US1926987A - Permanent waving apparatus - Google Patents

Permanent waving apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US1926987A
US1926987A US664116A US66411633A US1926987A US 1926987 A US1926987 A US 1926987A US 664116 A US664116 A US 664116A US 66411633 A US66411633 A US 66411633A US 1926987 A US1926987 A US 1926987A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
foil
sheet
hair
felt
tress
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
US664116A
Inventor
Hobart N Durham
Jr George B Finnegan
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.)
BEAUTY UTILITIES Inc
Original Assignee
BEAUTY UTILITIES Inc
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
Priority to US641576A priority Critical patent/US2014246A/en
Priority to US664116A priority patent/US1926987A/en
Application filed by BEAUTY UTILITIES Inc filed Critical BEAUTY UTILITIES Inc
Priority to FR762543D priority patent/FR762543A/en
Publication of US1926987A publication Critical patent/US1926987A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Priority to DEB162509D priority patent/DE638453C/en
Priority to US692949A priority patent/US2022657A/en
Priority to GB24515/33A priority patent/GB433290A/en
Priority to GB27647/34A priority patent/GB433351A/en
Priority to GB27412/34A priority patent/GB444757A/en
Priority to FR45295D priority patent/FR45295E/en
Priority to US14405A priority patent/US2028051A/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
    • A45D4/00Separate devices designed for heating hair curlers or hair-wavers
    • A45D4/02Separate devices designed for heating hair curlers or hair-wavers for steep curling, e.g. with means for decreasing the heat
    • A45D4/06Separate devices designed for heating hair curlers or hair-wavers for steep curling, e.g. with means for decreasing the heat heated by electricity

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to permanent waving, and more particularly to a novel and improved heating pad for heating a wound tress of hair to permanently wave it.
  • the invention consists in the novel parts, constructions, arrangements, combinations and improvements herein shown and described.
  • Figure l of the drawing is a perspective view of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention.
  • Figure 2 is a section of Figure 1;
  • Figure 3 is a side elevation showing the embodiment shown in Figure 1 as applied to a tress wound on a curling rod, with certain parts shown in section.
  • the present invention has for its object the provision of an improved device for heating, steaming and applying waving chemicals to hair in the permanent waving process, particularly where the heat and steam are generated by electrolytic conduction.
  • the device is hereinafter referred to as a heating pad.
  • Another object of the invention is the provision of'a lotion carrying and heat generating pad adapted to be wrapped around a wound tress of hair so as to uniformly heat the curl while subjecting it to the heated vapors generated from the iotion.
  • the invention provides an electrolytic heating pad which automatically seals the steam and moisture, reducing to a minimum escape and leakage of liquid, while the improved construction of the pad renders short circuiting through careless application of the pad practically impossible.
  • the pad comprises a relatively thin layer of absorbent material 1, which is an electrical insulator when dry, and is electrolytically conducting when saturated. with an electrolytically conducting hair taken on the line 2-2 waving solution.
  • absorbent material 1 is an electrical insulator when dry
  • electrolytically conducting hair taken on the line 2-2 waving solution.
  • This sheet of felt or flannel is preferably slightly longer than the normal length of a long, wound tress ready for heating, and is slightly wider than the circumference of such a wound tress, so that when the wound tress has beenencloscd in the sheet of felt or flannel, it is completely covered thereby.
  • a sheet of perforated metallic foil 2 or other foramlnous inetal On the inner side of the sheet of felt or flannel 1, is positioned a sheet of perforated metallic foil 2, or other foramlnous inetal, which is slightly narrower than the sheet of felt or flannel, and is positioned thereon so that a narrow margin 3 and 4i of felt is provided along three sides of the foil, while one end 5 of the foil projects above the sheet of felt.
  • the perforations in foil 2 are preferably provided over the entire area and may be uniformly spaced, or otherwise, as desired.
  • This foil may be very thin, and may be reenforced by a sheet of thin parchment paper 6, perforated in register with the foil, and secured to the foil by light waxing, this paper also serving to electrically insulate the inner sheet of foil 2 from contact with the metal curling rod 7 on which the hair is wound.
  • the paper is on the side of the foil 2 away from the felt or flannel 1. While the paper serves as an electrical insulator to prevent contact between the inner foil and a the curling rod, it also serves to prevent contact between the metal foil and the hair wound on the curling rod, thereby avoiding any possibility of the hair being discolored by contact with this foil during the heating process.
  • a sheet of metal foil 8 which is preferably imperforate and considerably thicker than the sheet oi perforated foil.
  • This outer sheet of foil is preferably” wider and longer than the sheet of absorbent material 1, and forms a wrapping or envelope within which is contained the absorbent material, the innerfoil and the wound tress of hair to be waved.
  • the several sheets are preferably assembled and held together by a line of stitching 9 in the position shown in Figure 1 of thedrawing, in which the perforate sheet of foil 2 with the registering sheet of perforate paper 6 is positioned on the absorbent sheet 1' with equai margins 3 of felt along both edges of the foil and paper.
  • the perforate foil "2 is pref erably spaced from the end or the felt to pro vide a somewhat wider margin 4 of felt which may be positioned at the bottom' of the curling rod 7 immediately below the bottom of the wound tress and between it and the scalp to absorb any lotion which might tend to drip onto the scalp of the customer.
  • the upper end 5 of the foil 2 preferably extends beyond the felt 1 and provides an uninsulated metallic terminal to which electrical contact may be easily made after the padthas been wrapped around the wound tress and curling rod 7, as shown in Figure 3.
  • the imperforate sheet of foil 8 extends beyond one edge of the sheet of felt 1, and is positioned so that its upper end is slightly below the upper edge of the felt to provide a narrow, insulating margin 10 of felt between the two layers of foil.
  • the lower edge of the imperforate foil extends for a slight distance below the bottom of the felt and said outer or imperforate sheet of foil is sufliciently thick and yet pliable enough to per mit its being crimped below the wound tress of hair and adjacent to the lower end of the curling rod, thereby providing a seal ,13 between the heated curl and the scalp of. the customer.
  • the imperforate layer of foil is preferably of sufiicient width to permit its being wrapped around the wound tress of hair for more than a single circumference.
  • the wide margin of felt 4 is not heated during the waving process due to the fact that practically no current passes through this marginal portion which is preferably positioned at the bottom of the curling rod 7 and below the bottom end of the wound tress.
  • the marginal portion 4 also serves to cool any liquid which i might drop on the customers scalp.
  • the heating pad of the present invention is saturated with a hair waving lotion capable of conducting sufficient electricity at relatively low voltages to produce enough heat to permanently wave the tress.
  • a hair waving lotion capable of conducting sufficient electricity at relatively low voltages to produce enough heat to permanently wave the tress.
  • a solution may comprise ammonium carbonate dissolved in water, although many other solutions are suitable and may be used, if
  • the electrolyte comprisesja solution of ammonia or an ammonium salt
  • the passage of the electric current through'the lotion or electrolyte generates heat which causes the electrolyte to steam and liberate ammonia vapor, the steam and ammonia vapor escaping through the perforations onto the wound tress of hair and permanently waving it.
  • foils used may be of any suitable metal, lead foil, preferably containing a very small amount of tin, is highly satisfactory, as it is not seriously attacked during the process, does not discolor the hair, retains the shape imparted to it by winding it about the wound tress and by crimping it at the bottom of the curling rod, and is non-polarizable and may be used with either direct or alternating current.
  • Such foil also has a relatively low melting point, so that any short circuit through the foil causes immediate localized fusing, which thereby reduces any possible danger from short circuiting to a minimum.
  • the heating pads of the present invention permit the heating of the curl at the extreme bottom of the curling rod and both layers of foil are easily accessible for contact with the connectors which supply current to the two sheets of foil.
  • the waxing of the paper to the inner sheet of thin foil reinforces the foil while .the bad is being applied to the tress wound on the curling rod, but is released from the foil during the heating process, thereby insuring that new heating pads are used on each customer, and preventing the unsanitary conditions which now frequently prevail where the lotioncarrying pads are used more than once.
  • the heating pads are wrapped around the tress of hair to be waved after the tress has been properly wound on a curling rod '7 and covered with tape 12. Just prior to wrapping, he heating pads are moistened with the waving 0- tion, and any excess lotion may be squeezed out of the pads.
  • This moistening is easily accomplished with the illustrative embodiment of the invention inasmuch as the inner side of the felt is covered with the perforated foil while the'outer side of the felt is exposed over substantially its entire area.
  • the pad is positioned on the wound tress with the perforate paper against the tress, the margin 4 of .felt at the bottom of the curling rod, and with the imperforate foil extending laterally away from the curling rod.
  • the pad is then wound around the curling rod, and the imperforate foil is wrapped around the felt to seal the tress within the wound pad.
  • the bottom of the imperforate foil may then be crimped below the curling rod, either by hand or by a suitable crimping tool.
  • the connectors of opposite polarity are connected to the exposed parts of the inner and outer sheets of foil as indicated in Figure 3, and current is supplied from trans former 11 for the requisite period of time until the tress is permanently waved.
  • the felt is not completely saturated with the hair waving lotion, and when the pad becomes heated, the tendency to drip lotion onto the scalp of the customer is thereby reduced. After a suffic'ient period of heating, the pad may then be removed and the tress unwound from the curling rod, washed, set and dried in the usual manner.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between an inner sheet of thin, perforate lead foil and an outer sheet of relatively thick lead foil and means for securing said sheets together.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between an outer sheetof relatively thick lead foil and an inner sheet of thin perforate lead foil reenforced by paper on the side away from said absorbent material.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of perforate metal foil of a size sufficient to enclose a wound tress of hair, a sheet of absorbent material slightly wider than said foil and superposed thereon to cover all but one end of said foil, and an outer sheet of metal foil secured to said absorbent sheet along one edge thereof so that when wrapped around a wound tress of hair the outer foil encloses the absorbent sheet and perforate foil.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of foramlnous metal, a sheet of absorbent material superposed thereon and contacting with a substantial area of said foraminous metal and a sheet of metal foil extending laterally from one edge of said absorbent sheet and secured thereto to form a tight,
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperferate sheets of metal foil, one of said foils and the absorbent sheet being secured together in substantial register with each other, said foils being insulated from metallic contact with each other by a margin of absorbent material.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, and a sheet of perforate paper secured to said perforate foil and covering one face thereof.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, and means for securing said sheets together, said sheets being so positioned relative to each other that the perforate foil extends beyond said other sheet and provides a terminal.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil and means for securing said sheets together in overlapping relation, said perforate sheet extending beyond one end of said absorbent material and said imperforate foil extending from one side of said absorbent material whereby electrical connections may be made to said foils.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent ma terial positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being positioned relatively to each other to provide a margin of absorbent material at the bottom of said perforate foil with said imperforate foil extending below said margin.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being positioned on each other so that the perforate foil stops short of the bottom of the absorbent sheet and the imperforate foil extends at least to the bottom of the absorbent sheet to provide a nonheating, scalable margin of absorbent material to be positioned" at the bottom of the wound tress to prevent drippi 11.
  • An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperferate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being secured together in partial overlapping relationship, said imperforate foil extending below one end of said absorbent material to provide a seal below a wound tress to be heated.
  • An electrolytic permanent-waving heating pad comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between two sheets of metal foil, one of said sheets of foil being perforated and having-a coating of electrical insulating material on its face which is away from the absorbent sheet.
  • a curl heating device for permanent waving including in combination a curl support, a heater comprsing an absorbent electrolyte carrier, two metallic foil electrodes engageable with opposite faces of the electrolyte carrier over a substantial area so as to provide a short current 0 path through the carrier, and meansfor insulating the curl support from the adjacent electrode.
  • a curl heating device for permanent waving including in combination a curl support, a heater comprising an absorbent electrolyte carrier, two metallic foil electrodes engageable with opposite faces of the electrolyte carrier over a substantial area so as to provide a short current path through the carrier, means for insulating the curl support from the adjacent electrode, and 110 electric circuit terminals connected directly to the electrodes of the pad.
  • An electrolytic permanent waving heater comprising a flexible laminated assembly of an absorbent, pad for an electrolyte, electrodes of 115 substantial area in electrical contact with opposite faces of the pad, thus forming a short conducting path for the current, and a non-conducting sheet positioned between the hair and the contiguous electrode, the heater being flexible 120 so that it can be wrapped around a curl for heating it.

Landscapes

  • Hair Curling (AREA)
  • Electrotherapy Devices (AREA)
  • Packages (AREA)
  • Cosmetics (AREA)
  • Cleaning And Drying Hair (AREA)

Description

Sept. 12, 1933.. H. N. DURHAM El AL I PERMANENT WAVING- APPARATUS Filed April 3, 1933 Patented Sept. 12, 1933 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE George B.
Finnegan,
J r., Mountain Lakes,
N. J.,' assignors to Beauty Utilities, Ina, Summit, N. J a corporation of Delaware Application April 3," 1933. Serial No. 664,116
/ Claims.
The present invention relates to permanent waving, and more particularly to a novel and improved heating pad for heating a wound tress of hair to permanently wave it.
5 Objects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in part hereinafter and in part will be obvious herefrom, or may be learned by practice with the invention, the same being realized and attained by means of the instrumentalities m and combinations pointed out in the appended claims.
The invention consists in the novel parts, constructions, arrangements, combinations and improvements herein shown and described.
The accompanying drawing, referred to herein and constituting a part hereof, illustrates one embodiment of the invention, and together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention.
Of the drawing:
Figure l of the drawing is a perspective view of an illustrative embodiment of the present invention;
Figure 2 is a section of Figure 1; and
Figure 3 is a side elevation showing the embodiment shown in Figure 1 as applied to a tress wound on a curling rod, with certain parts shown in section.
The present invention has for its object the provision of an improved device for heating, steaming and applying waving chemicals to hair in the permanent waving process, particularly where the heat and steam are generated by electrolytic conduction. For convenience, the device is hereinafter referred to as a heating pad. Another object of the invention is the provision of'a lotion carrying and heat generating pad adapted to be wrapped around a wound tress of hair so as to uniformly heat the curl while subjecting it to the heated vapors generated from the iotion. Moreover, the invention provides an electrolytic heating pad which automatically seals the steam and moisture, reducing to a minimum escape and leakage of liquid, while the improved construction of the pad renders short circuiting through careless application of the pad practically impossible.
Referring now in detail to the present preferred and illustrative embodiment of the invention as shown in the accompanying drawing, the pad comprises a relatively thin layer of absorbent material 1, which is an electrical insulator when dry, and is electrolytically conducting when saturated. with an electrolytically conducting hair taken on the line 2-2 waving solution. For this purpose, we prefer to use a layer of felt or flannel which has been treated for pick -up to increase its absorptive capacity. This sheet of felt or flannel is preferably slightly longer than the normal length of a long, wound tress ready for heating, and is slightly wider than the circumference of such a wound tress, so that when the wound tress has beenencloscd in the sheet of felt or flannel, it is completely covered thereby.
On the inner side of the sheet of felt or flannel 1, is positioned a sheet of perforated metallic foil 2, or other foramlnous inetal, which is slightly narrower than the sheet of felt or flannel, and is positioned thereon so that a narrow margin 3 and 4i of felt is provided along three sides of the foil, while one end 5 of the foil projects above the sheet of felt. The perforations in foil 2 are preferably provided over the entire area and may be uniformly spaced, or otherwise, as desired. This foil may be very thin, and may be reenforced by a sheet of thin parchment paper 6, perforated in register with the foil, and secured to the foil by light waxing, this paper also serving to electrically insulate the inner sheet of foil 2 from contact with the metal curling rod 7 on which the hair is wound. The paper is on the side of the foil 2 away from the felt or flannel 1. While the paper serves as an electrical insulator to prevent contact between the inner foil and a the curling rod, it also serves to prevent contact between the metal foil and the hair wound on the curling rod, thereby avoiding any possibility of the hair being discolored by contact with this foil during the heating process.
On the outer side of the sheet of felt or flannel 1 is positioned a sheet of metal foil 8 which is preferably imperforate and considerably thicker than the sheet oi perforated foil. This outer sheet of foilis preferably" wider and longer than the sheet of absorbent material 1, and forms a wrapping or envelope within which is contained the absorbent material, the innerfoil and the wound tress of hair to be waved.
The several sheets are preferably assembled and held together by a line of stitching 9 in the position shown in Figure 1 of thedrawing, in which the perforate sheet of foil 2 with the registering sheet of perforate paper 6 is positioned on the absorbent sheet 1' with equai margins 3 of felt along both edges of the foil and paper. At the lower end of the pad, the perforate foil "2 is pref erably spaced from the end or the felt to pro vide a somewhat wider margin 4 of felt which may be positioned at the bottom' of the curling rod 7 immediately below the bottom of the wound tress and between it and the scalp to absorb any lotion which might tend to drip onto the scalp of the customer. The upper end 5 of the foil 2 preferably extends beyond the felt 1 and provides an uninsulated metallic terminal to which electrical contact may be easily made after the padthas been wrapped around the wound tress and curling rod 7, as shown in Figure 3.
The imperforate sheet of foil 8 extends beyond one edge of the sheet of felt 1, and is positioned so that its upper end is slightly below the upper edge of the felt to provide a narrow, insulating margin 10 of felt between the two layers of foil. The lower edge of the imperforate foil extends for a slight distance below the bottom of the felt and said outer or imperforate sheet of foil is sufliciently thick and yet pliable enough to per mit its being crimped below the wound tress of hair and adjacent to the lower end of the curling rod, thereby providing a seal ,13 between the heated curl and the scalp of. the customer. The imperforate layer of foil is preferably of sufiicient width to permit its being wrapped around the wound tress of hair for more than a single circumference. The wide margin of felt 4 is not heated during the waving process due to the fact that practically no current passes through this marginal portion which is preferably positioned at the bottom of the curling rod 7 and below the bottom end of the wound tress. The marginal portion 4 also serves to cool any liquid which i might drop on the customers scalp.
In the electrolytic process of hair waving, the heating pad of the present invention is saturated with a hair waving lotion capable of conducting sufficient electricity at relatively low voltages to produce enough heat to permanently wave the tress. Such a solution may comprise ammonium carbonate dissolved in water, although many other solutions are suitable and may be used, if
-. desired. When the electrolyte comprisesja solution of ammonia or an ammonium salt, the passage of the electric current through'the lotion or electrolyte generates heat which causes the electrolyte to steam and liberate ammonia vapor, the steam and ammonia vapor escaping through the perforations onto the wound tress of hair and permanently waving it.
While the foils used may be of any suitable metal, lead foil, preferably containing a very small amount of tin, is highly satisfactory, as it is not seriously attacked during the process, does not discolor the hair, retains the shape imparted to it by winding it about the wound tress and by crimping it at the bottom of the curling rod, and is non-polarizable and may be used with either direct or alternating current. Such foil also has a relatively low melting point, so that any short circuit through the foil causes immediate localized fusing, which thereby reduces any possible danger from short circuiting to a minimum.
The heating pads of the present invention permit the heating of the curl at the extreme bottom of the curling rod and both layers of foil are easily accessible for contact with the connectors which supply current to the two sheets of foil. The waxing of the paper to the inner sheet of thin foil reinforces the foil while .the bad is being applied to the tress wound on the curling rod, but is released from the foil during the heating process, thereby insuring that new heating pads are used on each customer, and preventing the unsanitary conditions which now frequently prevail where the lotioncarrying pads are used more than once.
In use, the heating pads are wrapped around the tress of hair to be waved after the tress has been properly wound on a curling rod '7 and covered with tape 12. Just prior to wrapping, he heating pads are moistened with the waving 0- tion, and any excess lotion may be squeezed out of the pads. This moistening is easily accomplished with the illustrative embodiment of the invention inasmuch as the inner side of the felt is covered with the perforated foil while the'outer side of the felt is exposed over substantially its entire area. After moistening, the pad is positioned on the wound tress with the perforate paper against the tress, the margin 4 of .felt at the bottom of the curling rod, and with the imperforate foil extending laterally away from the curling rod. The pad is then wound around the curling rod, and the imperforate foil is wrapped around the felt to seal the tress within the wound pad. The bottom of the imperforate foil may then be crimped below the curling rod, either by hand or by a suitable crimping tool. When so wound the connectors of opposite polarity are connected to the exposed parts of the inner and outer sheets of foil as indicated in Figure 3, and current is supplied from trans former 11 for the requisite period of time until the tress is permanently waved. Preferably, the felt is not completely saturated with the hair waving lotion, and when the pad becomes heated, the tendency to drip lotion onto the scalp of the customer is thereby reduced. After a suffic'ient period of heating, the pad may then be removed and the tress unwound from the curling rod, washed, set and dried in the usual manner.
The invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specificmechanisms shown and described but departures may be made therefrom within the scope of the accompanying claims without departing from the principles of the invention and without sacrificing its chief advantages.
What we claim is: i
1. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between an inner sheet of thin, perforate lead foil and an outer sheet of relatively thick lead foil and means for securing said sheets together.
2. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between an outer sheetof relatively thick lead foil and an inner sheet of thin perforate lead foil reenforced by paper on the side away from said absorbent material.
3. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of perforate metal foil of a size sufficient to enclose a wound tress of hair, a sheet of absorbent material slightly wider than said foil and superposed thereon to cover all but one end of said foil, and an outer sheet of metal foil secured to said absorbent sheet along one edge thereof so that when wrapped around a wound tress of hair the outer foil encloses the absorbent sheet and perforate foil.
4. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of foramlnous metal, a sheet of absorbent material superposed thereon and contacting with a substantial area of said foraminous metal and a sheet of metal foil extending laterally from one edge of said absorbent sheet and secured thereto to form a tight,
recess? vapor retaining outer covering when said pad is wrapped around a wound tress.
5. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperferate sheets of metal foil, one of said foils and the absorbent sheet being secured together in substantial register with each other, said foils being insulated from metallic contact with each other by a margin of absorbent material.
6. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, and a sheet of perforate paper secured to said perforate foil and covering one face thereof.
'7. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, and means for securing said sheets together, said sheets being so positioned relative to each other that the perforate foil extends beyond said other sheet and provides a terminal.
8. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil and means for securing said sheets together in overlapping relation, said perforate sheet extending beyond one end of said absorbent material and said imperforate foil extending from one side of said absorbent material whereby electrical connections may be made to said foils.
9. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent ma terial positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being positioned relatively to each other to provide a margin of absorbent material at the bottom of said perforate foil with said imperforate foil extending below said margin.
10. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperforate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being positioned on each other so that the perforate foil stops short of the bottom of the absorbent sheet and the imperforate foil extends at least to the bottom of the absorbent sheet to provide a nonheating, scalable margin of absorbent material to be positioned" at the bottom of the wound tress to prevent drippi 11. An electrolytic heating pad for permanently waving hair comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between perforate and imperferate sheets of metal foil, said sheets being secured together in partial overlapping relationship, said imperforate foil extending below one end of said absorbent material to provide a seal below a wound tress to be heated.
12. An electrolytic permanent-waving heating pad comprising a sheet of absorbent material positioned between two sheets of metal foil, one of said sheets of foil being perforated and having-a coating of electrical insulating material on its face which is away from the absorbent sheet.
13. A curl heating device for permanent waving including in combination a curl support, a heater comprsing an absorbent electrolyte carrier, two metallic foil electrodes engageable with opposite faces of the electrolyte carrier over a substantial area so as to provide a short current 0 path through the carrier, and meansfor insulating the curl support from the adjacent electrode.
14. A curl heating device for permanent waving including in combination a curl support, a heater comprising an absorbent electrolyte carrier, two metallic foil electrodes engageable with opposite faces of the electrolyte carrier over a substantial area so as to provide a short current path through the carrier, means for insulating the curl support from the adjacent electrode, and 110 electric circuit terminals connected directly to the electrodes of the pad.
15. An electrolytic permanent waving heater comprising a flexible laminated assembly of an absorbent, pad for an electrolyte, electrodes of 115 substantial area in electrical contact with opposite faces of the pad, thus forming a short conducting path for the current, and a non-conducting sheet positioned between the hair and the contiguous electrode, the heater being flexible 120 so that it can be wrapped around a curl for heating it.
HOBART N. DURHAM.
US664116A 1932-11-07 1933-04-03 Permanent waving apparatus Expired - Lifetime US1926987A (en)

Priority Applications (10)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US641576A US2014246A (en) 1932-11-07 1932-11-07 Permanent waving
US664116A US1926987A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-04-03 Permanent waving apparatus
FR762543D FR762543A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-09-11 Improvements to methods and apparatus for permanent hair waving
DEB162509D DE638453C (en) 1932-11-07 1933-09-24 Permanent hair wave device with outside heating
US692949A US2022657A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-10-10 Permanent waving heater
GB27647/34A GB433351A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-11-04 Improvements in devices for use in permanent hair waving
GB24515/33A GB433290A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-11-04 Improvements in or relating to permanent hair waving process and apparatus
GB27412/34A GB444757A (en) 1932-11-07 1934-09-24 Improvements in or relating to hair curling apparatus
FR45295D FR45295E (en) 1932-11-07 1934-10-08 Improvements to methods and apparatus for permanent hair waving
US14405A US2028051A (en) 1932-11-07 1935-04-03 Permanent waving

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US641576A US2014246A (en) 1932-11-07 1932-11-07 Permanent waving
US664116A US1926987A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-04-03 Permanent waving apparatus
US692949A US2022657A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-10-10 Permanent waving heater

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US1926987A true US1926987A (en) 1933-09-12

Family

ID=41008917

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US641576A Expired - Lifetime US2014246A (en) 1932-11-07 1932-11-07 Permanent waving
US664116A Expired - Lifetime US1926987A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-04-03 Permanent waving apparatus
US692949A Expired - Lifetime US2022657A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-10-10 Permanent waving heater
US14405A Expired - Lifetime US2028051A (en) 1932-11-07 1935-04-03 Permanent waving

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US641576A Expired - Lifetime US2014246A (en) 1932-11-07 1932-11-07 Permanent waving

Family Applications After (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US692949A Expired - Lifetime US2022657A (en) 1932-11-07 1933-10-10 Permanent waving heater
US14405A Expired - Lifetime US2028051A (en) 1932-11-07 1935-04-03 Permanent waving

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (4) US2014246A (en)
DE (1) DE638453C (en)
FR (2) FR762543A (en)
GB (3) GB433351A (en)

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2617010A (en) * 1951-08-18 1952-11-04 Schmitz Harry Electrically operated steam generator
US2726294A (en) * 1951-01-30 1955-12-06 Health Guardian Corp Devices for giving an alarm upon bed wetting
US5694954A (en) * 1995-10-11 1997-12-09 Habibi; Masood Heated hair curler with adjustable diameter and heating unit therefor
US5887599A (en) * 1997-09-10 1999-03-30 Habibi; Masood Adjustable hair curler and method of use
US5890496A (en) * 1995-10-11 1999-04-06 Habibi; Masood Heatable hair curler with adjustable diameter
US20040003824A1 (en) * 2002-03-15 2004-01-08 Masood Habibi Toothed heated hair styling device and method of manufacture
USRE38713E1 (en) 1999-02-26 2005-03-22 Masood Habibi Heated hair styling system
US20080072921A1 (en) * 2006-09-22 2008-03-27 Masood Habibi Hair styling device and method of operation
US20080283081A1 (en) * 2007-05-15 2008-11-20 Masood Habibi Hair styling device
US20080283080A1 (en) * 2007-05-15 2008-11-20 Masood Habibi Hair styling device
US20100307525A1 (en) * 2008-12-16 2010-12-09 Maxime De Boni Permanent reshaping process using a heating mechanical tensioning device
US10081905B2 (en) 2014-01-09 2018-09-25 Modiron, LLC Ironing device

Families Citing this family (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2423945A (en) * 1944-11-03 1947-07-15 Technical Products Company Electrolytic steam pad for ironing boards
US2479914A (en) * 1945-10-17 1949-08-23 Cutler Hammer Inc Resistance heater unit for thermal overload devices and method of making the same
DE951660C (en) * 1949-03-19 1956-10-31 Andre Muller Electric permanent hair waving device for creating permanent waves at temperatures that do not exceed 98 98Ò
US3835292A (en) * 1973-02-28 1974-09-10 Clairol Inc Steam curling iron
US4601299A (en) * 1983-12-19 1986-07-22 Clairol Incorporated Hair setting process and tissue
EP3104738A1 (en) * 2014-02-14 2016-12-21 Mirakel Technologies, Inc. Systems, devices and methods for styling hair

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2726294A (en) * 1951-01-30 1955-12-06 Health Guardian Corp Devices for giving an alarm upon bed wetting
US2617010A (en) * 1951-08-18 1952-11-04 Schmitz Harry Electrically operated steam generator
US5694954A (en) * 1995-10-11 1997-12-09 Habibi; Masood Heated hair curler with adjustable diameter and heating unit therefor
US5890496A (en) * 1995-10-11 1999-04-06 Habibi; Masood Heatable hair curler with adjustable diameter
US5887599A (en) * 1997-09-10 1999-03-30 Habibi; Masood Adjustable hair curler and method of use
USRE38713E1 (en) 1999-02-26 2005-03-22 Masood Habibi Heated hair styling system
US20040003824A1 (en) * 2002-03-15 2004-01-08 Masood Habibi Toothed heated hair styling device and method of manufacture
US7341064B2 (en) 2002-03-15 2008-03-11 Masood Habibi Toothed heated hair styling device and method of manufacture
US20080072921A1 (en) * 2006-09-22 2008-03-27 Masood Habibi Hair styling device and method of operation
US7540289B2 (en) 2006-09-22 2009-06-02 Masood Habibi Hair styling device and method of operation
US20080283081A1 (en) * 2007-05-15 2008-11-20 Masood Habibi Hair styling device
US20080283080A1 (en) * 2007-05-15 2008-11-20 Masood Habibi Hair styling device
US20100307525A1 (en) * 2008-12-16 2010-12-09 Maxime De Boni Permanent reshaping process using a heating mechanical tensioning device
US8517034B2 (en) * 2008-12-16 2013-08-27 L'oreal Permanent reshaping process using a heating mechanical tensioning device
US9113689B2 (en) 2008-12-16 2015-08-25 L'oreal Permanent reshaping process using a heating mechanical tensioning device
US10081905B2 (en) 2014-01-09 2018-09-25 Modiron, LLC Ironing device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US2014246A (en) 1935-09-10
GB433351A (en) 1935-08-06
FR762543A (en) 1934-04-12
GB444757A (en) 1936-03-24
US2028051A (en) 1936-01-14
US2022657A (en) 1935-12-03
GB433290A (en) 1935-08-06
FR45295E (en) 1935-07-22
DE638453C (en) 1936-11-16

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1926987A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US4697066A (en) Electric hair curling waved with improved heating element arrangement
US1883828A (en) Heater for permanent wave machines
US2118177A (en) Permanent waving device
US1957049A (en) Wrapper for permanent waving of hair
US2055099A (en) Permanent waving sachet
US2057005A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US2177881A (en) Permanent waving
US2168219A (en) Permanent waving device
US2122163A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US2051689A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US2162081A (en) Permanent wave apparatus
US2078559A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US2116079A (en) Sachet for treating and waving hair
US2316505A (en) Heater pad
US2114917A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US2349285A (en) Method of permanent waving and a permanent waving heater
US1706385A (en) Electric heating device
US2072857A (en) Permanent waving apparatus
US1481109A (en) Hair-waving appliance and method of using the same
US1556266A (en) Hair-waving device
US2080085A (en) Hair waving pad
US1720865A (en) Apparatus and articles for waving hair
SU59876A1 (en) Permanent Curler
US1674068A (en) Steam envelope for hair waving