This invention relates to furniture. More specifically, this invention relates to upholstered furniture and their methods of manufacture and shipping.
A typical piece of upholstered furniture, such as a chair or sofa, includes a seat deck assembly supported by a frame. Manufacture of upholstered furniture generally begins with assembling the frame. Wood or wooden products are often used to construct a frame in the general shape of the furniture, which may include arm rests, the supporting portions for the seat deck assembly, and a back rest. After the frame is complete and the seat deck assembly installed, upholstery fabrics are typically secured around the bottom edge of the frame through fixed fastening means. This leaves the bottom open, exposing unsightly items such as springs or coils, allowing dust to collect within the frame, and allowing loose remnants to fall from the furniture to the floor.
Conventionally, the bottom opening is covered with a fabric dust cover, such as cambric, to create a more aesthetically pleasing appearance. The fabric dust cover is secured to the bottom of the frame, covering the rough edges of the upholstery fabric, through fixed fastening means, typically staples. A fabric dust cover is too flimsy for automation, requiring manual installation. Tools required for applying the fasteners to the frame are relatively expensive, may be dangerous to operate, and require extensive training before operating. Securing the fabric may also require an exorbitant number of fasteners, sometimes hundreds per piece of furniture, driving up the cost to manufacture each piece of furniture. Securing the fabric may also be very time consuming as a fabric dust cover must be perfectly cut and aligned to achieve an aesthetically pleasing look on a finished product. The quality of the dust cover install can be highly dependent upon the skill and training of the installer.
Once a piece of upholstered furniture is complete, it must be shipped from the manufacturing site. The fabric dust cover and bottom periphery of the furniture are particularly susceptible to damage during transport. Therefore, at additional expense, manufacturers often place the furniture on cardboard trays to help prevent the dust cover and bottom furniture edges from getting ripped, dented, dinged, other being otherwise damaged during transport. Once the furniture arrives at its final location, these cardboard trays are discarded as waste. Minimizing labor and parts costs, making the process safer, and making the process less dependent upon the training and skill of the installer, would result in better manufacturing efficiencies, more consistent quality sofas, better value for the consumer, less waste, and would be well received by the industry.
A packaged upholstered sofa in accordance with embodiments of this disclosure comprises an upholstered sofa with a wood frame in a protective tray with an integrated dust cover for protecting the lower periphery of the sofa during transport and storage, and for providing a permanent dust cover for the bottom of the sofa. The protective tray with the integrated dust cover has a semi-rigid dust cover portion sized for an open bottom of the sofa, and a tray periphery with four sidewalls portions. The tray periphery supporting and retaining the semi rigid dust cover and being separable from the dust cover when ready for the show room or customer use.
In embodiments, the sofa generally has a rectangular footprint and forms a box frame with a left panel, a right panel, a front panel, and a back panel. Each of the left, right, front, and back panels have a lowermost edge and an outside face. A bottom side has a rectangular peripheral frame defining an open bottom, the rectangular frame having a downwardly facing peripheral frame surface.
In embodiments, a dust cover portion of a semi-rigid tray with an integrated dust cover is fixedly attached to the undermost edge of left, right, front, and back panels, such that the peripheral edge of the upholstery cover is captured within the protective tray with an integrated dust cover. In embodiments, the integrated dust cover hides the peripheral edge of the upholstery cover from view of a user when the rest of the tray is removed.
In some embodiments, a protective tray with an integrated dust cover has one or more flaps removably attached to the body portion along perforated seams facilitating raising the flaps to extend upwardly along the sofa sides forming a protective skirt. The flaps may be secured together by tape, adhesives, interlocking features, or mechanical fasteners.
According to an embodiment, a method of packaging an upholstered sofa for shipment and use includes providing a protective tray with an integrated dust cover having a body portion and one or more flaps attached to the body portion along a perforated seam; aligning the body portion of the protective tray with an integrated dust cover with a bottom edge of the upholstered furniture; securing the protective tray with an integrated dust cover to the bottom edge of the upholstered furniture; folding the one or more flaps of the protective tray with an integrated dust cover around the bottom edge of the upholstered furniture.
A feature and advantage of embodiments is a protective tray attached to the bottom of a sofa by staples to the sofa frame, the protective tray spanning a open bottom of the frame, the tray having a separation means allowing portions surrounding a central portion covering the open bottom to be separated from the central portion leaving the central portion with a clean peripheral edge.
A feature and advantage of embodiments of the disclosure is the elimination of a panel by combining the dust cover and shipping tray, resulting in cost savings. A feature and advantage of embodiments of the disclosure is the ability to automate the application of the dust cover to the furniture by replacing fabric with a semi-rigid material capable of being manipulated by assembly robots. Automation allows for lower overall expense, fewer injuries, a more consistent and uniform look across multiple pieces of furniture, and a general reduction in the number of fasteners used. A feature and advantage of embodiments of the disclosure is a reduction of waste material by limiting the waste to the removable flaps. A feature and advantage of embodiments of the disclosure is that the user can easily remove and discard the flaps, allowing a piece of furniture to remain protected during all stages of transport from the manufacturer to the user.
A feature and advantage of embodiments is that the dust cover, normally not rigid, can be supported by a peripheral bottom portion and skirt portion of the protective cover and integrated dust cover, and be robotically picked up and attached to the sofa. In embodiments, the dust cover may be flexible or non rigid such that without the supporting skirt portion it would not be able to be readily picked up by the vacuum graspers of industrial robots; but with the surrounding skirts, the combination can be picked up and robotically attached to a sofa frame.
While embodiments of the disclosure are amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the disclosure to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
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In embodiments, the sofa tray comprises a bottom portion 36 and a skirt portion 38. Fold lines 40 may separate the bottom portion and skirt portion. The fold lines may be pre-creased or indented lines defining the fold lines. The sofa having a wood frame 41, lower frame portion 41 with a downwardly facing frame surface 42.
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The protective tray and integrated dust cover 135 has perforations or slits or other separation facilitating features 155 as shown in
U.S. Pat. Nos. 3,043,490; 6,409,267; 9,380,877; 8,438,716; 10,512,338; 2019/0254440; and 2019/0290017 are incorporated by reference for all purposes.
The above references in all sections of this application are herein incorporated by references in their entirety for all purposes. All of the features disclosed in this specification (including the references incorporated by reference, including any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), and/or all of the steps of any method or process so disclosed, may be combined in any combination, except combinations where at least some of such features and/or steps are mutually exclusive.
Each feature disclosed in this specification (including references incorporated by reference, any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings) may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent or similar purpose, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
The invention is not restricted to the details of the foregoing embodiment(s). The invention extends to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the features disclosed in this specification (including any incorporated by reference references, any accompanying claims, abstract and drawings), or to any novel one, or any novel combination, of the steps of any method or process so disclosed. The above references in all sections of this application are herein incorporated by references in their entirety for all purposes.
Although specific examples have been illustrated and described herein, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art that any arrangement calculated to achieve the same purpose could be substituted for the specific examples shown. This application is intended to cover adaptations or variations of the present subject matter. Therefore, it is intended that the invention be defined by the attached claims and their legal equivalents, as well as the following illustrative aspects. The above described aspects embodiments of the invention are merely descriptive of its principles and are not to be considered limiting. Further modifications of the invention herein disclosed will occur to those skilled in the respective arts and all such modifications are deemed to be within the scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/799,625, filed Jan. 31, 2019, the entire contents of which is incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62799625 | Jan 2019 | US |