Camouflage material
11346638 · 2022-05-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
The present invention relates to a camouflage material, in particular an artificial camouflage material intended for hunting and animal observation.
Claims
1. A camouflage material including an attachment strip with a first attachment face and a second attachment face to which a plurality of first grass strips and second grass strips are attached, the first grass strips lie immediately adjacent to the first attachment face and the second grass strips lie immediately adjacent the second attachment face wherein: each grass strip lies perpendicular to the attachment strip; each grass strip and the attachment strip are a synthetic material; each grass strip is double sided with a primary grass side and a secondary grass side; each grass strip has an independently chosen grass marking on each side, where the grass marking is a palette of colours and patterns which creates a visual appearance of a grass or reed on that side; the specific combination of the grass marking applied to the primary grass side and the grass marking applied to the secondary grass side of a single grass strip is a grass marking combination; the grass strips are directly or indirectly attached to the immediately adjacent attachment face by welding or gluing; and the camouflage material includes grass strips with at least four different grass marking combinations; such that: the distance a portion of each grass strip extends away from a first attachment edge of the attachment strip is independently and randomly selected to be between 1″ (25 mm) and 6″ (150 mm); each first grass strip overlaps the immediately adjacent first grass strip by between 10% and 90%; each second grass strip overlaps the immediately adjacent second grass strip by between 10% and 90%; and the grass strips are all the same length.
2. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein the synthetic material that the grass strips and the attachment strip are made of is a polyethylene.
3. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 2, wherein the grass strips and/or the attachment strip are made from high density polyethylene.
4. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein the length of each grass strip is from 24″ (61 cm) to 96″ (244 cm) in length.
5. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 2, wherein each of the grass strips are independently made from low density polyethylene, medium density polyethylene, high density polyethylene, or combinations thereof.
6. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein the grass strips are attached to the attachment strip by welding to form an attachment weld.
7. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 6, wherein the welding used is high frequency or ultrasonic welding.
8. The camouflage material as claimed in in claim 6, wherein the attachment weld is made up of a plurality of short welded sections.
9. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 8, wherein the welded sections are short straight welds.
10. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 9, wherein the welded sections are at an angle of 25° to 65° to the attachment strip.
11. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 8, wherein the welded sections are circular or oval in shape.
12. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 8, wherein some of the welded sections attach grass strips to other grass strips without attaching them to the attachment strip.
13. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein the number of grass marking combinations is between 4 and 20.
14. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 13, wherein the number of grass marking combinations is between 4 and 10.
15. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein the camouflage material has a first camouflage face and a second camouflage face which have different visual appearances, the first camouflage face is a face of the camouflage material seen when the first attachment face is facing an observer and the second camouflage face is a face of the camouflage material seen when the second attachment face is facing an observer.
16. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 15, wherein the first camouflage face and second camouflage face have a visual appearance optimised for different seasons in a specific geographical location.
17. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 15, wherein the first camouflage face and second camouflage face have a visual appearance optimised for different geographical locations.
18. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 15, wherein the first camouflage face and second camouflage face have a visual appearance optimised for different environments.
19. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 1, wherein grass strips with similar grass marking exposed are not immediately adjacent each other.
20. The camouflage material as claimed in claim 2, wherein the attachment strip is made from low density polyethylene, medium density polyethylene, high density polyethylene, or combinations thereof.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) By way of example only, a preferred embodiment of the present invention is described in detail below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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(13) Please note that the drawings are pictorial representations they are not engineering drawings and as such they are not to any scale, further the relative dimensions and shapes may be exaggerated or simplified for clarity.
(14) The capital letter of lowercase ‘i’ is not used in a numbered list or item identifier to avoid confusion with lowercase ‘L’, similarly the capital letter ‘O’ is not used to avoid confusion with the number 0 (zero).
Definitions
(15) Grass Strip: in this specification a grass strip is a thin elongate member with a simulated grass or reed pattern applied to each side/face. Each grass strip is double sided, that is the colours, saturation of the colours, intensity of the colours or combination of colours is different on each side or face. These grass strips are sometimes known as ‘Synthetic Rattan Flat Reeds’ or when the polymer used is polyethylene ‘PE Rattan’. It is intended that this term covers the synthetic rattan flat reeds that have a coloration and/or pattern that is an imitation of the natural colouration/pattern/look of reed, rattan reeds or grasses.
(16) High Frequency (HF) Welding: This is intended to include Ultrasonic, microwave, dielectric and radio frequency welding technology normally used for plastic welding.
(17) Pattern: in relation to the grass strip this term is meant to cover both a pattern of colours and three-dimensional surface patterns alone or in combination.
(18) Perpendicular: in this specification the term perpendicular is intended to refer to 90°+/−5° unless otherwise specified and, essentially perpendicular is intended to cover the range of 90°+/−10°.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
(19) Referring to
(20) The attachment strip (2) is a thin elongate member of a synthetic material. It is preferred that the attachment strip (2) is a polyethylene or a polyethylene blend as the preferred form of grass strip (9) is a polyethylene synthetic rattan flat reed as this has the required environmental properties.
(21) As shown in
(22) As shown in
(23) Referring to
(24) The length of the attachment strip (2), A, is not felt critical as it depends on the intended purpose, and if the camouflage material (1) is provided in roll form the maximum length could be 100 m (‘330 ft) or more depending on the roll size. It is expected that most separate camouflage material (1) items will be in the range 61 cm (24″)<A<244 cm (96″)
(25) The length of exposed attachment strip (9,20,30), B and J, may be 0 cm (0″) to 30 cm (10″). If a section of camouflage material is cut from a roll it is most likely to be 0 (zero) and if it is part of a separately manufactured camouflage material (1) item then it is used as a means of connecting/attaching (releasably or permanently) that item in place. In some variants this may be longer to allow for damage or specific purposes, this dimension is not particularly critical.
(26) The width of each grass strip (9,20,30), C, is determined by the manufacturer of the source material used, most commonly it is between 5 mm ( 3/16″) and 13 mm (½″) though it could be up to 25 mm (1″).
(27) The length of each grass strip (9,20,30), D, for a particular piece of camouflage material (1) is expected to be essentially the same and be in the range of 61 cm (24″) to 163 cm (64″). Some variants for specific purposes may extend this to 244 cm (96″).
(28) The distance each grass strip (9,20,30) extends away from the attachment strip (2), E, is independently and essentially randomly chosen for each grass strip (9,20,30) in the range of 25 mm (1″) to 150 mm (6″) though in most cases 25 mm (1″)<E<100 mm (4″). This provides an uneven edge outline to the camouflage material (1). The lower values of E make the grass strip (9,20,30) stiffer which imitates dry material or the broken ends of reed and grass, whereas the larger values of E allow the grass strip (9,20,30) to bend and move in the wind matching natural reeds or grass, this combination further breaking up the outline and increasing the realism.
(29) The width of the attachment strip (2), F, is not felt critical it merely needs to be wide enough to securely attach the grass strip (9,20,30) and, where the attachment strip (2) extends away from the terminal grass strips (9,20,30), allow the camouflage material (1) to be attached in use. Most likely 25 mm (1″)<F<75 mm (3″) though for added flexibility this may extend down to 13 mm (½″). There may be more than one attachment strip (2) but this is not shown and it may reduce the effectiveness of the camouflage material (1).
(30) The length of the grass strip (9,20,30) extending away from the attachment strip (2) to the secondary terminal end (15), G, is simply D−(E+F)=G.
(31) The overlap between immediately adjacent grass strips (9,20,30) attached to the same attachment face (7,8) of the attachment strip (2), H, is in the range of 10% to 90% of C, i.e. 0.1 C<H<0.9 C.
(32) Referring to
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(34) Referring to
(35) Referring to
(36) Referring to
(37) If welding is used to attach the grass strips (9,20,30) to the attachment strip (2) and any intervening grass strips (9,20,30) then the weld will also extend through to any grass strip (9,20,30) attached to the opposite attachment face (7,8). Referring to
(38) Each grass strip (9,20,30) is double sided with a different colour, intensity, palette, saturation of colours, lightness or pattern variation on each grass side (37,38). This different marking (‘grass marking’) on each grass side (37,38) means that by reversing some of the grass strips (9,20,30) a variation in marking along the length of the attachment strip (2) occurs. This variation in exposed marking along the length of the camouflage material (1) increases the realism of the camouflage material (1). It has been found that using grass strips (9,20,30) with different marking combinations, at least four, achieves sufficient realism. Some of the grass strips (9,20,30) show the reverse side to the immediately adjacent grass strip (9,20,30) and some colours/grass markings may only be used infrequently, the aim is to provide a camouflage material (1) that imitates the natural environment in use. In most cases between 4 and 10 different colours/grass marking of grass strip will be used.
(39) As the camouflage material (2) has first and second grass strips (20,30) it provides a denser camouflage than the natural material variants or variants that have only first grass strips (20) present. In addition the outer most layer of grass strips (9,20,30) can be disturbed without necessarily compromising the effectiveness of the camouflage material (1), this can provide a more natural camouflage.
(40) By choosing the colours of the grass strips carefully the camouflage material (1) can be made double sided, with one side adapted for one environment or season and the other for a second environment or season. This dual use camouflage material (1) is very difficult to create using natural materials.
(41) Referring to
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(46) Referring to
(47) As shown in
(48) Referring to
(49) In some variants first and second grass strips (20,30) may be attached together at points where they do not overlap the attachment strip (2).
(50) In some variants, for example where the camouflage material (1) is provided in rolls, B and/or J may be 0 (zero) as the customer cuts off the length required.
KEY
(51) 1 camouflage material, 2 attachment strip; 4 first attachment edge; (the one from which E is measured) 5 second attachment edge; (the one from which G is measured) 7 first attachment face; 8 second attachment face; 9 grass strips; 11 first terminal end of the attachment strip; 12 second terminal end of the attachment strip; 14 Primary terminal end; (one terminal end of a grass strip) 15 Secondary terminal end; (terminal end of a grass strip, opposite end to 14) 20 first grass strips; (attached to first attachment face) 30 second grass strips; (attached to second attachment face) 34 primary grass edge (of grass strip); 35 secondary grass edge (of grass strip); 37 primary grass side; 38 secondary grass side; 45 welded sections; 46 weld; 50 attachment holes; 60 boat; 62 outboard motor; 64 tubular support;