed have been previously devised and utilized. Most of these are only decorative or support decorative elements such as drapery, or mosquito netting, and cannot safely support the weight of an adult human.
Other, more substantial structures have been designed for use with a bed in order to assist in lifting or positioning an infirm person, and for specific surgical procedures. These include the many variations of trapeze apparatus over a “hospital bed”. While these structures and their accessories could possibly be utilized for sexual activity, they are not designed for this purpose. Neither are they satisfactory as attractive bedroom furniture.
Substantial supportive structures unrelated to health care have been described, such as U.S. Pat. No. 5,241,717, Ward et al., Sep. 7, 1993, that purports to protect the occupants of the underlying bed from falling debris during a catastrophe such as an earthquake. Other similar inventions follow: U.S. Pat. No. 5,737,784, Jackman, Apr. 14, 1998; U.S. Pat. No. 4,965,895, Shustov, Oct. 30, 1990; U.S. Pat. No. 4,782,541, Tuchman, Nov. 8, 1988; U.S. Pat. No. 4,779,294, Miller, Oct. 25, 1988; U.S. Pat. No. 4,069,527, Harris, Jan. 24, 1978. These devices fulfill their respective, particular objectives, yet none of these are aesthetically pleasing structures marketable as means to enhance their user's sexual pleasure.
Objects and Advantages
The over-bed support structure fills the need for a piece of bedroom furniture that allows its users to safely improvise a greater range of sexual positions than possible on a standard bed, yet without appearing to be a sexual apparatus.
This over-bed structure advances the art by providing a structure that
This over-bed support structure provides a means for an adult to sit, or kneel, astride of their sexual partner's face or pelvis while supporting their own weight, by holding on to the overhead structure. The over-bed support structure may also be utilized to suspend one or both of the legs of an adult, via straps attached to the structure, thereby enabling their partner comfortable access to their genitalia. Previously referenced suspensory apparatus such as “swings” and “chairs” can be adapted for use with the structure. Other sexual positions enabled by this invention include kneeling face to face, or front to back, with one or both partners stabilizing their bodies by grasping the canopy structure. It is central to the invention that the canopy and supporting posts of the bed be capable of withstanding the structural load of the weight of an adult body.
An overhead structure for a bed, designed to increase the options available to its users in positioning their bodies while performing sexual acts. Minimally, the overhead structure consists of a framework, and its supporting elements, positioned over a bed and able to support the weight of a person weighing up to 200 pounds.
This over-bed support structure allows persons involved in sexual intercourse to position their bodies in ways that may be more comfortable, or more pleasurable, if one of the participants is able to support some or all of their weight from an overhead apparatus. This over-bed support structure functions in conjunction with other inventions, which enhance the functionality of the over-bed support structure through the attachment of suspensory apparatus to the over-bed support structure.
The type of material used in fabricating the structure does not have a direct bearing on the invention. Structural members may be made of steel, aluminum, plastic, fiberglass, wood, composite materials or any other suitable material or combination of materials.
The arrangement of the structural members may also vary, depending on the innate requirements of the materials used, or on aesthetic considerations applicable to the bed itself or to styles of bedroom furniture the structure is applied to. The method of supporting this structure may also vary, though in most cases its application will be as a canopy over a four-poster bed. However, it may also be suspended from a separate supporting structure, or from the ceiling, or from structural members in the ceiling. Alternately, it may be cantilevered from the bed frame, or from a separate structure, or from a wall, or from structural members in a wall.
Commercially, the over-bed support structure will find its application primarily as an integral component of a four-poster bed. It is possible to retrofit this over-bed support structure to an existing four-poster bed. However, most existing four-poster beds do not have the structural integrity to support both this over-bed support structure and the weight of a human adult, much less the stability to withstand any lateral forces produced by the movements of its user's bodies. Because of this, the over-bed support structure is presented in the appended drawings as an integral part of a four-poster bed that was designed in conjunction with it.
The above described drawings illustrate some embodiments of the invention. The following description, in conjunction with the drawings, is presented to enable anyone of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention. Various modifications, and variations in use and application, will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art. The general principles defined in the appended claims may be applied to a wide range of embodiments. Thus the invention is not intended to be limited to the aspects presented, but is accorded the widest scope consistent with the novel principles and features disclosed herein.
The embodiment in
Additional embodiments illustrated in
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