Headwear with slots for glasses

Apparel – Head coverings

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C002S209130, C351S155000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06282721

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to headwear wearable about the head and ears of a user, and more particularly to an improved headwear construction that can, if desired, easily support a pair of sun glasses or eyeglasses, using open slots, buttonholes, or the like, aligned strategically on each side of the headwear, thereby providing an entrance for the arm(s) of a pair of sunglasses or eyeglasses that will be positioned behind the headwear.
2. General Background
There are a number of types of headwear that are commercially available, which cover and fit around a person's head, forehead, and ears to provide warmth and protection from cold weather elements (i.e. hats, headbands, hoods, etc). There are many uses for headwear such as skiing, biking, attending sporting events, any out-door athletic or work activity, etc. In addition, headwear is quite convenient, popular and necessary in that they help keep a person warm & protected, they are also small, lightweight, easy to carry, pack away and wear. For these reasons, headwear is widely used. However, all of the uses mentioned in this paragraph may also demand the wearing of a pair of eyeglasses or sunglasses for corrective vision or bright light protection. However, it is very difficult and often uncomfortable to wear both ear-covering headwear and a pair of sunglasses or eyeglasses at the same time.
Many people must wear doctor prescribed eyeglasses in order to see adequately and safely, for example, it is very dangerous to ski down a trail or ride a bike without being able to read signs or see ahead well enough to maneuver when necessary and/or quickly in order to avoid disaster. A large percentage of the world's population wears prescription eyeglasses but cannot conveniently or comfortably do so while wearing fully enveloped headwear. Even more people wear sunglasses on a bright day in order to see through blinding sunlight but again, cannot.
Fully enveloped headwear is designed to cover the head, forehead and at least the top half of the ears which makes it nearly impossible to properly fit a pair of glasses over the wearer's ears. Eye/sunglasses are made to fit over the top and around the back of a human ear but with headwear on there is no simple means to access the ears. An eyeglass or sunglass wearer can however, with a headwear on, force the arms of the glasses up, in, and around to fit the ear but this often causes the headwear to fold back, thereby exposing the ears to the cold weather elements, which in turn, defeats the main purpose of headwear and makes for a very uncomfortable, often painful, configuration along with no means of security for the glasses.
Thus there is a need for a simple straight-forward headwear construction that can cover the ears of the wearer, at least partially, more preferably fully, and which further includes optional means to encompass and support a pair of the all important sunglasses or eyeglasses, particularly in a manner that can be quickly, easily, and comfortably accomplished.
3. Description of the Prior Art
It is know to support sunglasses or eyeglasses on apparatus that fits on the head of a wearer such as headbands, helmets, masks or earmuffs. Combination headwear and sunglasses or eyeglass apparatuses are known to provide a more secure and easy way of wearing glasses. However, none of the following items is an attempt at combining sunglasses or eyeglasses support means with headwear for the purpose of having cold winter weather protection & warmth with an option of so easily wearing much-needed sun or eyeglasses. For example, see:
Leight, U.S. Pat. No. 5,724,119, which discloses an earmuff-eyeglass combination that consists of an earmuff assembly and an eyeglass assembly, where the eyeglass assembly includes an eyeglass with opposite sides and a pair of temple bar devices, and where each temple bar device has a rear end pivotally mounted on said earmuff assembly and has a front end coupled to a corresponding side of said eyeglass, wherein: each of said temple bar devices includes a plurality of bars, including a first bar having a rear end pivotally connected to said earmuff assembly and having a front end lying forward of said rear end, and a second bar having a rear end pivotally connected to said front end of said first bar and having a front end which lies forward of said second bar rear end and which is pivotally coupled to a corresponding side of said eyeglass, whereby to enable adjustment of the forward-rearward position of the eyeglass.
Marcus, U.S. Pat. No. 5,647,061, which discloses a headgear having eyeglass securing means consisting of a continuous band of elastic material having an inner surface intended for circumferential fitting engagement with the head of a wearer and an outer surface opposite said inner surface, said inner and outer surfaces being defined by top and bottom edges; and eyeglass securing means for selectively attaching a pair of eyeglasses worn by said wearer to said band, said eyeglass securing means comprising an elongated strip of flexible material having a first end fixed to said band, and a second end releasably attachable to said band, said strip having a length sufficient to form a loop about a nose bridge of said eyeglasses when said second end is attached to said band, said strip including a hook and catch fastener portion at said second end, and said inner surface of said band including a hook and catch fastener receiving portion aligned above said first end for releasable attachment of said second end thereto.
Forsyth, U.S. Pat. No. 5,278,999, which discloses a combined ear and eye protection device consisting of a pair of ear muffs each having an exterior housing and interior sound absorbing material, each said muffs adapted to fit over one ear of the user; a headgear adjustably attached at each end to one of said ear muffs and adapted to fit over the head of the user; and eye protector glasses having a front frame and two side templates wherein each template is attached at one end to said frame and pivotally attached at its other end to the interior of said ear muffs and said frame being removable from at least a portion of each said template permitting the substitution of alternate frames, said templates including means for horizontal adjustment independently of said pivotal attachment to said ear muffs; wherein each ear muff includes a top frontal quadrant and said pivotal attachment of said templates being located within said quadrant.
Holmes, U.S. Pat. No. 5,133,596, which discloses an eye and hearing protection member consisting of means for protecting eyes and means for protecting hearing, said eye protecting means being selected from the group consisting of a goggle and a spectacle, each one including a frame means and at least one lens affixed thereto, the frame means including integrated reinforcement means whereby said reinforced frame means remains substantially rigid and without substantial deformation during normal use of the safety unit; the hearing protection means including a pair of earcups; a pair of arm members adapted to cooperate with and extend from the respective opposed temple regions of the reinforced frame means by way of mutually complimentary engageable coupling means of releasable snap-fit type, which coupling means are disposed at one end of the respective arm members and at laterally spaced positions of the reinforced frame means, which arm members carry at their ends a respective one of the earcups and where the arm members resiliently react against the substantially rigid frame means to hold the earcups to the side of a wearer's head in use and which receive the earcups in a manner to provide adjustability on an inclined plane to account for facial asymmetry, the mounting of the lens being isolated from the resilience of the arms by the provision of the frame reinforcement means.
Brousseau, U.S. Pat. No. 5,117,510, which discloses a headgear construction for supporting a flashlight consisting of (a) a circular headgear h

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