Portable combination hair shampoo basin and drying hood

A portable combined hair shampoo basin and drying hood configured for use by a person reclining in a bed or on a couch such as a bedridden person although it may be used in the home by all family members for shampooing, hair coloring, permanent waving, and the drying of the hair thereafter. It is a box-like device that sits on the bed or couch having a double wall defined basin reservoir and a half moon cutout in a front wall to receive the neck of the user. The basin inner wall has a plurality of openings through which water passes when water is poured over the head from a pitcher to drain down through the openings into the reservoir. This keeps spent rinse water out of the upper basin section and away from clean hair with water draining from the reservoir container through a hose connected thereto during the shampoo process. After the shampoo process and water is drained from the reservoir a blow dryer inserted in an outer wall opening of the basin may be activated for use of the basin as a hair drying hood with hot air forced into the reservoir blowing out through the plurality of openings to impinge on a user's hair in the upper container of the basin.

This invention relates in general to shampoo and scalp treatment basins, 
and more particularly, to a portable combined hair shampoo basin and 
drying hood configured in generally box form with a users neck supporting 
cutout for a reclining user. 
Many hair shampoo and scalp treatment basins are heavy permanently fixed in 
place installations with heavy metal sink basins with special chairs 
required to support a person having a hair shampoo and scalp treatment. 
Such heavy fixed in place installations are generally found in beauty 
parlors and barber shops and not in the home, retirement home or invalids 
hospital room. These large and complex fixed in place installations are 
expensive to make and install, freely use water and require a special 
shampoo chair for the user. Various portable appliances have been made for 
shampooing hair of those confined to a bed. Many of the portable devices 
make use of water stored inside and as a result are heavy and awkward to 
use. Further, such devices require some kind of pump or pressure tank to 
force the water out and over head with extra equipment to go wrong and 
water to get cold and then with no convenient provisions for drying the 
hair after the shampoo. Substantially all these problems may be overcome 
through use of a pitcher to pour the water through the hair and on the 
scalp and thereafter drying the hair in the same basin used in a drying 
hood mode. 
It is therefore a principal object of this invention to provide an 
efficient, portable combination hair shampoo basin and drying hood that is 
inexpensive in the market place. 
Another object is to provide such a shampoo basin and drying hood placeable 
on a bed in the home or hospital bed for use by persons confined to bed. 
A further object is to provide such a shampoo basin and drying hood in 
generally box shape having a neck receiving cutout in a front wall further 
with an additional cutout taking pressure off the cervical vertabrae of 
the user. 
Still another object is to provide such a combined hair shampoo basin and 
drying hood useable for a user in a semi-reclining position. 
A further object is to provide such a hair shampoo basin where even though 
spent rinse water is not completely drained from the basin hair is kept 
out of the spent water with the double wall construction. 
Another object is to have distributed air flow for hair drying when a 
person is using the device in the drying hood mode. 
Features of the invention useful in accomplishing the above objects 
include, in a new portable combination hair shampoo basin and drying hood, 
a unit package in rectangular box-like form with a handle for easy 
carrying like luggage. The unit is formed with an outer basin box having 
two sides, a front, a back and bottom and an inner basin container spaced 
from the outer basin box but joined thereto around the top by an upper rim 
wall. A half moon cutout from the top of the front wall is provided for 
receiving and supporting the neck of a user and a further cutout at the 
bottom thereof provides relief space and takes pressure off the cervical 
vertebrae of the user's neck. A water barrier ridge (or dam) is provided 
in this additional cutout to help divert water from leaking to the basin 
exterior. The basin inner wall has a plurality of openings through which 
water passes when water is poured over the head from a pitcher to drain 
down through the openings into the reservoir. This keeps spent water out 
of the upper basin section and away from clean hair with water draining 
from the reservoir container through a hose connected thereto during the 
shampoo process. After the shampoo process and water is drained from the 
reservoir a blow dryer inserted in an outer wall opening of the basin may 
be activated for use of the basin as a hair drying hood with hot air 
forced into the reservoir blowing out through the plurality of openings to 
impinge on a user's hair in the upper container of the basin. The inner 
basin bottom is additionally formed with a plurality of canals and with a 
plurality of openings at the bottoms of the canals and the inner basin 
side walls are also provided with a plurality of openings. A removable "U" 
shaped tubular conduit bracket is also provided equipped with a plurality 
of inwardly basin directed openings that when mounted in opposite side 
wall mount openings is positionable in an arc over the front and top of 
the head to direct blow drying air downward on the user's head as desired. 
This unit includes a removable tilt support bracket with grooves therefor 
on each of the outer sides to receive it with one set of grooves for 
storage of the support bracket and shampooing and a second set of grooves 
for hair drying. At least one indentation is provided located in any of 
the four bottom corners of the outer walls of the basin to provide a 
protective recess for a drain spout that could be located at the back or 
at the front. Opposite side aligned grooves in the internal side walls of 
the basin are provided to receive an optional baffle to shorten the drying 
compartment. An opening in the outer wall is provided for a hot air 
blowing device such as a hand held type blow dryer.

Referring to the drawings: 
As shown in FIGS. 1-4 an outer basin box 1 comprised of two outer sides, a 
front, back and bottom encloses an inner basin 2 with the inner and outer 
basins spaced from each other and defining an enclosed space. The front 3 
has a half moon cutout 4 that extends from the outer basin box 1 to the 
inner basin 2 and has a cervical vertebrae cutout 5 running through the 
bottom of the half moon cutout to relieve pressure from the cervical neck 
vertebrae of the user. A barrier (or dam) 6 is positioned in the cutout 5 
to help prevent water leakage from the inner basin 2 through the cutout 5 
to the exterior. The inner basin 2 is provided with openings 7 in its side 
wall. A water drain 8 extends from the interior of inner basin 2 to the 
exterior of basin box 1 with the outer end thereof in a bottom corner 
relief indentation 17 for protection thereof with it noted that this drain 
construction could be located at any one of the bottom four corners of the 
basin box 1. An opening 9 is provided in a wall of outer basin box 1 for a 
hot air blowing device such as a hair blow dryer 10 mounted with the 
outlet thereof inserted into the opening 9 for the blowing of hot air into 
the enclosed space between the outer basin box 1 and the inner basin 2. A 
handle 11 is provided on the outer basin box 1 for ease of carrying and a 
pitcher 12 is used for supplying water. 
Channels 13 are formed in the bottom of the inner basin 2 and are provided 
with openings 22 to permit water to drain down through the openings during 
shampooing and rinsing and then thereafter during the hair dry mode air to 
enter through the openings 22 and 7 with the head and hair in place in the 
device. A pair of aligned grooves 14 are formed in opposite side walls of 
the inner basin 2 for receiving an optional baffle shortening the hair 
drying compartment. A recessed shoulder 15 is formed in the top of inner 
basin 2 for receiving an optional top cover (not shown) in the 
transporting state. The enclosed space between the outer basin box 1 and 
the inner basin 2 provides a reservoir 16 space at the bottom of the 
device storing spent rinse water while it slowly drains and during the 
blow dry mode guide hot blow air to and up out of openings 22 in the 
bottom and through openings 7 in opposite sides of the inner basin 2. A 
tilt support bracket 18 is used to tilt the device for spent rinse water 
drainage and to position the device for drying hair with the bracket 18 
positionable, respectively, in grooves 19 and 19'. With bracket 18 in 
grooves 19 the device is tilted to drain water to drain 8 and when in 
grooves 19' the device is tilted for blow drying hair. A removable "U" 
shaped tubular conduit bracket 20 is mountable in opposite side openings 
21 for pivotal movement in an arc over the front and top of the head to 
direct blow drying air downward from a pluraity of inwardly basin directed 
openings on the user's head as desired. 
Operation of the portable combined hair shampoo basin and drying hood 
involves placement of the device on a bed or couch and connecting a 
plastic hose to the drain spout 8 with the hose extended to a suitable 
receptacle such as a plastic wastepaper basket. For optimized drainage 
tilt support is extended from grooves 19 to make the reservoir 16 drain to 
the back and out through drain spout 8 and the hose into the plastic 
basket or bucket. The user receiving a shampoo lies down with his or her 
neck resting in the half moon cutout 4. Water is poured over the user's 
head from pitcher 12 and shampoo is added to the hair and the scalp and 
hair then massaged. Thereafter water from the pitcher is again poured over 
the hair of the head for rinsing it clean with the process repeated at 
least one additional time. After the reservoir 16 is completely drained of 
spent rinse water the drain hose is removed and drain spout 8 capped to 
keep hot blow air from escaping. The tilt support 18 is moved to the back 
groove 19' in the hair drying position. Then with blow dryer 10 in place 
in opening 9 of outer basin box 1 and blowing, the user's hair will be 
dried in a few minutes ready for styling with a curling iron. 
Whereas this invention has been described with respect to a single 
embodiment thereof, it should be realized that various changes may be made 
without departure from the essential contributions to the art made by the 
teachings hereof.