US1531291A - Hair-waving pad - Google Patents

Hair-waving pad Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1531291A
US1531291A US611730A US61173023A US1531291A US 1531291 A US1531291 A US 1531291A US 611730 A US611730 A US 611730A US 61173023 A US61173023 A US 61173023A US 1531291 A US1531291 A US 1531291A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
hair
pad
waving
fabric
salts
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US611730A
Inventor
Ingrassia Leon
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 US611730A priority Critical patent/US1531291A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1531291A publication Critical patent/US1531291A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A45HAND OR TRAVELLING ARTICLES
    • A45DHAIRDRESSING OR SHAVING EQUIPMENT; EQUIPMENT FOR COSMETICS OR COSMETIC TREATMENTS, e.g. FOR MANICURING OR PEDICURING
    • A45D7/00Processes of waving, straightening or curling hair
    • A45D7/04Processes of waving, straightening or curling hair chemical
    • A45D7/045Processes of waving, straightening or curling hair chemical using wrappers

Definitions

  • the invention relates to an improved hair protecting pad for use on a'persons hair in the method of imparting a permanent wave. to the hair, and the invention herein constitutes a development of the invention defined in my application, Serial No. 546,869, composition of matter, filed March 25, 1922.
  • the cloth envelo e be porous so as to permit the seeping of t e soluble or rather pasty salts to the outside of the envelope when applied in operative position on the hair under treatment.
  • the drydpowder would sift out from its container an in shifting about in the envel-' ope would become bulky, uneven and at best not provide the necessary protection uniformly over the entire portion of the hair.
  • Attempts have been made to sew the envelope across its body portion so as to prevent the shifting of the d powder but this sewing of the envelope di not prevent, but on the contrary, promoted the leakage of the powders from the container," especially when dry. Further the stitching necessitated the use of additional labor which, materially added to the cost of manufacture and even then the stitched pad had to be contained in an additional envelope which further added to the cost. 7
  • the primary object of' the present invention is to provide a form of pad whichcan be used as similar pads have been used heretofore in the art of permanent hair wa ving, which will feature simpllclty 1n construction with resulting economy 1n the cost of manufacture, which can both the amount of hair protecting salts indicated as well as the proportions of the salts and other ingredients with which the pad was originally constructed.
  • the present disclosure contemplates the retention of the hair .protecting virtuesof this mineral oil and additiona lly features the utilization of oil, when dr as a binder for holding
  • Another object of the invention is to sim- I plify the usual steps of protecting the hair incidental to the usual permanent hair waving operation prior to the heat treatment and incidental to the general object of minimizing in cost
  • the present disclosure features a form of pad which does not need any protecting covering or envelope to prevent clloss of powder while being stored or porte a
  • the pad herein featured by forming a water solution of the desired salts, adding to the solution a small amount of mineral or other suitable oil, if a pad with the oil ingredients is desired, and while the solution is boiling dipping intothe same a drawings and in part will be more fully set forth in the following particular description of one method and of one form of apparatus for practicing the method and the invention also consists in certain new and novel operations and features of construction and combination of parts hereinafter set forth and claimed.
  • Figure 1 is a. view of a coil of hair wrapped with a protecting pad illustrating a preferred form of the article feature of the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a perspective view of the pad shown in Figure 1, in the flat condition in which it is normally packed.
  • a fabric of a typecapable of absorbing salt solutions is cut into the desired form and size, and for this purpose a cheap grade of sheet felt has been found to be entirely satisfactory. This felt either in the whole strip or cut into the shape desired of the final pads "is immersed in a boiling solution of the desired salts until it is completely impregnated and saturated with the solution.
  • a strand 11 is wrapped on a curling rod 12 following the usual practice.
  • One of the dry pads shown in Figure 2 is dipped for a moment into a wet liquid, usually water, and the wet pad is wrapped about the coiled strand after which the usual cylindrical electric heater is disposed in telescoped osition.
  • a wet liquid usually water
  • the wet pad is wrapped about the coiled strand after which the usual cylindrical electric heater is disposed in telescoped osition.
  • the pad is thus prepared and used in place of the old form of pads or wet cloth strips facilitates an easy practicing of the permanent hair waving operation in that there is eliminated the necessity of wrapping long strips of wet fabric about the hair, the handling of messy, sticky, cloths is avoided, the untidiness of both operator and equipment characterizing the use of leaking envelopes is eliminated and there is provided a neat, one-piece compact pad which contains the exact amount of ingredients selected for the operation and in which the proportion of in edients has been maintained and the ingre ients disposed in uniform amounts.
  • ment may be attained simply ,by the selection of the proper thickness and character of felt or other solution absorbing fabric.
  • I claim v 1 In the art of preparing a pad for use in subjecting hair to a waving operation, the method which consists in boiling a mixture containing borax, sodium thiosulphate and mineral oil, dipping into said boiling mixture a fabric capable of absorbing some of the mixture, removing from the boiling mixture the fabric so treated and permitting the treated fabric to dry.
  • the method which includes the steps of sat-usubjecting the hair when so wrapped to 'a heat treatment at a temperature higher than the boiling point of water.
  • the method which includes the step of rotecting the hair from overheating by positioning between the hair and the heating means, a fabric impregnated with a hair preserving substance compounded with a small amount of mineral oil.
  • a pad for use in waving hair including a fabric containing within its outlines borax, sodium thiosulphate and mineral oil, in the proportion approximately of borax, 64 parts, sulphate, 5 parts, and oil 5 parts.
  • a pad for use in waving hair including a fabric containing within its outlines borax,
  • a substantially dry pad designed to be Wetted and applied to the hair in the art of permanent hair waving, said pad impregnated with a hair protecting salt to which has been added a small amount of oil.
  • a pad for use in waving hair including a fabric impregnated with borax, and mineral oil.
  • a substantially dry, caked pad for use in waving hair including a fabric impregnated-with mineral salts cemented with a small amount of oil.
  • a fabric pad for use in protecting hair in the art of permanent waving, said pad being impregnated with hair protecting salts and containing mineral oil.
  • a fabric pad for use in protecting hair in the art of permanent waving, said pad being impregnated with a substance containing mineral oil and hair protecting salts.
  • a fabric pad for use in waving hair containing a hair treating salt together with oil.

Description

March 31. 1925.
L. INGRASSIA HAIR WAVING PAD Filedaan. 10, 1923 INVENTOR Patented Mar. 31 ,1925.
men menassm, or NEW YORK, 11. g.
nexmwavme rim.
J Application filed January 10, 1923. Serial No. 611,730.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, LEONINGRASSIA, a citizen of the United States, and resident of New'York city, in the countyof Kings'and State of New York, have-invented certain new and useful Improvements in Hair- Waving Pads,of which the following is a specification. 1
The invention relates to an improved hair protecting pad for use on a'persons hair in the method of imparting a permanent wave. to the hair, and the invention herein constitutes a development of the invention defined in my application, Serial No. 546,869, composition of matter, filed March 25, 1922.
In practicing the. art of the so-called permanent hair waving, it has been a usual- 1 practice to saturate strips of flannel or cloth in a water solution of borax and sodium thiosulphate to wrap the wet cloth about the coiled hair and to insert the coil so wrapped in an electric heater where the hair is sub- ,jected to an intense heat treatment while protected by the wet flannel or cloth. A later development of this art is to eleminate I the cloth strips and substitute therefor prepared pads, sometimes in the form of cloth envelopes in which the dry, powdered borax or sodium thiosulphate were contained. It is required of such prepared pads that the cloth envelo e be porous so as to permit the seeping of t e soluble or rather pasty salts to the outside of the envelope when applied in operative position on the hair under treatment. With these old form of envelopes the drydpowder would sift out from its container an in shifting about in the envel-' ope would become bulky, uneven and at best not provide the necessary protection uniformly over the entire portion of the hair. Attempts have been made to sew the envelope across its body portion so as to prevent the shifting of the d powder but this sewing of the envelope di not prevent, but on the contrary, promoted the leakage of the powders from the container," especially when dry. Further the stitching necessitated the use of additional labor which, materially added to the cost of manufacture and even then the stitched pad had to be contained in an additional envelope which further added to the cost. 7
Accordingly, the primary object of' the present invention is to provide a form of pad whichcan be used as similar pads have been used heretofore in the art of permanent hair wa ving, which will feature simpllclty 1n construction with resulting economy 1n the cost of manufacture, which can both the amount of hair protecting salts indicated as well as the proportions of the salts and other ingredients with which the pad was originally constructed.
In the above identified application. there was featured the use of mineral oil in com bination with the known protecting salts which oil was shown therein to possess certain hair protecting virtues and assisted the action of the salts in minimizing the deleterious action of the extremely high tem- .peratured heat employed in the art of per manent hair waving. The present disclosure contemplates the retention of the hair .protecting virtuesof this mineral oil and additiona lly features the utilization of oil, when dr as a binder for holding Another object of the invention is to sim- I plify the usual steps of protecting the hair incidental to the usual permanent hair waving operation prior to the heat treatment and incidental to the general object of minimizing in cost the present disclosure features a form of pad which does not need any protecting covering or envelope to prevent clloss of powder while being stored or porte a Broadly I prepare the pad herein featured by forming a water solution of the desired salts, adding to the solution a small amount of mineral or other suitable oil, if a pad with the oil ingredients is desired, and while the solution is boiling dipping intothe same a drawings and in part will be more fully set forth in the following particular description of one method and of one form of apparatus for practicing the method and the invention also consists in certain new and novel operations and features of construction and combination of parts hereinafter set forth and claimed.
In the accompanying drawings Figure 1 is a. view of a coil of hair wrapped with a protecting pad illustrating a preferred form of the article feature of the invention; and
Figure 2 is a perspective view of the pad shown in Figure 1, in the flat condition in which it is normally packed.
In forming a pad, such as is shown iii-"the drawings a fabric of a typecapable of absorbing salt solutions is cut into the desired form and size, and for this purpose a cheap grade of sheet felt has been found to be entirely satisfactory. This felt either in the whole strip or cut into the shape desired of the final pads "is immersed in a boiling solution of the desired salts until it is completely impregnated and saturated with the solution.
As an example of one such solution it is noted that a composition composed of sodium thiosulphate, mineral oil and borax mixed in the following proportions: borax, 64 parts; sodium thiosulphate, 5 parts; mineral oil, 5 parts, together with suificient water to insure the dissolving of the salts and without material excess. of water has been used with success. While this solution is actively boiling the pads are dipped therein, 'retained preferably for about ten minutes,
after which they are removed, strung up andexposed in air to dry. This drying operation usually takes from 5 to 6 hours, and when completed, thef-e is formed a somewhat stifi, yet readily bendable board which is dry to the touch and has the appearance usually shown by a salt incrusted fabric. Most of the salts are contained within the body of the fabric and the remainder forms an irregularly appearing crust on the opposite faces of the completed pad. Apparentl the mineral oil acts as an adhesive to ho] the powdered salts to the fabric for little, if any,
of the powder becomes loosened from the pad. It is within the scope of this disclosure, however, to omit the oil and to depend upon the presence of the salts which are held by the fabric to supply the requisite protection to the hair in the subsequent heating step of the permanent wave operation.
Referring to the accompanying drawings,
there is shown at 10 a pad prepared by fol- *lowing the methods hereinbefore suggested and which pad, as shown in Figure 2, is in the flat dry form in which such articles are packed in cartons for sale.
In the operation of waving the hair, a strand 11 is wrapped on a curling rod 12 following the usual practice. One of the dry pads shown in Figure 2 is dipped for a moment into a wet liquid, usually water, and the wet pad is wrapped about the coiled strand after which the usual cylindrical electric heater is disposed in telescoped osition. By using this pad the hair is e ectively protected against scorching or burning; and even the ends of fine, blonde, gre or even white hair can be waved without amage to the hair.
The pad is thus prepared and used in place of the old form of pads or wet cloth strips facilitates an easy practicing of the permanent hair waving operation in that there is eliminated the necessity of wrapping long strips of wet fabric about the hair, the handling of messy, sticky, cloths is avoided, the untidiness of both operator and equipment characterizing the use of leaking envelopes is eliminated and there is provided a neat, one-piece compact pad which contains the exact amount of ingredients selected for the operation and in which the proportion of in edients has been maintained and the ingre ients disposed in uniform amounts.
ment may be attained simply ,by the selection of the proper thickness and character of felt or other solution absorbing fabric.
Having thus described my invention, I claim v 1. In the art of preparing a pad for use in subjecting hair to a waving operation, the method which consists in boiling a mixture containing borax, sodium thiosulphate and mineral oil, dipping into said boiling mixture a fabric capable of absorbing some of the mixture, removing from the boiling mixture the fabric so treated and permitting the treated fabric to dry.
2. In the art of preparing a pad for use insubjecting hair to a waving operation, the
method which consists in boiling a mixture containing a solution of a hair preserving compound together with oil, dipping into said boiling mixture a fabric capable of absorbing some of the mixture, removing from the boiling mixture the fabric so treated and permitting the treated fabric to dry.
3. In the art of preparing a pad for protecting hair from the deleterious action of the high temperatured heat employed in the method of permanent hair waving, the process which consists in saturating a felt pad in a solution of hair protecting salts together with mineral oil, drying the saturated pad to form a marketable article and then wetting the drypad with water just priordto applying the pad to the hair to be wave 4. the art of permanent hair waving,
the method which includes the steps of sat-usubjecting the hair when so wrapped to 'a heat treatment at a temperature higher than the boiling point of water.
5. In the art of waving hair on the human head by subjecting the hair to a heat treatment, the method which includes the step of rotecting the hair from overheating by positioning between the hair and the heating means, a fabric impregnated with a hair preserving substance compounded with a small amount of mineral oil.
6. In a pad for use in waving hair including a fabric containing within its outlines borax, sodium thiosulphate and mineral oil, in the proportion approximately of borax, 64 parts, sulphate, 5 parts, and oil 5 parts.
' 7 A pad for use in waving hair including a fabric containing within its outlines borax,
sodium thiosulphate and mineral oil.
8. A substantially dry pad designed to be Wetted and applied to the hair in the art of permanent hair waving, said pad impregnated with a hair protecting salt to which has been added a small amount of oil.
9. A pad for use in waving hair including a fabric impregnated with borax, and mineral oil.
10. A substantially dry, caked pad for use in waving hair including a fabric impregnated-with mineral salts cemented with a small amount of oil.
11. A fabric pad for use in protecting hair in the art of permanent waving, said pad being impregnated with hair protecting salts and containing mineral oil.
12. A fabric pad for use in protecting hair in the art of permanent waving, said pad being impregnated with a substance containing mineral oil and hair protecting salts.
13. A fabric pad for use in waving hair, containing a hair treating salt together with oil.
.Signed at New York city, in the county of New York and State of New York, this 29th day of December. A. D. 1922.
LEON INGRASSIA.
US611730A 1923-01-10 1923-01-10 Hair-waving pad Expired - Lifetime US1531291A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US611730A US1531291A (en) 1923-01-10 1923-01-10 Hair-waving pad

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US611730A US1531291A (en) 1923-01-10 1923-01-10 Hair-waving pad

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1531291A true US1531291A (en) 1925-03-31

Family

ID=24450200

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US611730A Expired - Lifetime US1531291A (en) 1923-01-10 1923-01-10 Hair-waving pad

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US1531291A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2869559A (en) * 1957-10-07 1959-01-20 Procter & Gamble Non-volatile mercaptan and hydroxyamine impregnated end wrap and method of use
US2953140A (en) * 1959-02-20 1960-09-20 Gordon S Goff Molding device for hair waving

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2869559A (en) * 1957-10-07 1959-01-20 Procter & Gamble Non-volatile mercaptan and hydroxyamine impregnated end wrap and method of use
US2953140A (en) * 1959-02-20 1960-09-20 Gordon S Goff Molding device for hair waving

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2071365A (en) Wax applicator and method of making the same
US1994425A (en) Waxing pad
US1531291A (en) Hair-waving pad
US1957049A (en) Wrapper for permanent waving of hair
US2076521A (en) Hair curling and waving device
US1892107A (en) Hair waver
US2168219A (en) Permanent waving device
US1892389A (en) Method of and means for permanently waving hair
US2274170A (en) Hair waving device and process
US1663389A (en) Waxing strip for marcel irons
USRE21276E (en) Chemical heating pad for permanent
US1919690A (en) Method of and means for permanently waving hair
US2110677A (en) Exothermic device
US1425956A (en) Hair-waving means
US1935002A (en) Method of conditioning and permanently waving hair
US2140243A (en) Hair waving pad
US2173269A (en) Permanent wave pad
US1596247A (en) Hair-waving device
US1877662A (en) Method and apparatus for treating hair
US1631342A (en) Pad for hair waving
US1607981A (en) Composition of matter and method of using the same for permanently waving hair
US1481109A (en) Hair-waving appliance and method of using the same
US1581577A (en) Composition of matter
US1892426A (en) Method of and means for permanently waving hair
US1892390A (en) Method of and means for permanently waving hair