Claims
- 1. A window covering, comprising:
a film having a textured surface that produces a prismatic effect that primarily allows light to pass through the film but at refracted random or semi-random angles that distort viewed images.
- 2. The window covering according to claim 1 wherein the film includes a polymeric substrate having a first substantially flat surface that attaches to a window without adhesives using cohesion and atmospheric pressure.
- 3. The window covering according to claim 1 wherein the textured surface includes a first layer having a textured non-uniform thickness and a second layer having a substantially uniform thickness extending over the first layer.
- 4. The window covering according to claim 3 wherein the first layer comprises a combination of textured areas that refract the light and substantially flat areas that do not substantially refract the light.
- 5. The window covering according to claim 3 wherein the first layer comprises various patterns of bumps.
- 6. The window covering according to claim 3 including a third layer having a substantially uniform thickness that is located on top of the second layer over flat non-textured areas of the first layer.
- 7. The window covering of claim 1 including an ink layer.
- 8. The window covering of claim 7 wherein the ink layer includes multiple different colored areas each having different design shapes that corresponding with different textured pattern shapes on the textured surface.
- 9. The window covering according to claim 8 including other colored areas in the ink layer aligned with substantially flat areas in the textured surface.
- 10. A textured window film, comprising:
a polymeric film; a first layer of bumps covering some areas of the polymeric film while leaving other areas of the polymeric film uncovered; and a substantially uniform second layer extending over the first layer of bumps and over the uncovered areas of the polymeric film.
- 11. The textured window film according to claim 10 wherein the polymeric film, the first layer and the second layer are all formed of substantially clear resin.
- 12. The textured window film according to claim 10 including a color formed on the polymeric film.
- 13. The textured window film according to claim 12 wherein the color is formed on an ink layer located between the polymeric film and the first layer of bumps.
- 14. The textured window film according to claim 13 wherein the first layer of bumps are arranged into shapes that align with colored shapes in the ink layer.
- 15. The textured window film of claim 14 wherein the colored shapes in the ink layer simulate pieces of stained glass and the bumps in the first layer are aligned with the colored shapes causing the simulated pieces of stained glass to sparkle when light passes through the window film.
- 16. The textured window film of claim 10 wherein the bumps in the first layer are formed into rows extending substantially along the entire polymeric sheet.
- 17. The textured window film according to claim 10 wherein individual bumps in the first layer have a systematic repeating pattern.
- 18. The textured window film according to claim 10 wherein the polymeric film is between 0.5-10 mils thick, the bumps in the first layer are approximately 0.5-5.0 mils thick and the second layer is approximately 0.5-2.0 mils thick.
- 19. The textured window film according to claim 10 including a scent applied to the second layer for providing an aromatic scented effect from the window film.
- 20. A method for making a window covering comprising:
creating a pattern on a first screen for printing; applying a first clear or translucent coating onto a polymeric film through the screen thereby creating a pattern on the polymeric film that corresponds to the pattern on the screen; and applying a second clear or translucent coating over the first coating and any areas of the polymeric film uncovered by the first coating.
- 21. The method according to claim 20 including:
creating a second pattern on a second screen; and applying a third coating onto the second coating through the second screen that only applies the third coating over the un-patterned areas of the first coating.
- 22. The method according to claim 20 including using the first screen and the pattern formed on the first screen to form patterns of bumps in the first coating that randomly or semi-randomly refract light.
- 23. The method according to claim 22 including forming the pattern on the first screen so that some areas of the polymeric film do not have bumps and allow light to pass through substantially un-refracted.
- 24. The method according to claim 22 including forming the pattern on the first screen so that the areas on the polymeric film without bumps are narrow enough to prevent undistorted viewing of images through the window covering.
- 25. The method according to claim 20 including applying an ink layer on top of the polymeric film.
- 26. The method according to claim 25 including creating a pattern on the first screen that forms textured patterns in the first coating that align with colored shapes formed in the ink layer.
- 27. The method according to claim 26 including creating a pattern for the first screen that leaves areas of the polymeric film uncovered by textured patterns wherein the uncovered areas are aligned with other colored shapes formed in the ink layer.
- 28. The method of claim 20 including forming a repeating pattern on the polymeric film that allow multiple sheets of the polymeric film to be seamlessly tiled together.
- 29. The method of claim 20 including applying the second coating using an un-patterned screen having a finer mesh than the screen used for forming the first coating.
- 30. A window film, comprising:
a polymeric film attachable to a window including a first set of regions simulating a stained glass visual image and a second region simulating a less transparent leaded or metal image extending between the first set stained glass images.
- 31. The window film according to claim 30 including a textured surface on the polymeric film that has bumps aligned with the first set of regions and has a substantially flat surface in the second region.
- 32. The window film according to claim 31 wherein the bumps in the first set of regions refract light at random or semi-random directions causing the stained glass visual image to sparkle when the light passes through the window film.
- 33. The window film according to claim 30 wherein the first set of regions have multiple different colors and shapes simulating different stained glass colors and shapes.
- 34. The window covering according to claim 30 wherein the first set of regions include additional color subregions simulating different veins of color extending through the simulated stained glass image.
- 35. The window covering according to claim 30 wherein the second region has at least two different colors with different degrees of opaqueness that together simulate a 3-dimensional visual effect for the leaded or metal image.
- 36. The window covering of claim 2 wherein said window covering includes ultra-violet inhibitors.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Ser. No. 09/990,670, filed Nov. 16, 2001 entitled “Decorative Translucent Window Covering”, which claims priority from U.S. Ser. No. 09/416,361, filed Oct. 12, 1999, now issued U.S. Pat. No. 6,358,598 entitled “Decorative Translucent Window Covering”.
Continuation in Parts (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09990670 |
Nov 2001 |
US |
Child |
10846807 |
May 2004 |
US |