The present disclosure is directed to supplementing existing human hair and, more particularly, to adding volume by attachment of additional hair strands to a host strand of hair.
It is known that hair transplants only achieve a 30% to 50% increase in hair density. While an increase of 50% in hair density generally looks better, a lower density of hair improvement usually presents a thin head of hair. Ideally, the goal is to obtain a thickening of 100% or more of existing hair.
Prior methods are problematic because of limitations on reusability. For example, adhesives have been used to glue or bond additional hair to an existing hair shaft. The difficulty with adhesives is that they are exposed to the elements, such as rain, the ocean, sweat, as well as chemicals from shampoo, which can break down the adhesive. When the adhesive breaks down, the bond fails, resulting in hair loss.
Other methods and devices include the use of metal clamps. Such clamps require special tools to attach the clamp to the hair. In order to adjust and accommodate growing hair, the clamps must be unclamped and reclamped, resulting in tedious and expensive labor. Metal fatigue is also an issue with these types of clamps. Moreover, the use of thousands of clamps in a head of hair may cause allergic reactions, and these clamps can be easily snagged or pulled with a comb or brush.
Another approach has been to use thermal plastic tubes that are shrunk onto the hair with the application of heat. Such heat-shrunk tubes are difficult to adjust because they require reheating, which can be damaging to existing hair and the scalp, and such tubes are usually not able to be reheated and reapplied.
In general, existing methods and devices are one-time applications only. The practicality of attempting to adjust these existing hair supplementation devices while attached to the existing hair makes them unusable, for all intents and purposes.
In accordance with one aspect of the present disclosure, a system and method for supplementing existing hair is provided, which can include thickening of the hair by adding hair extensions to a host hair to increase volume, such as density or length or both. The system includes a sleeve, a rod, a microtube, a transitional member, and an acceptance member. The rod is sized and shaped to have an external surface that has an outer diameter that is smaller than a width of the existing hair and configured to accept the sleeve on the external surface. The rod is configured to enable the sleeve to slide along the external surface of the rod. The sleeve is formed on the rod, such as by dipping the rod into a liquid latex rubber solution multiple times to create multiple coatings. Supplemental hairs are added to the sleeve in between coatings while the latex is still wet. The transitional member is sized and shaped to enable the sleeve to be slid from the external surface of the rod and stretched onto an external surface of the microtube. The microtube is sized and shaped to have an internal bore that is configured to accept the existing hair and an external surface that has an outer diameter that is larger than the outer diameter of the external surface of the rod. The acceptance member is sized and shaped to enable the existing hair to be positioned into the internal bore of the microtube. The microtube is configured to enable the sleeve to slide off the external surface of the microtube and onto the existing hair. When the sleeve is slid off the microtube and onto the existing hair, the sleeve constricts towards its original diameter, thus gripping the existing hair.
The foregoing and other features and advantages of the present disclosure will be more readily appreciated as the same become better understood from the following detailed description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
In the following description, certain specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of various disclosed implementations. However, one skilled in the relevant art will recognize that the present disclosed implementations may be practiced without one or more of these specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In other instances, well-known structures or components, or both, that are associated with the environment of the present disclosure have not been shown or described in order to avoid unnecessarily obscuring descriptions of the implementations.
Unless the context requires otherwise, throughout the specification and claims that follow, the word “comprise” and variations thereof, such as “comprises” and “comprising,” are to be construed in an open inclusive sense, that is, as “including, but not limited to.” The foregoing applies equally to the words “including” and “having.”
Reference throughout this description to “one implementation” or “an implementation” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the implementation is included in at least one implementation. Thus, the appearance of the phrases “in one implementation” or “in an implementation” in various places throughout the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same implementation. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more implementations.
The present disclosure is directed to a system and method of using an elastic sleeve (or tube) to attach several supplemental hairs (synthetic or real) to a host hair, such as a human hair growing out of the scalp. In so doing the hair density (i.e., the number of hairs per square inch) will be increased, giving the prospective user the potential for a fuller head of hair. Several procedures and components are utilized to create the sleeve, position the sleeve onto a component that can allow an installer to put the sleeve onto a host hair, and position the host hair into such a component.
For ease of discussion, the outside diameters of the rod 102, the microtube 106, and a host hair (e.g., host hair 408) will be described in generic units to show the relationship between the different diameters of the various components. It should be recognized that each person's hair can have a different diameter (e.g., between 0.04 mm to 0.15 mm), so the units described herein can be adjusted for a specific diameter of hair, such as that of a user. In some implementations, example measurements may also be given. In various implementations, a target or average host hair diameter can also be used. In this way, small, medium, and large sleeves can be created for the different thicknesses of human hair.
The rod 102 is dipped into a container 202 of liquid latex rubber 204, e.g., as illustrated in
After the rod 102 is dipped into the liquid latex rubber 204, the supplemental hairs 214 are added to the sleeve 210, as illustrated in
After the supplemental hairs 214 have been added to the sleeve 210 and the sleeve 210 has cured, the rod 102 may be re-dipped into the container 202 of the liquid latex rubber 204 to add additional latex to the sleeve 210. In various implementations, this re-dipping procedure is performed such that the supplemental hairs 214 are not dipped into the liquid latex rubber 204, as illustrated in
In various implementations, the rod 102 may be dipped into the liquid latex rubber 204 one or more times (e.g., between four and ten times, or even more) before or after, or before and after, the supplemental hairs 214 are added to the sleeve 210. In some implementations, the supplemental hairs 214 may be added over the course of multiple coatings. For example, the rod may be dipped in the liquid latex and two hairs may be added to this first coat of the liquid latex. After the first coat cures, the rod may be dipped again to create a second coat. After the second coat cures, the rod may be dipped again and two more hairs may be added to this third coat. After the third coat cures, the rod may be dipped again, resulting in a sleeve with four coats of latex. It should be recognized that multiple coats can be used to create the sleeve and that one or more hairs can be added to one or more coats of the sleeve.
In various implementations, a ridge 216 may be formed on the sleeve 210, as shown in
After the sleeve 210 is formed on the rod 102, the rod 102 is attached to the transitional member, as illustrated in
In some implementations, the rod 102 may include micro grooves formed at an angle into the rod. The micro grooves may be formed such that when the rod 102 is dipped into the liquid latex rubber 204, the liquid latex rubber 204 picks up or maps these indentations, thus forming micro grooves on the inside diameter of the sleeve. In various implementations, the micro grooves may be angled in a same direction as the supplemental hairs 214 so that the sleeve 210 can only slide in one direction, which is opposite of the supplemental hairs 214. In this way, the sleeve 210 can still be slid from the rod 102 to the microtube 106 and onto a host hair, as described herein. And since the micro grooves are angled towards the supplemental hairs, the sleeve would resist moving in that direction once the sleeve is positioned on a host hair, while still allowing the sleeve to move towards the scalp for repositioning.
The transitional member 104 includes a tip 304, a midsection 306 and a base 316. In various implementations, the tip 304 has a diameter of one unit and the base 316 has a diameter of four units, and the midsection 306 has a diameter that is tapered from one unit at the tip 304 to four units at the base 316.
A first end 302 of the rod 102 is attached to the tip 304 of the transitional member 104 using an adhesive or other attachment compound. The tip 304 of the transitional member 104 is the same diameter as or slightly smaller than the outside diameter of the first end 302 of the rod 102, which helps to allow the sleeve 210 to slide from the rod 102 and onto the transitional member 104. In various implementations, the transitional member 104 is nano coated, covered in a release agent, or polished such that the sleeve 210 can easily slide on the transitional member 104.
The transitional member 104 also includes a shaft 308 to engage the microtube 106 and temporarily connect the transitional member 104 to the microtube 106. The shaft 308 of the transitional member 104 has an external diameter that is sized and shaped to fit inside a first end 310 of the microtube 106, which has an internal diameter 312. The first end 310 of the microtube 106 abuts a base 316 of the transitional member 104. A diameter of the base 316 is the same as or slightly larger than a diameter 314 of the microtube 106, which helps to allow the sleeve 210 to slide from the transitional member 104 to the microtube 106.
Once the rod 102 is connected to the transitional member 104, and the transitional member 104 is engaged with the microtube 106, the sleeve 210 can be slid from the rod 102 onto the transitional member 104 and onto the microtube 106. In various implementations the microtube 106 has an outside diameter of four units (although some larger or smaller diameters may be employed, depending on the elastic properties of the sleeve 210). The midsection 306 of the transitional member 104 is sized and shaped to change the diameter of the sleeve 210 as the sleeve is slid from the rod 102 to the microtube 106. In various implementations, the midsection 306 is frustoconical or otherwise tapered from the tip 304 to the base 316. In various implementations, the microtube 106 is nano coated, covered in a release agent, or polished such that the sleeve 210 can easily slide on the microtube 106.
After the sleeve 210 is completely on the microtube 106, the rod 102 and transitional member 104 are removed from the microtube 106. The connector member 108 and acceptance member 110 are then connected to the microtube 106 to allow a host hair to be positioned inside the microtube 106.
The connector member 108 enables the acceptance member 110 to couple to and abut the end of the microtube 106 so that the acceptance member 110 is temporarily connected to the microtube 106. The connector member 108 and the acceptance member 110 may be permanently connected, or they may be separate but engage with one another when inserting a free end of the host hair 408 into the microtube 106, as illustrated. The connector member 108 and the microtube 106 are sized so that the microtube 106 slides inside the connector member 108. The connector member 108 can be referred to as a two-thirds cylinder since it does not fully close around the microtube 106 and includes a gap along the length of the connector member 108. It should be recognized that the connector member 108 may be more or less than two-thirds, but sized and shaped so that the connector member 108 engages the microtube 106 when the microtube is partially inserted into the connector member 108, and so that the connector member 108 can be separated from the microtube 106 (by sliding the connector member 108 off the microtube 106) and removed from the host hair 408 once the host hair 408 is inserted into the microtube 106.
The acceptance member 110 is a half-funnel-like shape. The open half of the acceptance member 110 is positioned in a same direction as the gap in the connector member 108, which allows the acceptance member 110 to be removed from the host hair 408 once the host hair 408 is inserted into the microtube 106. When inserted into the connector member 108, the microtube 106 abuts a first end 420 of the acceptance member 110. The first end 420 includes a wall thickness that is the same as (or slightly larger than) the thickness of the wall of the microtube 106, such that the internal surface of the microtube 106 aligns with an internal surface of the acceptance member 110, which allows the host hair 408 to slide from the acceptance member 110 into the microtube 106 without interruption. In various implementations, the first end 420 has the same dimensions as the microtube 106, but is only a half section, again to allow the acceptance member 110 to be removed once the host hair 408 is inserted into the microtube 106.
In various implementations, the sleeve 210 may be created on the rod 102 and moved onto the microtube 106 by a manufacturer prior to installation. The manufacturer may also attach the connector member 108 and the acceptance member 110 to the microtube 106. This combination of components maybe provided to the installer as the resulting product (i.e., the sleeve with the supplemental hairs) and the installation tool (i.e., the microtube, connector member, and acceptance member). Therefore, a plurality of product/installation tools can be used by an installer (e.g., a hair stylist) to provide enhanced hair density for a user.
In other implementations, the connector member 108 and the acceptance member 110 may not be utilized to guide the host hair 408 into the microtube 106. Rather a thread and lasso method may also be used. In at least one such implementation, the thread would pass through the microtube 106 from the end with the supplemental hairs 214 towards the user's scalp 430. On the end with the user's scalp 430 is a lasso configured into the tread. In this way, an installer can capture the host hair 408 with the lasso and then pull the thread back through the microtube 106, which results in the host hair 408 being pulled through the microtube 106. The sleeve 210 is then slid off the microtube 106 and onto the host hair 408, as discussed in more detail below.
In some other implementations, the sleeve 210 could be slid off the microtube 106 and onto the thread prior to a host hair being captured by the lasso. In this way, the installer would receive the sleeve 210 on a thread and lasso (without the microtube 106) and the installer can capture the host hair 408 with the lasso and then pull the host hair 408 through the sleeve 210 by pulling the thread and lasso back through the sleeve 210. In some implementations, the host hair or the thread, or both, may be lubricated to help enable the thread and host hair to be pulled through the sleeve. Similarly, the sleeve 210 may include a ridge 216, as discussed elsewhere herein, to help enable the installer to slide the sleeve onto the host hair.
In some implementations, an adhesive may also be added to the sleeve 210 to further ensure that the sleeve 210 will stay on the host hair 408. The adhesive may be added to the host hair 408 prior to sliding the sleeve 210 off the microtube 106 and onto the host hair 408. Alternatively, or additionally, the adhesive may be added to the outside of the microtube 106, such that the inside of the sleeve 210 becomes at least partially coated with the adhesive when the sleeve 210 is slid off the microtube 106 and onto the host hair 408. In yet other implementations, the sleeve 210 itself may be pre-conditioned with adhesive, such as a head sensitive adhesive that activates under higher temperatures.
The various implementations described above can be combined to provide further implementations. In addition, while the present disclosure has been described in the context of human hair, it will be appreciated that it can be utilized on any hair or flexible filament that has the characteristics of hair. These and other changes can be made to the implementations in light of the above-detailed description. In general, in the following claims, the terms used should not be construed to limit the claims to the specific implementations disclosed in the specification and the claims, but should be construed to include all possible implementations along with the full scope of equivalents to which such claims are entitled. Accordingly, the claims are not limited by the disclosure.
This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) to U.S. Provisional Application 62/321,990 filed Apr. 13, 2016, which application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2017/025976 | 4/4/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/180370 | 10/19/2017 | WO | A |
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