GB2316301A - Hairbrush - Google Patents

Hairbrush Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB2316301A
GB2316301A GB9618430A GB9618430A GB2316301A GB 2316301 A GB2316301 A GB 2316301A GB 9618430 A GB9618430 A GB 9618430A GB 9618430 A GB9618430 A GB 9618430A GB 2316301 A GB2316301 A GB 2316301A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
head
hairbrush
handle
interconnecting portion
resilient
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB9618430A
Other versions
GB9618430D0 (en
GB2316301B (en
Inventor
Bernard Berning
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to GB9618430A priority Critical patent/GB2316301B/en
Publication of GB9618430D0 publication Critical patent/GB9618430D0/en
Priority to PCT/EP1997/005451 priority patent/WO1998009549A1/en
Priority to EP97912109A priority patent/EP0996346A1/en
Publication of GB2316301A publication Critical patent/GB2316301A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2316301B publication Critical patent/GB2316301B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A46BRUSHWARE
    • A46BBRUSHES
    • A46B5/00Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware
    • A46B5/002Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions
    • A46B5/0054Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions designed to allow relative positioning of the head to body
    • A46B5/0062Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions designed to allow relative positioning of the head to body being flexible or resilient during use
    • A46B5/007Inserts made of different material, e.g. springs, plates
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A46BRUSHWARE
    • A46BBRUSHES
    • A46B5/00Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware
    • A46B5/002Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions
    • A46B5/0054Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions designed to allow relative positioning of the head to body
    • A46B5/0062Brush bodies; Handles integral with brushware having articulations, joints or flexible portions designed to allow relative positioning of the head to body being flexible or resilient during use

Abstract

A hairbrush comprises a head 1, provided with bristles 10, and a handle 3 which are connected together via an interconnecting portion 2. The interconnecting portion 2 comprises two open-ended hollow cylinders 21, 22 which extend from the head 1 and handle 3 respectively and telescopically overlap to provide a journal bearing arrangement. A resilient flexible member 25 is located within the overlapping hollow cylinders 21, 22, and is attached at both ends 27 to the head 1 and handle 3 respectively and acts to bias the head 1 and handle 3 into a particular rotational orientation with respect to one another while allowing the head to rotate relative to the handle during use.

Description

Hairbrushes The present invention relates to hairbrushes and in particular to a hairbnrsh for use when blow-drying.
Blow-drying is a method of styling hair whereby a brush is held in one hand and a hairdryer in the other. The hairdryer and the brush may also be combined to form one elongated instrument. The operator rotates or pulls or just holds the mass of hair or a section of hair on the brush,.usually by a rotating movement under tension, and at the same time applies warm air from the hairdryer, thereby drying and shaping the hair into a style. It is important, especially when blow-drying shorter hair, to ensure that the head of the brush stays close to the scalp so that the warm air is directed towards the roots of the hair rather than just to the ends of the hair. When blow-drying longer hair, one would in most cases start by directing the air firstly towards the ends of the hair and then move towards the roots. However, it is at all times important that the operator has close control over transverse movements of the brush head, for example, to enable it to be held close to the scalp when necessary.
The action of rotating, pulling or just holding the hair in place is sometimes carried out in a heavy-handed way such that too much tension is applied. This risk is especially great amongst apprentices or less experienced operators. Excessive tension may also occur where an operator is trying to straighten curly or permed hair and may result in overstretching of the hair, in particular where the hair has already been made sensitive by perming, colouring or bleaching, or a combination of all of these.
GB 2172196 describes a hairbrush in which a rigid head portion is connected to a rigid handle portion by means of a flexible portion which allows the head portion to deflect resiliently transversely to its length.
This helps to lift hair in a controlled arc away from the scalp in a transverse movement in order to let it fall in a soft and casual style, so giving it fullness.
The present invention seeks to provide a hairbrush for use in blow-drying which helps to overcome at least one of the problems associated with the prior art discussed above.
In accordance with the present invention there is provided a hairbrush for use in blow-drying, said hairbrush comprising a handle, a head having outwardly extending bristles and an interconnecting portion connecting the handle and the head, wherein said interconnecting portion includes transverse stiffening means and resilient means, whereby a torsion acting to rotate the head about a longitudinal axis extending along the length of said head, will cause the head to rotate away from a neutral position, relative to the handle, about said longitudinal axis, and whereby, when said torsion is removed, said resilient means acts to return the head to its neutral position.
Preferably, the hairbrush takes the form of a substantially cylindrical device, said handle, said interconnecting portion and said head all being connected together along said longitudinal axis which is common to all three elements.
The transverse stiffening means may take the form of a pair of telescoping, open-ended cylinders, of which an inner cylinder extends from the handle and an outer cylinder extends from the head, or vice-versa, the telescoping cylinders overlapping such that all relative movement between the head and handle is restricted except for translational movement along the length of the longitudinal axis and rotational movement about the longitudinal axis. The resilient means may take the form of a resilient flexible member attached to both the handle and the head whereby the head and handle are biased towards a fixed rotational orientation, relative to one another.
The resilient flexible member preferably has much greater torsional flexibility than longitudinal flexibility, and may conveniently take the form of a wire spring or a solid cylinder of elastomeric material such as rubber.
In order to prevent over twisting of the resilient member, the interconnecting portion preferably includes some form of engagement means which prevents rotation of the handle relative to the head beyond a predetermined angle in either direction. Where the interconnecting portion includes telescoping open-ended cylinders the engagement means may take the form of one or more axially extending projections formed on the axially outer end of the inner cylinder and one or more radially inwardly projecting surfaces formed on the outer cylinder which engage with said projections if the outer cylinder is rotated through said predetermined angle relative to the inner cylinder in either one or both directions. In order to prevent longitudinal movement of the cylinders relative to one another, the interconnecting portion may further include co-operating longitudinal engagement means such as a circumferential groove formed in one of the cylinders and a co-operating projection formed in the other cylinder. The circumferential groove may have some longitudinal play or give to allow for change in the longitudinal length of the resilient member resulting from twisting of the interconnecting portion and hence the resilient member itself, where no provision has been made in the resilient member to prevent longitudinal size changes. Alternatively, in such situations, the circumferential groove may curve slightly, in an axial direction, to account for this effect. However, in a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a longitudinal stiffening means is provided within the resilient means which substantially prevents any change in the longitudinal length of the resilient means.
The interconnecting portion preferably acts both as a shockabsorber to soften the abrupt resistance which hair applies to the head when in use, and as a warning to a user that too much tension is being applied to the hair when the head is noticeably rotated away from its equilibrium point with respect to the handle.
The resilient means may be made from steel in any shape as will be recognised by those skilled in the art, or any other metal in any shape or form capable of absorbing shock. Alternatively, it may be made in natural or synthetic rubber, elastomeric or plastics material or any other material which has a memory and comes back to its original form after having been deformed.
In order that the present invention may be better understood an embodiment thereof will now be described by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a diagrammatical, cross-sectional view of an embodiment of the present invention; Figure 2 is an end on view indicating the rotational movement of the head relative to the handle permitted by the interconnecting portion; Figure 3 is an exploded view of a part of Figure 1 showing the resilient means in greater detail; Figure 4 is a diagrammatical, cross-sectional view of an alternative construction of a resilient means suitable for use in the present invention; Figure 5 is a diagrammatical perspective view of a fork-style brush head suitable for use in the present invention; Figure 6 is a diagrammatical perspective view of a loop-style bristle brush head suitable for use in the present invention; and Figure 7 is a diagrammatical perspective view of a brush head suitable for use in the present invention having protruding moulded bristles and a pivotable member for trapping hair against the brush head.
Referring to the drawings, the hairbrush includes a head 1, an interconnecting portion 2 and a handle 3. Outwardly, all three elements 1, 2, 3 have the appearance of co-axial cylinders connected end to end, with bristles 10 extending radially outwardly from the head. The bristles 10 extend along the entire length and approximately half of the circumference of the head. The handle is made of a rigid plastics material and may be moulded so as to be easily grippable with, for example, small ridges or rounded projections formed thereon.
The interconnecting portion 2 includes an inner open-ended cylinder 21 and an outer open-ended cylinder 22 which together form a transverse stiffening means. The interconnecting portion 2 also includes a resilient member 25 having shock absorbing properties, and being in the form of a substantially cylindrical, solid piece of elastomeric material or rubber. The resilient member has a central member 26, in the form of a relatively long cylinder of elastomeric material having a relatively narrow diameter so as to have a correspondingly small torsional resistance, and two end caps 27, in the form of short, solid cylinders formed on both ends of the central member 26, each end cap 27 having a greater diameter than the central member 26 to provide a larger surface area for attachment to both the head 1 and handle 3 of the hairbrush. The solid central member 26 of elastomeric material may, of course be replaced with a metal spring or other body having torsional resilience.
Figure 4 shows an alternative construction of the resilient member 25 which includes a substantially non-extendible central axle 30 formed of, for example, wire. The central member 26 has tapered ends 35 and a narrow waist 36. End caps 27, having intemally tapering surfaces corresponding to the tapered ends 35 of the central member 26, are adhered or moulded onto the tapered ends 35 of the central member 26 and are attached to the respective ends 31 of the axle 30.
The narrow waist 36, created by an inwardly reducing circumference of the central member 26, allows fine-tuning of the torsional resistance to respond to the average torque applied by the average operator by choosing the exact grade of elastomeric material required.
The resilient member 25 in this case has the end caps 27 moulded on to the preshaped or moulded elastomeric central member 26.
The resilient member may again be connected to the brush-head 1 and brush- handle 3 by any suitable means such as, for example, ultra-sonic welding or other methods depending upon the materials used. Suitable such methods are well known to those skilled in the art. The end caps are conveniently attached to the inner and outer cylinders 21,22 by their curved, side surfaces rather than their flat, end surfaces.
Figure 2 shows how the head 1 may rotate relative to the handle 3 in either direction. The arrows 50 show how the head rotates about the central axis of the hairbrush.
In use, the interconnecting portion 2 acts as a shock absorber and a hair-stretch absorber which functions as the operator's wrist or arm movement applies tension to the hair on the brush, whether rotating in a clockwise or anticlockwise direction. The shock absorbing effect softens the abrupt resistance which the hair presents on the brush.
When the operator applies too much pressure or pull to the hair, the interconnecting portion twists resiliently. The operator is likely to notice this twisting within the hairbrush and consequently knows to apply less pressure; this in turn relieves the pressure on the hair, thereby reducing the danger of causing overstretch damage to the hair shafts.
Figures 5, 6 and 7 show alternative possible arrangements of the brush head for use in the present invention. The bristles formed on the brush head may conveniently be made of pig's bristle, pony tail or other natural material such as jute; alternatively, the bristles may be made of moulded plastic, or any other suitable material.

Claims (11)

1. A hairbrush for use in blow-drying, said hairbrush comprising a handle, a head having outwardly extending bristles and an interconnecting portion connecting the handle and the head, wherein said interconnecting portion includes transverse stiffening means and resilient means, whereby a torsion acting to rotate the head about a longitudinal axis extending along the length of said head, will cause the head to rotate away from a neutral position, relative to the handle, about said longitudinal axis, and whereby, when said torsion is removed, said resilient means acts to return the head to its neutral position.
2. A hairbrush as claimed in claim 1 wherein said handle, said interconnecting portion and said head are all connected together along said longitudinal axis.
3. A hairbrush as claimed in either one of the preceding claims wherein said head is elongate.
4. A hairbrush as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein said transverse stiffening means is provided by first and second co-operating members, said first member having a radially outwardly facing surface of substantially circular cross-section and said second member having a radially inwardly facing surface of substantially circular cross-section which bears against said radially outwardly facing surface.
5. A hairbrush as claimed in claim 4 wherein said co-operating members comprise telescoping, open-ended tubes each of which extends longitudinally away from the interconnecting portion to form either said handle or said head.
6. A hairbrush as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein said resilient means takes the form of a resilient flexible member attached to both the handle and the head whereby the handle and head are biased towards a particular rotational orientation relative to one another.
7. A hairbrush as claimed in claim 6 wherein said resilient flexible member has much greater torsional flexibility than longitudinal flexibility.
8. A hairbrush as claimed in any one of the preceding claims further comprising at least one engagement means which prevents rotation of the handle relative to the head beyond a predetermined angle in at least one direction.
9. A hairbrush as claimed in any one of the preceding claims wherein said interconnecting portion is adapted to act as a shock absorber or a hair-stretch absorber and wherein said interconnecting portion is adapted to prevent rotation of the handle relative to the head beyond a predetermined angle in both directions and to retum to its neutral position in a resilient manner.
10. A hairbrush as claimed in claim 6 and any one of the preceding claims when dependent thereon, wherein said resilient flexible member includes a longitudinal stiffening means.
11. A hairbrush substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to Figures 1 to 3, Figure 4, Figure 5, Figure 6 or Figure 7.
GB9618430A 1996-09-04 1996-09-04 Hairbrushes Expired - Fee Related GB2316301B (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9618430A GB2316301B (en) 1996-09-04 1996-09-04 Hairbrushes
PCT/EP1997/005451 WO1998009549A1 (en) 1996-09-04 1997-09-02 Flexibly resilient hairbrush
EP97912109A EP0996346A1 (en) 1996-09-04 1997-09-02 Flexibly resilient hairbrush

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB9618430A GB2316301B (en) 1996-09-04 1996-09-04 Hairbrushes

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB9618430D0 GB9618430D0 (en) 1996-10-16
GB2316301A true GB2316301A (en) 1998-02-25
GB2316301B GB2316301B (en) 1998-06-24

Family

ID=10799383

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB9618430A Expired - Fee Related GB2316301B (en) 1996-09-04 1996-09-04 Hairbrushes

Country Status (3)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0996346A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2316301B (en)
WO (1) WO1998009549A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2004098348A1 (en) * 2003-05-09 2004-11-18 Motl, Vaclav Comb

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR646144A (en) * 1927-12-24 1928-11-07 Franz Josef Krall Dr Massage device
GB1158936A (en) * 1967-01-30 1969-07-23 Bernard Berning Improvements relating to Hair-Brushes.
US4685165A (en) * 1984-09-12 1987-08-11 Turn-N-Tame Inc. Hair brush
GB2172196B (en) 1985-03-11 1988-04-27 Bernard Berning Improvements relating to hair-brushes
US5502860A (en) * 1994-05-09 1996-04-02 Franke; John Hairbrush with torque resistant head

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2004098348A1 (en) * 2003-05-09 2004-11-18 Motl, Vaclav Comb

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0996346A1 (en) 2000-05-03
GB9618430D0 (en) 1996-10-16
GB2316301B (en) 1998-06-24
WO1998009549A1 (en) 1998-03-12

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5188131A (en) Eyelash mascara case and applicator
JP3807485B2 (en) Equipment for applying products to keratin fibers, in particular eyelashes or eyebrows, in particular makeup or care products
JP5165403B2 (en) Applicator for applying substances to keratinous fibers
US7950402B1 (en) Contoured eye shadow applicator system and make-up method
US20210196036A1 (en) Hair Brush
US4796325A (en) Angularly adjustable double headed toothbrush
US8881745B2 (en) Adjustable applicator
EP0523199A1 (en) Adjustable curve mascara brush
USRE38755E1 (en) Progressive brush for applying a cosmetic product
RU2357632C2 (en) Make-up brush
JP2641625B2 (en) Brushes for applying cosmetic products, especially mascara
WO2009084343A1 (en) Mascara applicator
US5315731A (en) Individual tooth toothbrush
MXPA96006069A (en) Triple z rimel brush
US5502860A (en) Hairbrush with torque resistant head
US5027838A (en) Cosmetic applicator brush
CN111031851A (en) Brush for applying a cosmetic composition
US2507373A (en) Rotatable hair-treating implement
US20200008560A1 (en) Adjustable applicator
GB2316301A (en) Hairbrush
JPS63277004A (en) Hair setting method and instrument
JP2004229710A (en) Mascara stick
US3565063A (en) Massaging brush
JPH0246740Y2 (en)
US10653233B2 (en) Hairbrush having manual rotating handle

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20150904