Moustache Curling Tongs
Patent US417462
Invention Curling Tongs
Filed Friday, 14th June 1889
Published Tuesday, 17th December 1889
Inventor Walter H. Bagshaw
Language English
CPC Classification:For a full resolution version of the images click here
A PDF version of the original patent can be found here.
Parts not referenced in the text: None
Parts not referenced in the images: None
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, Walter H. Bagshaw, of Lowell, in the county of Middlesex, State of Massachusetts, have invented a certain new and useful Improvement in Curling-Tongs, of which the following is a description sufficiently full, clear, and exact to enable any person skilled in the art or science to which said invention appertains to make and use the same, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, forming part of this specification, in which—
Like letters and figures of reference indicate corresponding parts in the different figures of the drawings.
My invention relates especially to the class of curling-tongs known as “mustache-curlers;” and it consists in certain novel features, hereinafter fully set forth and claimed, the object being to produce a simpler, cheaper, and more effective device of this character than is now in ordinary use.
The nature and operation of the improvement will be readily understood by all conversant with such matters from the following explanation.
The tongs
In the modification shown in
In
In
In the use of my improvement the tongs are heated and the hair to be curled is inserted between the beveled ends of the arms
My improved tongs are much more readily used than those of ordinary construction, the spring action of the arms being sufficient to prevent the hair from slipping from between them as the tongs are rotated, and their beveled ends enabling the hair to be quickly and easily inserted therein.
Having thus explained my invention, what I claim is—
1. A hair-curling instrument consisting of a handle and two parallel spring-arms disposed in close proximity or contact, the outer free ends of said arms being beveled inwardly.
2. A hair-curling instrument consisting of a handle and two parallel spring-arms disposed in close proximity or contact, the outer free ends of said arms being beveled inwardly from their outer to their inner edges.
3. A hair-curling instrument consisting of a handle and two parallel spring-arms disposed in close proximity or contact, the outer ends of said arms being beveled inwardly, and the inner ends or shanks thereof being tapered.
Walter H. Bagshaw.
Witnesses:
Samuel B. Wyman,
Geo. H. Stevens.