Hembar for a shade fabric and assembly method
A hembar includes front and rear walls and top and bottom spline channels adjacent a top and a bottom of the hembar. Each spline channel receives a spline in an oblique orientation to a vertical line and is arranged to conceal the channel from any viewing location in front of the hembar. A shade fabric is received in the channels through longitudinal slots and the splines are received through an open end. A notch opposite the slot receives part of the shade fabric to facilitate spline insertion. A pocket for a weighting element is off-centered such that it is closer to the rear wall. The hembar is assembled using a support member having obliquely angled walls to support the hembar with one channel horizontally oriented. The front and rear walls of the hembar may be covered by the shade fabric in a full wrap option.
This application claims priority from commonly-assigned U.S. provisional application No. 60/836,517, filed Aug. 9, 2006, the entire disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
FIELD OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates generally to roller shades having flexible shade fabrics, and more particularly to a hembar adapted for attachment to a lower end of a shade fabric.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONRoller shades include a flexible shade fabric supported by an elongated roller tube for winding and unwinding of the shade fabric. A hembar is attached to a lower end of the shade fabric to weight the lower end of the shade fabric. The weighting of the shade fabric by the hembar limits wrinkling of the shade fabric to facilitate smooth operation of the roller shade as the shade fabric is wound and unwound.
A variety of attachment means are used to secure shade fabrics to hembars including the use of adhesives and staples. It is also known to secure shade fabrics to hembars using elongated splines received in channels defined by the hembar. Referring to
Roller shades are often used with blackout side rails to eliminate light gaps along opposite sides of the shade fabric. The blackout side rails define vertical channels that receive side edge portions of the shade fabric. To minimize light leakage, the channels of the blackout side must be narrow in width, i.e., narrow in dimension perpendicular to the shade fabric, for example, approximately 0.5 inch in width. However, prior art hembars utilizing spline-attachment means, such as hembar 2, are not usable with blackout side rails because the hembars will not fit within the narrow channels of the blackout side rails. For example, the typical prior art hembar 2 has a width of approximately 0.6 inch in width.
What is needed is a hembar defining spline channels adapted for receipt of elongated splines that defines a narrow cross-section adapted for receipt of the hembar within blackout side rails.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccording to the present invention, a hembar includes a front wall defining a substantially vertical front surface, a rear wall defining a substantially vertical rear surface opposite the front wall, and at least one spline channel between the front and rear walls. The front and rear walls are spaced from each other by a horizontal distance and the spline channel is oriented at an oblique angle with respect to a vertical line such that a width of the spline channel is greater than the horizontal distance between the front and rear walls. The oblique orientation of the spline channel, instead of perpendicular to the vertical line, provides for reduction in the hembar dimensions without reduction of the spline dimensions to facilitate receipt of the hembar in blackout side rails having correspondingly narrow vertical channels. Preferably the hembar includes top and bottom spline channels. Each of the top and bottom spline channels is preferably oriented with respect to the front wall such that the channel is concealed from view when the hembar is viewed from any location in front of the hembar.
According to one embodiment, each of the spline channels defines a longitudinally-extending slot opening for receiving a looped portion of a shade fabric within the interior of the channel and an open end for receiving a spline. Each spline channel may also define a notch in a wall opposite the slot opening of the channel for receiving part of the looped portion of the shade fabric to facilitate insertion of the spline.
According to one embodiment, the hembar includes a longitudinally-extending retainer pocket between the front wall and the rear wall adapted to receive a weighting element. The retainer pocket is adapted to receive the weighting element in an off-centered manner such that the weighting element is located closer to the rear wall than to the front wall.
According to a method of attaching a shade fabric to a hembar body having obliquely oriented spline channels, a hembar support member is provided. The hembar support member includes at least one obliquely oriented support surface for receiving either a front wall or a rear wall of the hembar and supporting the hembar such that one of the spline channels is oriented horizontally. The method includes the steps of placing the hembar on the hembar support member such that the bottom spline channel is substantially horizontal, directing a shade fabric into the bottom spline channel to define a looped portion and inserting a spline into the bottom spline channel to secure the shade fabric to the hembar body in the bottom channel. The method includes the steps of wrapping the shade fabric between the channels to cover the front wall, placing the hembar body on the hembar support member such that the top spline channel is horizontal, directing shade fabric into the top spline channel to define a looped portion, and inserting a spline into the top spline channel to secure the shade fabric to the hembar body in the top spline channel.
According to one embodiment, the shade fabric is directed into the channels using a creasing tool and the splines are inserted into the channels using a spline tool having a fabric-engaging portion including a tapered flange and a post adapted for receipt in an opening defined by each spline for applying a pulling force to the spline.
The method may also include the step of wrapping the shade fabric between the spline channels to cover the rear wall of the hembar body so as to provide a full wrap of the hembar body. The wrapping the rear wall by the shade fabric may occur prior to the wrapping of the front wall. The method further comprises the removing the spline from the top spline channel, directing the shade fabric into the top spline channel such that two looped portions of the shade fabric are defined and arranged in a stacked fashion within the top spline channel, and re-inserting the spline into the top spline channel within the two looped portions of the shade fabric such that the shade fabric is secured to the hembar body in the top spline channel.
The steps of directing a shade fabric into one of the spline channels and inserting a spline into the spline channel may be performed in a two-step procedure that is performed over a length of the hembar body and repeated to advance the spline from a first end of the hembar body to an opposite second end of the hembar body.
For the purpose of illustrating the invention, the drawings show a form of the invention that is presently preferred. However, it should be understood that this invention is not limited to the precise arrangements and instrumentalities shown in the drawings.
Referring to the drawings, where like numerals identify like elements, there is illustrated in the cross-sectional view of
The hembar 10 includes an elongated body 12 including a front wall 14, an opposite rear wall 16, a top 18 and a bottom 20. The front and rear walls 14, 16 respectively define front and rear surfaces that are substantially vertical when the hembar is oriented as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
As discussed above, the oblique angling of the spline-receipt channels 22, 24 allows the splines 26 to be dimensioned substantially similar to the splines 6 of prior art hembar 2 (i.e., requiring no reduction in the width of the spline as would be the case if the spline remained perpendicular to the vertical line V). In this manner, the splines 26 used with hembar 10 will function to secure a shade fabric to the hembar 10 in a similar fashion as the splines 6 used with the prior art hembar 2 (i.e., there will be no reduction in the clamping action provided by the splines). Such a result would not be achieved if the dimensions of the hembar 2 simply reduced in an overall manner to fit within narrower channels of blackout side rails. In such a case, the dimensions of the spline-receipt channels would be reduced in proportion requiring a correspondingly reduction in the dimensions of the splines (e.g., the width of the splines).
In addition to providing for reduction in the overall thickness or profile of the hembar body 12 as described above, the hembar 10 of the present invention is also adapted to desirably conceal both of the spline-receipt channels 22, 24 from view when the hembar 10 is viewed from a location in front of the hembar. Referring again to
Still referring to
The hembar 10 of the present invention also facilitates assembly between the hembar 10 and shade fabric 28 as follows. Still referring to
Referring now to
Referring to
As shown in
The above-described horizontal orientation for the channels 22, 24 provided by the hembar support 42 facilitates the following assembly procedure for securing the shade fabric 28 to the hembar 10. It should be understood that the spline 26 shown in
Referring again to
Referring now to
Referring to
According to one preferred assembly method, a two-step process can be repeated to advance the spline 26 along the hembar body 12 within the spline-receipt channel 24 as follows. Starting first at the end of the hembar 10 shown in
Upon completion of the two-step process to pull the spline 26 across the bottom channel 24, the shade fabric 28 is wrapped around half of the hembar body 12 covering the rear wall 16 of the hembar body as shown in
Following the formation of the new (second) looped fabric portion within the top spline-receipt channel 22 as shown in
Referring to
The foregoing describes the invention in terms of embodiments foreseen by the inventor for which an enabling description was available, notwithstanding that insubstantial modifications of the invention, not presently foreseen, may nonetheless represent equivalents thereto.
Claims
1. A hembar adapted for attachment to a shade fabric comprising:
- a front wall defining a substantially vertical front surface;
- a rear wall defining a substantially vertical rear surface, the front wall and the rear wall spaced from each other by a horizontal distance; and
- at least one spline channel defined between the front and rear walls, the spline channel oriented at an oblique angle with respect to a vertical line such that a width of the spline channel is greater than the horizontal distance between the front and rear walls.
2. The hembar of claim 1, wherein the at least one spline channel includes a top spline channel adjacent a top of the hembar and a bottom spline channel adjacent a bottom of the hembar.
3. The hembar of claim 2, wherein the oblique angle of each spline channel is approximately 45 degrees.
4. The hembar of claim 2, wherein each of the spline channels is oriented with respect to the front wall such that the spline channel is concealed from view from any location in front of the hembar.
5. The hembar of claim 1, wherein the spline channel defines a longitudinally-extending slot opening for receiving a shade fabric within the interior of the spline channel and at least one open end for receiving a spline within the interior of the spline channel.
6. The hembar of claim 5, wherein the spline channel defines a notch in a wall of the channel, the notch located opposite the slot opening for receiving part of a looped portion of a shade fabric placed into the interior of the spline channel to facilitate insertion of a spline into the looped portion of the shade fabric.
7. The hembar of claim 1, further comprising a longitudinally-extending retainer pocket between the front and rear walls adapted for receiving a weighting element.
8. The hembar of claim 7, wherein the retainer pocket is adapted to receive the weighting element in an off-centered manner with respect to the front wall and the rear wall.
9. The hembar of claim 8, wherein the retainer pocket is adapted to receive the weighting element such that the weighting element is located closer to the rear wall than to the front wall.
10. The hembar of claim 1, wherein the distance between the front wall and the rear wall is approximately 0.4 inch or less.
11. A hembar assembly for a shade fabric comprising:
- an elongated body having a front wall and an opposite rear wall respectively defining substantially vertical front and rear surfaces and spaced from each other by a horizontal distance, the elongated body defining top and bottom fabric-attachment channels respectively located between the front and rear walls adjacent a top and a bottom of the hembar, each fabric-attachment channel defining a width and adapted for receiving a looped portion of a shade fabric; and
- a pair of elongated splines each adapted for receipt by one of the fabric-attachment channels within the looped portion of the shade fabric such that the shade fabric is wedged within the channel by the spline to secure the shade fabric to the hembar,
- each fabric-attachment channel oriented obliquely with respect to a vertical line such that the width of the channel is greater that the horizontal distance between the front and rear walls.
12. The hembar assembly of claim 11, wherein each fabric-attachment channel is arranged with respect to the front wall of the hembar body such that the fabric-attachment channel is concealed from view when the hembar body is viewed from any location in front of the hembar.
13. The hembar assembly of claim 12, further comprising an elongated weighting element received within a weight-retainer pocket between the front and rear walls of the hembar body, the weighting element located closer to the rear wall of the body than to the front wall.
14. The hembar assembly of claim 11, wherein the distance between the front wall and the rear wall of the elongated body is approximately 0.4 inch or less.
15. A method of attaching a shade fabric to a hembar comprising the steps of:
- providing an elongated hembar body having a substantially vertical front wall, a substantially vertical rear wall opposite the front wall, and top and bottom spline channels respectively located between the front wall and the rear wall adjacent a top and a bottom of the hembar body, each of the spline channels adapted to receive an elongated spline such that the spline is oriented obliquely to the front and rear walls, the hembar body defining a longitudinally-extending slot opening for each channel communicating with the interior of the channel;
- providing a pair of elongated splines each adapted for receipt within one of the spline channels;
- providing a hembar support member including at least one obliquely oriented support surface for receiving either one of the front and rear walls of the hembar body and supporting the hembar body such that one of the spline channels is substantially horizontal;
- placing the hembar body on the hembar support member such that the bottom spline channel is substantially horizontal;
- directing a shade fabric into the interior of the bottom spline channel through the associated slot opening of the hembar body to define a looped portion of the shade fabric;
- inserting a spline into the bottom spline channel through an open end of the bottom spline channel within the looped portion of the shade fabric such that the spline wedgingly secures the shade fabric to the hembar body in the bottom spline channel;
- wrapping the shade fabric about the hembar body between the bottom spline channel and the top spline channel such that the front wall of the hembar body is covered by the shade fabric;
- placing the hembar body on the hembar support member such that the top spline channel is substantially horizontal;
- directing the shade fabric into the interior of the top spline channel through the associated slot opening of the hembar body to define a looped portion of the shade fabric; and
- inserting a spline into the top spline channel through an open end of the top spline channel within the looped portion of the shade fabric such that the spline wedgingly secures the shade fabric to the hembar body in the top spline channel.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the steps of directing a shade fabric into the interior of the bottom channel and directing the shade fabric into the interior of the top channel include the step of using a creasing tool.
17. The method of claim 15, wherein the steps of inserting a spline into the bottom spline channel and inserting a spline into the top spline channel include the step of using a spline tool having a fabric-engaging portion including a tapered flange and a post adapted for receipt in an opening defined by each spline for applying a pulling force to the spline.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein the steps of directing a shade fabric into the interior of the bottom spline channel and directing the shade fabric into the interior of the top spline channel are respectively performed as part of two-step procedure with the steps of inserting a spline into the bottom spline channel and inserting a spline into the top spline channel, the steps of directing and inserting performed over a length of the hembar body during the two-step procedure and repeated to advance the spline from a first end of the hembar body to an opposite second end of the hembar body.
19. The method of claim 15, comprising the further step of wrapping the shade fabric about the hembar body between the top spline channel and the bottom spline channel such that the rear wall of the hembar body is covered by the shade fabric.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the step of wrapping the shade fabric to cover the rear wall occurs before the step of wrapping the shade fabric to cover the front wall, and wherein the method further comprising the steps of:
- removing the spline from the top spline channel through the open end of the spline channel;
- directing the shade fabric into the top spline channel through the associated slot opening of the hembar body such that two looped portions of the shade fabric are defined, the two looped portions arranged in a stacked fashion within the top spline channel; and
- re-inserting the spline into the top spline channel through the open end of the top spline channel within the two looped portions of the shade fabric such that the spline wedgingly secures the shade fabric to the hembar body in the top spline channel.
21. An elongated hembar adapted for attachment to a shade fabric for weighting a lower end of the shade fabric, the hembar comprising:
- a front wall;
- a rear wall opposite the front wall;
- a top spline channel defined between the front wall and the rear wall adjacent a top of the hembar; and
- a bottom spline channel defined between the front wall and the rear wall adjacent a bottom of the hembar,
- each of the spline channels defining an interior adapted to receive a spline such that the spline is oriented obliquely with respect to a vertical line.
22. The hembar of claim 21, wherein each of the spline channels is arranged with respect to the front wall such that the spline channel is concealed from view when the hembar is viewed from any location in front of the hembar.
23. The hembar of claim 21, wherein each of the spline channels defines a longitudinally-extending slot opening for receiving a shade fabric within the interior of the spline channel and at least one open end for receiving a spline within the interior of the spline channel, each of the spline channels further defining a notch in a wall of the channel, the notch located opposite the slot opening for receiving part of a looped portion of a shade fabric placed into the interior of the spline channel to facilitate insertion of a spline into the looped portion of the shade fabric.
24. The hembar of claim 21, further comprising a longitudinally-extending retainer pocket between the front wall and the rear wall adapted for receiving a weighting element in an off-centered manner with respect to the front wall and the rear wall.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 3, 2007
Publication Date: Feb 14, 2008
Inventor: David A. Kirby (Emmaus, PA)
Application Number: 11/890,186
International Classification: A47H 1/04 (20060101);