1) Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an improved imprinting type of device that contains a relieved decorative design to be imprinted with paint or the like on a relatively smooth surface such as a wall or a piece of furniture. In order to create a wallpaper effect, the invention provides an improved multi-piece imprinting device and a pattern sheet that allows for repetitive imprinting following a predetermined pattern.
2) Description of Prior Art
The idea of making an imprinting device—also called a stamp—that is put in contact with ink or the like and pressed against a given surface to reproduce a design or character of any kind, dates as far back as the end of the nineteenth century, as is disclosed by Smith et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 518,515). An improved version of a rubber stamp was proposed by Selden et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 1,869,869) in the second quarter of the twentieth century. More recently, Bunger (U.S. Pat. No. 4,625,640) proposed a more complex version of an imprinting device, for imprinting successive images forming a composite imprint.
Different devices and methods have been used in interior design by professionals and amateurs alike, with a common intent: to create a unique or otherwise, but always nice, living or working environment, especially one pleasing to the eyes. Covering walls, furniture and other surfaces with different materials, such as paint, plain or patterned fabric, wood panels, and plain or patterned paper and plastic materials, including wallpaper, has been a common practice. The combined use of paint and an imprinting device has also been the object of development in this field.
A similar improved stamp type of device was probably first proposed as a method of decoration by Mitchell (GB 253,185) in 1925. Over the years, different products have been brought to market, and this technique has been widely used to obtain different decorative results, and consequently unmet needs have been detected. Several improvements in design, materials, and methods have been proposed: Matsumuro (U.S. Pat. No. D272,363, U.S. Pat. No. D272,364) has proposed a new design for a stamp with cap. Warn (GB598,731) proposed a device for decoration of surfaces, which design was similar to a stamp but the method of creating images on a surface was by removing wet paint material with the device, instead of applying paint with it. Another stamp type of device to remove wet paint from the surface and create a so-called textured effect was proposed by Bourboulis (U.S. Pat. No. 3,669,069). More recently, Carsel (U.S. Pat. No. 5,832,832, U.S. Pat. No. 5,857,411) has proposed an improved imprinting device that gains so-called ergonomic characteristics. Another approach has been proposed by Wasylczuck (U.S. Pat. No. 5,655,451) with a more complex imprinting device, where interfitting stamps can create a pattern with different ornamental designs on walls or other surfaces. McGuire (U.S. Pat. No. 4,030,414) has proposed a large, one-piece imprinting device, with more than one imprinting face, where one of the faces has the entire relieved ornamental design to be imprinted on a wall, and another face has a part of the design.
Hagen (U.S. Pat. No. 3,817,178) has proposed a complex approach to repetitive stamping on walls, where not only measurements and a chalk line are necessary, but also the device utilizes a chain connected at one end to the device and at the other end to the wall.
Although not closely related to the present invention, also of note is the original approach taken by Barbanell (U.S. Pat. No. 5,056,880), with what he calls holographic wallpaper that can create a 3-D effect on a wall in the presence of a laser illuminating system. All in all, the different ideas proposed over time and across the world illustrate the effort made to meet peoples' need or desire to decorate surfaces with images.
Nice results can be obtained with wallpapering, but one may try to avoid wallpapering because of the somewhat messy nature of the technique, its unforgiving nature with regard to minor mistakes of the operator, and above all because of the labor-intensive and even messier nature of the process of removing the wallpaper and going back to the previous finishing or trying a new one, whether paint or other, in case of a change of heart.
None of the imprinting devices and methods described above take into account one or both of following needs: (1) a means to repetitively imprint the decorative designs in a regular, well-measured fashion, such as a wallpaper pattern, especially when dealing with larger surfaces, such as a wall. In order to do that with any of the aforementioned devices, one would have to deal with different measuring tools, and yet, results would heavily depend on the operator's skill to use those measuring tools, would be hard to obtain, and would be extremely time-consuming. And (2) when attempting to repetitively imprint on a surface, especially the walls of a room, trying to create a wallpaper effect, there is a need to take into account some obstacles the operator may face when using an imprinting device. Individual imprinting devices containing parts of the decorative design should be provided, for use in wall corners and close to doors, for example, when such a need cannot be avoided.
The present invention takes into account both needs and proposes an improved, multi-piece imprinting device and a pattern sheet that allows for easy repetitive imprinting on a selected surface, because the pattern is predetermined, it is already measured and no further measurements are needed. A method for their combined use is also disclosed.
The primary object of this invention is to provide one with means to easily, efficaciously, and cost-effectively create a wallpaper type of effect on a surface from an imprinting device.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a simple pattern for easy and precise repetitive imprinting.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved imprinting device that (1) facilitates imprinting in the presence of an obstacle, such as internal corners of the walls in a room and close to doors, and (2) is designed in a way that helps one follow a pattern during the repetitive imprinting process.
The present invention proposes an improved, multi-piece imprinting device, a pattern sheet to allow for repetitive imprinting on a selected surface, and a method for their combined use.
Imprinting Device and Pattern Sheet:
The imprinting device is a multi-piece stamp made of polymer sponges, containing a relieved decorative design to be imprinted with paint or the like on a desired, relatively smooth surface, such as a wall of a piece of furniture. One of the pieces of the imprinting device contains the entire design (
The upper part 23 of the body (
The vertical line 27 and the horizontal line 28 on the base of the imprinting device serve as a guide for the operator during the imprinting process. Those lines should be aligned to the vertical and horizontal lines on the pattern sheet. The orientation sign, such as an arrow 22 on the base of the imprinting device that contains the entire decorative design is intended to help the operator position the imprinting device on the selected surface, during the imprinting process. The letters A, B, C, and D 21 are used to identify the quarters of the imprinting design (
The pattern sheet (
The vertical lines 29 and the horizontal lines 30 on the pattern sheet divide the perforations in quarters 25, which are numbered in a clock-wise fashion: the upper right quarter is #1, the lower right quarter is #2, the lower left quarter is #3, and the upper left quarter is #4. The quarters are intended to help the operator select a desired position to place the imprinting device and design to be imprinted. The numbering system also helps the operator to consistently select the sequence of positions of the imprinting device, to follow a pattern during the repetitive imprinting process. When placing the imprinting device on the selected surface, through a perforation in the pattern sheet, the lines on the imprinting device should be aligned to those on the sheet.
Complementary pattern sheets (
Combined Use of Imprinting Devices and Pattern Sheets:
In order to achieve the said wallpaper effect, the operator should first place the pattern sheet on the selected surface (
When the design is imprinted through all the perforations, the pattern sheet should be removed and repositioned on the same surface, moving it to the right, for example, where imprinting stopped. The pattern sheet should then be held in place by the pieces of masking tape that should be pressed against the surface, and the imprinting process should restart.
In case of need of a half design, the piece of the imprinting device containing the necessary half of the decorative design should be selected and the design imprinted (
In case of using an imprinting device and its complementary imprinting device, the operator should first imprint the decorative design with the help of its pattern sheet and wait till the paint dries to apply the complementary decorative design with the help of its complementary pattern sheet (
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PI0500076-9 | Jan 2004 | BR | national |