Ornamental balloons or inflatables have been a festive favorite for all special occasions including birthdays, weddings, graduations, holidays and personal celebrations. Ornamental balloons take many shapes as characters, flowers, numbers, props, building structures and virtually anything that has some form of structure. Ornamental balloons may be filled with air or helium and generally require some type of anchoring or tethering system to keep the balloons in place, to prevent a helium balloon from floating upwardly away or to keep an air filled balloon from wandering or blowing away if outside.
In the market place today, over 90% of light-weight inflatables or balloons are filled with helium gas. Helium-filled inflatables and balloons are also generally not reusable. The helium gas leaks out through the special balloon material over time. Generally after a couple of weeks or less, the helium filled balloons are severely deflated, rendered unattractive and useless for their intended purpose.
Air inflatables are typically in spherical latex balloons, pool toys, trampolines and air mattress categories. How to display large decorative air-filled balloons has many challenges. Adhesives and cumbersome tie downs are commonly used but are very ineffective. Exposed tie downs and anchors are also unsightly and unsafe to be around as they cause children to be exposed to tripping and hurting themselves. So a particular concern with all balloons is keeping them in place without distracting their viewing with clumsy strings, tethers, anchors or rigid holders.
There is a need for large decorative and ornamental, air-filled balloons that do not use adhesives, exposed cumbersome tie downs or anchors. Such ornamental large balloons should have a long life, be capable of deflating for storage and later inflating for reuse. Desirably, common household items in combination with a unique ornamental balloon base design with hidden pockets for common household items would keep the ornament balloons in their place inside or outside during normal weather conditions.
A reusable, ornamental air-filled balloon structure includes a large, elongate, unbalanced upper ornamental chamber. The chamber has a valve on its bottom for inflating for use and deflating for storage of the balloon structure. A lower base ornamental chamber, that is adapted to rest on a flat surface or plane, has a centralized pocket with an aperture for transversely receiving the bottom of the upper chamber. A hidden valve for inflating the lower chamber for use and deflating for storage is provided. The upper chamber air valve is capable of being passed through the aperture and anchored to the lower chamber to secure the two chambers together while the upper chamber stays in an upright condition ideal for display. Common household filled cans are placed in the hidden centralized pocket to weigh the balloon structure down and keep it in place. The height of the upper ornamental chamber is generally at least three times taller than the height of the lower base chamber.
A principal object and advantage of the ornamental air-filled balloon structure of the present invention is that the structure is unusually tall but very stable when inflated and displayed from ground level.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure uses air instead of helium which makes its purchase relatively inexpensive, easy to inflate, set up and use for extended use as the air does not readily leak out of the balloon as helium would.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure stays in place both indoors and outdoors do to its hidden anchoring system.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is unusually tall wherein the upper ornamental chamber is at least 3 or 4 times taller than the lower base chamber.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is unusually stable wherein the lower ornamental chamber is approximately one-third in width to the height of the upper ornamental chamber.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is of great stability, the ornamental chambers can take on a great variety of shapes and ornamentation for multiple uses heretofore not known.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is the ornamental base chamber can be made with one, two, three, four or more chambers.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure may be inflated with air and stays inflated for a long duration and further may be deflated and stored for multiple future uses.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is that the balloon structure may be inflated with air which is heavier than helium so that the ornamental structure has less tendency to float away and requires minimal anchoring.
Another object and advantage of the present invention is that the ornamental balloon structure is that it does not use unsightly and unsafe cumbersome tie downs and anchors making the balloon structure safe for children to play around the structure.
Referring to
Upper snowman balloon chamber 16 is elongate and tall, vertically oriented and somewhat unbalanced. Reasonably tall illustratively means the upper chamber may be 50 inches or taller HU. The upper chamber has a curved bottom end 18 and at the central portion of bottom seam is located a depending connector known as an air valve 20 for inflating and deflating the upper chamber 16. Suitable air valves 20 for this invention maybe found disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,917,646. Adjacent the central air valve 20 are left and right depending connector tabs 22, 24 which similarly have stretch cord 30 tied to each tab 22, 24 with some slack therebetween.
To inflate Upper snowman balloon chamber 16, an air pump 26 or straw 28 may be inserted into and through valve 20. Air is pumped or blown into the chamber 16 until it is fairly rigidly inflated. When dis-assembling the balloon structure 14, the straw 28 is simply inserted into and through the valve 20 and the air within the balloon chamber 16 is simply evacuated.
Lower ornamental snowman balloon chamber base 36 may take many shapes and chamber variations having overall width W and length L and a height HL which illustratively may be approximately 10 inches. Illustrated with the snowman ornamental balloon structure 14, the lower base chamber 36 comprises first subchamber 36A, second subchamber 36B, third subchamber 36C and fourth subchamber 36D. these subchambers may be interconnected by air channels which facilitate and expedite inflation of the chamber base balloon 36. Between chambers 36A and 36D as well as chambers 36B and 36C, is located an un-inflated web or pocket 38 of fused balloon material that extends the width W of the balloon base 36. An aperture 40 is in the center of web 38. An air valve 42 for inflating and deflating the lower balloon chamber 16 is in the lower balloon chamber base 16 and may be hidden on a bottom surface (see
To connect the upper ornamental balloon chamber 16 to the lower ornamental base balloon chamber 36 please review
Disassembly is generally the reverse of assembly just above. The stretch cord 30 is lifted out from under the lower base chamber 36. The air valve 20 has its tape removed from the lower base chamber 36 and is pulled through the aperture 40 to free the upper chamber 16 from the lower base chamber 36. The straw 28 is then inserted to valves 20 and 42 and the air within the upper and lower chambers 16 and 36 is evacuated and the chambers 16 and 36 are rolled up or folded till next usage.
Ornamental balloon structures 10 of snowman 14, graduation 50, Nutcracker toy soldier 60, champagne bottle 70 and Christmas tree 80 are all reusable and invisibly anchorable with household goods as weights 44. They each are relative tall in that the upper balloon chambers are approximate 50 inches or tall while the lower balloon chambers are approximately 10 inches high. This means that the upper balloon chambers are three to five times taller than the lower base chambers. In other words, the base chambers are one fifth to one third smaller than the upper chambers. By this arrangement, the ornamental balloon structures 10, 14, 50, 60, 70 and 80 are real-life-size in a range approximating sixty inches. The length L and width W (
Referring to
Lower ornamental balloon chamber 108 is of a slightly different embodiment. It has a first front chamber 110 and a second rear chamber 112 which may be independent from each other or joined by interconnecting channels 114. Each chamber 110 and 112 have distal end turned out feet 111 and 113 to increase the stabilization of the lower balloon chamber without adding significant width or length as to balance the transversely mounted upper ornamental chamber 92.
The above specification and FIGS. are for illustrative purposes only. The true scope of the present invention being defined by the following claims.