ILLUMINATING JEWELRY ITEMS USEFUL FOR SENDING CODED MESSAGES TO OTHER PERSONS
The present invention is directed to the field of jewelry items, and in particular, light emitting jewelry. The present invention sends coded signals to other persons.
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The present invention is directed to the field of jewelry items, and in particular, light emitting jewelry. The present invention sends coded signals to other persons.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONModern society presents many ways for a person to meet other people. They can join a dating service, they can meet in an Internet chat room, or other Internet locations, they can meet at bars or at gatherings intended for people to meet each other, such as speed dating events. While all of these kinds of arrangements offer some benefit, they fail to address the kind of spontaneous situation that can arise when two strangers encounter each other at a restaurant, a park, a ball game, a subway station, or any other of thousands of places where people encounter each other.
Thus, it would be advantageous to provide a device or apparatus that would allow one person to send another person a coded, non-verbal message which means that the message sender is interested in meeting other persons, is open for contacts and does not mind to be approached by other people right then and there in order to establish a contact or relationship. One of the advantages of such a system is that the person receiving the message would have no doubt that the person sending the signal is interested in meeting. In the absence of such a signal a person may be left to wonder if there is interest in meeting, as there could be any number of reasons why initiating contact would not be a good idea: a person is married or involved in a relationship, a person is not married but is not interested in any new contacts, a person does not want to be approached by strangers etc. On the other hand, a person can be in the company of another person (who could be just a friend or a relative) and would still like to meet somebody for establishing a relationship. Thus, it would be beneficial to provide a device that would allow a person possessing the device to send coded, non-verbal messages to other persons, which indicates a desire and willingness to meet, as well as to send any of a number of other possible coded non-verbal messages.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONProviding a device that would allow a user to send a coded, non-verbal signal to other persons is an object of the invention.
Providing the aforementioned device in jewelry form is a further object of the present invention.
Providing a device that would allow a person send a non-verbal message to another person, indicating, among other possible messages, a willingness for social interaction, is a further object of the present invention.
The present invention is directed to a device, such as light emitting jewelry, provided with a power source, such as a battery, and a light source maintained behind a display surface, from which light of a preselected color can be perceived by an observer. The emitted color of light, which functions as a coded signal, informs the observer whether the jewelry wearer is interested in interacting socially. Thus, the jewelry product of the present invention can be used by a wearer to signal other persons as to the wearer's level of interest in meeting, or, just as possibly, signal the other person as to the wearer's disinterest in meeting.
The jewelry of the present invention expresses a non-verbal code to other persons through the use of colored light, which non-verbal code communicates the desire for social interaction. The jewelry item includes a housing for holding the light source such as a light bulb or LED, a colored lens, if necessary, a power source, such as a battery, and electrical connection between the power source and the light source. A switch provided on the jewelry item activates the light source by the wearer of the jewelry item. Alternatively, the jewelry item may contain a plurality of light sources, and/or colored lenses in order to provide the wearer with the flexibility to non-verbally communicate any one of a number of codes messages, depending on the circumstances and present inclinations of the wearer.
Thus, when a person in possession of the device (first person) encounters someone who they desire to meet (second person), the first person can power the device (or otherwise have it on at all times), which sends a colored light, coded signal to the second person, notifying the second person, non-verbally, that the first person has an interest in engaging in conversation or other social interaction with the second person.
The device therefore functions as an door opener, so to speak, that allows people in possession of the jewelry item to communicate willingness to engaging socially, also allowing the observer of the item to know that the possessor of the item is interested in social interaction.
The aforementioned components are maintained within a rear-housing component 15, with conductive disc 30 mounted to the rear-housing component. As shown, the rear-housing component 15 is provided with a back wall 16 and sidewalls 17. The interior portion of the sidewalls 17 may be provided with threads 18 for engaging with an external housing 50 that serves as the front facing exterior of the jewelry item.
The rear-facing side of the rear-housing component 15 is provided with a pin 8, sufficient to pierce the clothing of a wearer. A jewelry lock 6 provided with central aperture 7 is also, provided, for fitting over the pin 8, which allows the jewelry item 10 to be locked onto the wearer.
Alternatively, the rear-facing side of the housing can be provided with another kind of fastener that allows for the jewelry to attach to the wearer. Such fasteners may include safety pin type jewelry fasteners that attach to the housing rear face, or a frictionally engaging or spring biased clip that secures to a pocket, or even to the wearer's hair. These are examples of some of the kinds of fasteners that could be provided to the jewelry item in order to secure it to the wearer Furthermore, the above-described arrangement could be mounted upon another piece of jewelry, such as a bracelet, necklace, ring, or earring.
Further as shown in
Merely by way of example, a display of the color green could mean: “I am interested in meeting people of the opposite sex”; blue could mean that “I am interested in meeting people of the same sex”; red could mean “I am not interested in meeting at this time”; and yellow could mean that “if we meet, its just as friends”. Thus, it is contemplated that the jewelry items of the present invention will be used with a specific, predetermined code, understandable by the wearer and observers alike. Such a code can be widely disseminated through any number of means, such as by Internet website, or through directions and product packaging that are provided at the time of sale or other product distribution, or through other promotional and marketing activities.
The jewelry item of the present invention can take any number of forms. It may be in the form of a brooch, pin, bracelet, hair pin, badge, necklace, ring, or earring, to name but a few possibilities.
Thus, when the wearer of the jewelry item is in a social setting and wishes to send a coded, non-verbal message to another person in that setting, he or she can turn on the light source (or perpetually have it on), as described above, which may simply display a single color (
Claims
1. An illuminating jewelry item for communicating a non-verbal, color coded message from the possessor of the jewelry item to a person within range of viewing the jewelry item, wherein the non-verbal, color coded message sent by the jewelry item possessor relates to social interaction, the jewelry item comprising:
- a housing including:
- a power source;
- a light source;
- an electrical circuit in communication with the power source and light source; a switch for turning the electrical circuit on and off, which respectively turns the light source on and off;
- a forward facing, light transmissive material positioned over the light source, means for securing the jewelry item to the possessor or a thing of the possessor, wherein the light transmissive material has a preselected color designated to have a specific meaning concerning a desire to engage in social interaction, such that when the device is illuminated, the possessor of the jewelry item sends to observers within the visual range of the jewelry item a specific message, discernible by the illuminated color, which message concerns social interaction.
2. The jewelry item of claim 1 further comprised of a pin and jewelry lock, wherein the pin is affixed to a backside of the housing.
3. The jewelry item of claim 1 wherein the jewelry item is capable of transmitting one color.
4. The jewelry item of claim 1 wherein the jewelry item is capable of transmitting a plurality of colors.
5. The jewelry item of claim 1 further comprised of a forward facing external housing constructed of an opaque material, the external housing provided with an aperture though which the colored, light transmissive material can be viewed.
6. The jewelry item of claim 1 further comprised of a forward facing external housing constructed of an opaque material, the external housing provided with an aperture though which the colored, light transmissive material can be viewed, and wherein a color wheel possessing a plurality of colored light transmissive materials, of different colors, each designated to have a specific meaning concerning a desire to engage in social interaction, are arrayed on the color wheel in an arrangement permitting the possessor of the item to preselect the color he or she desires to display, thereby allowing the possessor to select from among a number of nonverbal color coded codes relating to social interaction.
7. The jewelry item of claim 1 wherein the light source is a light bulb.
8. The jewelry item of claim 1 wherein the power source is a battery.
9. The jewelry item of claim 1 wherein the jewelry item is selected from the group consisting of brooch, pin, bracelet, hair pin, badge, necklace, and ring.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 28, 2008
Publication Date: Sep 3, 2009
Applicant: (Lindenhurst, NY)
Inventor: Oksana Nagornova (Lindenhurst, NY)
Application Number: 12/039,362
International Classification: A44C 15/00 (20060101);