Custom printed lamp shade
10001255 · 2018-06-19
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21V1/146
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/22
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21W2121/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/143
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V11/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/26
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V1/14
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
The present invention generally concerns a custom lampshade with a digital print. More specifically, the lamp shade includes an end cap that joins with printing substrates capable of passing light. At least one end cap is used to shape and support a substrate having a digital image printed on at least one of its surfaces. The end cap has a center aperture with a diameter sized to accept a threaded portion of a shade rest or a diameter that is sized to accept a lamp socket. The end cap has an outer channel sized to accept the edges of a transparent substrate material. In another embodiment, the end cap is devoid of an outer channel, but is joined about its outer diameter with a translucent substrate material via an adhesive. When the lamp shade is used, a light source illuminates the digital image printed on either substrate.
Claims
1. A custom printed lamp shade comprising: a.) a substrate being a transparent sheet of acrylic glass having a reverse digital image printed on one side; b.) two transparent acrylic glass end caps, wherein at least one end cap includes a center aperture, spokes that radiate outward from the center aperture, and an outer channel capable of accepting the thickness of the transparent sheet of acrylic glass having a reverse digital image printed on one side; c.) wherein the center aperture of the transparent acrylic glass end cap is sized to accept a diameter for a threaded portion of a shade rest lamp fitter, a diameter that is sized to accept a threaded portion of a lamp socket, or lamp socket having a lamp ring; and d.) wherein the edges of the transparent sheet of acrylic glass join about the channel of at least one end cap.
2. The custom printed lamp shade of claim 1, wherein the transparent sheet of acrylic glass can accept UV-LED curable inks from a digital printer for printing the reverse digital image thereon.
3. The custom lamp shade of claim 1, wherein each end cap is laser cut to be substantially square, substantially triangular, or substantially circular.
4. The custom printed lamp shade of claim 1, wherein the transparent sheet of acrylic glass is shaped by a substantially square, substantially triangular, or substantially circular end cap to form lampshade walls having such corresponding shapes.
5. The custom printed lamp shade of claim 1, wherein the digital image printed about the surfaces of the substrate is illuminated by a light source associated with a lamp.
6. The custom printed lampshade of claim 1, wherein the transparent sheet of acrylic glass has a thickness from an 1/16 to a , a transparency of 92%, and has a bulk density of 1.20 g/cm.sup.3 at 20 C.
7. A method of manufacturing a custom printed lampshade comprising: a. sizing a sheet of transparent acrylic glass with a laser cutter; b. using a digital printer capable of applying UV-LED curable inks to print a reverse digital image onto one side of the transparent sheet of acrylic glass; c. laser cutting acrylic glass into an end cap: i. being a circle, a square with round edges, or a triangle with round edges having a center aperture with a diameter sized to accept a shade rest of a lamp fitter, or a diameter sized to accept a lamp socket, or a diameter sized to accept a lamp socket with a lamp ring, and spokes that radiate outward therefrom; ii. wherein the end cap is laser cut and accepts edges of a transparent sheet of acrylic glass having a reverse digital image printed thereon; d. applying heat to the transparent sheet of acrylic glass having the reverse digital image printed thereon to a depolymerization temperature that softens the acrylic glass to hand guide the sheet of acrylic glass into of the end cap; and e. forming the custom printed lamp shade by securing the transparent sheet of acrylic glass, having the reverse digital image printed thereon, about the end cap via an adhesive.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1) The figures discussed below are non-limiting examples of the present invention and are intended to capture or contemplate common changes to the same.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(16) From this point forward, the following words will describe a custom printed lamp shade.
(17) Embodiments of the present invention include the substrate being a transparent material,
Definitions
(18) To detail the present invention, the following non-limiting terms are used.
(19) The terms acrylic glass or acrylic generally refer(s) to thermo-plastics which may be obtained via free-radical polymerization of mixtures which comprise methyl methacrylate. These mixtures generally comprise at least 40% by weight, preferably at least 60% by weight and particularly preferably at least 80% by weight or higher, based on the weight of the monomers, of methyl methacrylate. These mixtures for production of polymethyl methacrylates can also comprise other (meth)acrylates copolymerizable with methyl methacrylate. In industry, the expression (meth)acrylates includes methacrylates and acrylates and mixtures of the two. These monomers are well known. Among them are, inter alia, (meth)acrylates which derive from saturated alcohols, e.g. methyl acrylate, ethyl (meth)acrylate, propyl (meth)acrylate, n-butyl (meth)acrylate, tert-butyl (meth)acrylate, isobutyl (meth)acrylate, pentyl (meth)acrylate and 2-ethylhexyl (meth)acrylate; and also (meth)acrylates which derive from unsaturated alcohols, e.g. oleyl (meth)acrylate, 2-propynyl (meth)acrylate, allyl (meth)acrylate, vinyl (meth)acrylate; and also aryl (meth)acrylates, such as benzyl (meth)acrylate or phenyl (meth)acrylate, and in each case the aryl radicals here can be unsubstituted or can have up to four substituents; Cycloalkyl (meth)acrylates, such as 3-vinylcyclohexyl (meth)acrylate, bornyl (meth)acrylate; hydroxyalkyl (meth)acrylates, such as 3-hydroxypropyl (meth)acrylate, 3,4-dihydroxybutyl (meth)acrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl (meth)acrylate, 2-hydroxypropyl (meth)acrylate; Glycol di(meth)acrylates, such as 1,4-butanediol (meth)acrylate, (meth)acrylates of ether alcohols, e.g. tetrahydrofurfuryl (meth)acrylate, vinyloxyethoxyethyl (meth)acrylate; amides and nitriles of (meth)acrylic acid, e.g. N-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)(meth)acrylamide, N-(diethylphosphono)(meth)acrylamide, 1-methacryloyl-amido-2-methyl-2-propanol; sulfur-containing meth-acrylates, such as ethylsulfinylethyl (meth)acrylate, 4-thiocyanatobutyl (meth)acrylate, ethylsulfonylethyl (meth)acrylate, thiocyanatomethyl (meth)acrylate, methylsulfinylmethyl (meth)acrylate, bis((meth)-acryloyloxyethyl) sulfide; polyfunctional (meth)-acrylates, such as trimethyloylpropane tri(meth)-acrylate.
(20) The terms backlit, or backlit film, or film generally refer(s) to a specialty vinyl and laminate materials, including but not limited to, synthetic paper (polyolefine type, polystylene type, etc.); natural fiber paper such as cellulose fiber paper (wood-free paper, coated paper, latex impregnated paper, etc.); synthetic resin sheet or film (polyolefine, polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene-terephtharate, polystylene, polymethacrylate, polycarbonate, etc.). Examples of the resin to be used for the receiving layer for the film may include without limitation polyester, polyacrylate, polycarbonate, polyvinyl acetate, styrene-acrylate resin, vinyl tolueneacrylate resin, polyurethane, polyamide, urea resin, polycaprolactone, styrene-maleic anhydride resin, polyvinyl chloride, polyacrylonitrile, etc. and mixtures, copolymers of these resins, and others.
(21) The term digital image generally refers to a numeric representation (normally binary) of a two-dimensional image, a photo. Depending on whether or not the image resolution is fixed, it may be of vector or raster type. The term may also refer to raster images that have been compressed called bitmap images. Web browsers can display standard internet image formats including GIF, JPEG, and PNG, bitmap formats. It is an embodiment of the present invention where a digital image is loaded onto a computer enabled printer and printed onto a transparent or translucent substrate. The digital image can be, without limitation, a reproduction of fine art, a personal photo, cell phone snapshots, or any digitally represented image.
(22) The term threaded shade rest generally refers to common threaded bushings used to secure a hanging lamp shade to a lamp assembly by a finish that can mate with the same. The bushings may also be referred to as reducer bushings.
(23) The term lamp socket generally refers to electrical connections that are found in lamps typically having an Edison Screw connector for light bulbs. There are many types of sockets, including without limitation, Phenolic medium base sockets, standard lamp sockets, lamp sockets having a keyless socket and threaded shell with a shade ring, and the like. The present invention is designed so that an end cap's center aperture has a varying diameter that can accommodate and fit flush with various types of lamp sockets.
The End Cap
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(25) However, other end cap 5, 10, 14 starting materials may include without limitation solid wood, natural wood, coniferous wood, hardwood, bamboo, balsa wood, mahogany, basswood, beech, poplar, birch, maple, Douglas fir, spruce, pine, fir, common beech, oak, ash, cherry, walnut, obeche, padouk, teak, veneer, plywood, laminated wood, cork, metal, Earthenware ceramic, technical ceramic, Macor (glass ceramic), ceramic composite, porcelain, earthenware, stoneware, pottery, clay mineral, porcelain stoneware, fine stoneware tiles, kaolin, or any combinations thereof. All configurations of the end cap 5, 10, 14 are meant to be bases that are located at at least one end 5, 10, 14 of a lamp shade to ensure that a single piece is formed when joined with the acrylic or backlit substrate.
(26) It is an embodiment of the present invention wherein a sheet of acrylic glass having a thickness of about a to about 2.25 is selected and placed under a laser cutter to form an end cap 5, 10, 14. Preferably, an end cap 5, 10, 14 starting material should be acrylic glasses sold under the trade names, including but not limited to, Plexiglas, ACRYLITE, Lucite, Perspex, Altuglas, Setapan, Setacryl, Lucryl, Deglas, Friacryl, Hesa-Glas, Limacryl, Resarit, Satin Glass, Setasand, or Setaletter. The acrylic sheet is fashioned into an end cap 5, 10, 14 by a CO.sub.2 laser cutter that can cut or engrave non-metal materials such as acrylic, a non limiting example being a Eurolaser XL-3200 Laser Cutter Machine capable of a laser power between 30-600 Watts and having motion technology to ensure precision cuts.
(27) CO.sub.2 laser cutters are known in the art and are used in combination with a computer that may have proprietary software that accepts manual inputs to create patterns for controlling the routing and eventual laser cutting of intricate designs into and out of acrylic glass. The computer should have a basic operating system, such as MS Windows, Linux, Mac OS, or the like. The computer is capable of storage including but not limited to random access memory, read only memory, hard disks, floppy disks, compact disks, DVDs, flash drives, solid state disks, tape drives, or any other type of device or medium capable of storing information temporarily or permanently. Non-limiting examples of computer inputs and outputs may include, without limitation, a keyboard, a mouse, a trackball, a joystick, a touchpad, and/or a microphone, a CRT monitor, or an LED or LCD display panel.
(28) As such, the user of the present invention should be skilled in 3D and 2D modeling systems and techniques to give cutting instructions to the CO.sub.2 laser system. Commercially available programs have free-form surface manipulation capabilities, where 2D traces of parametric curves are made by free handing structures with non-uniform rational B-spline surfaces (NURBS). Within a modeling program, points and line segments in a Cartesian plane, e.g. an [x, y, z,] Cartesian system, are used as predetermined spatial instructions or can be free hand drawn to create virtually solid models for fabricating an end cap with the laser cutter.
(29) An experienced user will understand how to manipulate control points and meshes that define contoured surfaces by using, for example, B-spline curves. Any generic modeling program should be capable of sweeping, extruding, revolving, lofting, slicing, sculpting of a surface, or converting connected points forming 2D parametric contours and straight lines into any imaginable 3D shape, if needed, in vector or raster output formats including but not limited to CDR, SVG, DWG, AI, DXF, CMX, HPGL, PDF, EPS, ZCC, XPS, PLT, BMP, TIF, JPG, PNG, and the like.
(30) Programs for sending instructions to the laser cutter may include without limitation CorelDraw X5, AutoCad 2011, Inkscape, Adobe Illustrator, Draftsightand, RetinaEngrave USB, Euro Laser Connect, 3DM LW (3D Markup Language for Web), Dassault Systemes graphic representation, Virtual Architecture CAD, Ashlar-Vellum Argon3D Modeling, ArtCAM model, BRL-CAD Geometry, Solidedge Assembly, Pro/ENGINEER Assembly, Data Design System DDS-CAD, CopyCAD Curves, CopyCAD Model, CopyCAD Session, CadStd, CATIA V5 Drawing document, CATIA V5 Part document, CATIA V5 Assembly document, CATIA V5 Manufacturing document, AutoCAD and Open Design Alliance applications, Solidedge Draft, MicroStation design file, Delcam Geometry, Delcam Machining Triangles, ASCII Drawing Interchange file formatAutoCAD, VariCAD drawing file, WilcomWilcom ES Designer Embroidery, Agtek format, EXCELLON, FeatureCAM, FormZ, BRL-CAD, GERBER, T-FLEX CAD, GRAITEC, Auto CAD, Solidworks, Autodesk Inventor, Fusion 3D, Rhino 3D, Alias, Pro-Engineer Sketchup, and the like.
(31) As depicted in
(32) However, end caps 14 may be laser cut to give substantially circular lamp shades that have a total diameter from about 5 to about 100 in diameter, where substantially triangular and substantially square lamp shades may be cut to comparable sizes. When the substrate is backlit material, the outer portion of the end cap is joined to the backlit, which is about 1/32 to about 1/16 thick, with an adhesive. No matter the end cap's shape, when the substrate is acrylic glass an outer channel is cut from about 1/16 to about from the outer edge of the same, where the channel has a width and depth laser cut to accept the thickness of the acrylic substrate, which may be from about 1/16 to about in thickness.
(33) All end caps 5, 10, 14 in
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Acrylic Glass as a Substrate
(35) It is an embodiment of the present invention where a substrate with a digitally printed image on at least one of its surfaces forms the walls of the lamp shade. Especially useful as a starting material for a printing substrate, are copolymerized sheets of acrylic glass known as ACRYLITE, which is manufactured by Evonik Industries under trade secret no. NJTSR #56705700001-7119P or the specialty ACRYLITE suited for digital printing. These acrylic sheets have superior optical clarity, with T=92% across all thicknesses, a softening temperature from about 100 C. to about 210 C., and a depolymerization temperature of about 250 C. The acrylic sheets typically have a bulk density of about 1.20 g/cm.sup.3 at about 20 C. and ideally suited to receive UV-LED curable inks from a digital printer. Commercial acrylic sheets are shipped with an adhesive laminate to guard from scratching the surfaces during shipping.
(36) Acrylic glass is a good substrate for accepting UV-LED curable inks from digital printers. When an acrylic glass sheet is selected, a digital image is reversed printed on at least one area of one side thereof. Digital printers may include, without limitation, a Mutoh ValueJet 1626UH digital printer that is capable of printing a digital image onto an acrylic substrate that is at least thick with UV-LED curable inks. The printer is interfaced with a computer having digital images stored thereon and a UV-LED lamp for curing the pigments that are deposited on the acrylic sheet. The custom image stored in the interfaced computer is uploaded into image software, e.g. Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro, or the like, and resized according to the surface size of the acrylic substrate.
(37) The resized image is then transferred to a commercial printer capable of applying UV-LED curable inks onto an acrylic substrate. The digital printer should at least have a minimum droplet size of about 3.7 pl, be variable dot, have a maximum resolution of about 1440 dpi, have a head height up to about 0.5, a maximum medium width of about 64, an operating temperate less than that of the softening temperature of acrylic glass, a UV-LED lamp curing system, and possibly have the printing be drop on demand or piezo drive method printing.
(38) Once the digital image has been reverse printed and cured onto the acrylic substrate, the printed substrate is re-laminated by a dual thermal/cold pressure lamination machine capable of wide format lamination of substrates that are about thick, a non-limiting example being a 65 Dual Thermal and Cold Pressure Sensitive Roll Laminator RSH1651 as sold by Royal Sovereign. The laminate that is applied is a flexible gloss white pvc, a non-limiting example being DigiJet 903 3-mil premium white gloss flexible calendered vinyl film coated with a permanent acrylic pressure sensitive adhesive as sold by sfsupplies.com. The printed substrate is laminated to protect the printed image from scratches during the laser cutting process.
(39) A similar CO.sub.2 laser cutter, as described above, is used to size the printed acrylic substrate. The size of the digitally printed substrate will depend on the eventual size of the lamp that the lamp shade will hang from. However, for substrates that will be shaped into substantially circular lamp shades, the amount of flat acrylic sheet needed will be dictated by the eventual circumference of the channel that is laser cut into and about the outer periphery of the end cap, where the amount of acrylic glass sheet is dictated by the equation:
(3.14)diameter of outer channel of the circular end cap=amount of flat substrate to cut.
(40) An allowance for acrylic glass material is added to ensure that enough material is available to laser cut. For substantially square or substantially triangular lamp shades having end caps with channels about their outer edges, cutting a sheet of acrylic glass will be given by the dimensions of the lengths of each side of each respective structure based on the size of the lamp that the lamp shade will hang from.
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Backlit Film as a Substrate
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(44) The backlit substrate 21 should be a polyester based film capable of accepting solvent based inks or UV-LED curable inks from digital printers that are interfaced with a computer having digital images stored thereon. The custom image stored in the interfaced computer is uploaded into image software, e.g. Photoshop, Paint Shop Pro, or the like, and resized according to the surface size of the backlit film. The resized image is then transferred to a commercial printer capable of applying solvent based ink to the backlit film substrate 21.
(45) A solvent ink type digital printer may include, without limitations, an HP Latex 360 Printer, where the printer is capable of a print quality color of about 12001200 dpi, and having an average printing power of 4.6 kW. The solvent based inks of the present invention may be a commercial mixture of -Butyrolatone, Diethylene glycol diethyl ether, Tetraethylene glycol dimethyl ether, organic materials, Tetraethylene glycol monobutyl ether, and dyes or pigments, or any combinations thereof, where the pigments have a measure of elasticity when printed into the backlit film 21.
(46) In this embodiment the end cap does not have an outer channel cut into the recess thereof because the backlit is a flexible material capable of being wrapped around the outer diameter of the same. In this embodiment the end cap 20 is a substantially circular having a center aperture with a diameter sized to accept a lamp socket, or can be sized to accept the diameter of a shade rest associate with a lamp fitter. However, it is within the scope of the present invention where the substantially solid end cap 20 may be shaped as substantially square or substantially triangular as well. For simplicity, the digital image 22 is represented by the word Picture, which can be applied to the backlit film by using a digital printer applying solvent based inks to at least one surface of the same. The image may be reverse printed on the backlit 21 surface that will be closest to the light source or directly printed on the viewing surface of the same. Once the backlit film 21 is completely wrapped around the end cap 20 and secured by an adhesive that joins the two, the remaining end portions of the film are overlapped and glued to form a structure supporting seam. The applied adhesive may include without limitation a methacrylate based adhesive or any adhesive commonly used to adhere backlit film 21.
EXAMPLE LAMP SHADES
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(49) The foregoing words describe embodiments for a custom printed lamp shade. When assembled, light passing substrates with digitally printed images form lamp shade walls that are shaped by at least one end cap. The digitally printed image on either substrate is illuminated by a light source when the lamp shade hangs from a lamp. However, these words are not a limitation on the scope of the present invention but are written to detail certain embodiments thereof. The present invention may take different forms. Any changes to the invention, as contemplated by one of ordinary skill in the art, are meant to be captured by this disclosure. Therefore, none of this disclosure should be read or taken as limiting the scope of the invention. But, the invention is captured by the following claims.