MANOR

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
COUNTRY MANNER Burlington Industries, Inc. New York NY MANOR;WOVEN TEXTILE FABRICS, OF RAYON YARN, IN THE PIECE;
COUNTRY MANNER FOREMAN FABRICS CORP. 1412 BROADWAY NEW YORK NY MANOR;WOVEN TEXTILE FABRICS, OF RAYON YARN, IN THE PIECE;
HOME&MANOR Sheikh Parwez 7601 Nantucket Dr Darien IL 60561 HOME AND MANOR;Conducting tradeshows in the nature of home shows in the field of home improvement featuring exhibits for homeowners in the process of remodeling, landscaping and decorating their homes;
MANOIR Villeroy & Boch S.a.r.l. 330 rue de Rollingergrund Luxembourg, Grand-Duchy Luxembourg MANOR;CHINA DINNERWARE;THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF THE WORD MANOIR IN THE MARK IS MANOR OR COUNTRY HOUSE;
STYMIE MANOR STYMIE MANOR INC. MONKTON MD 21111 MANOR;STALLION SERVICE; BOARDING OF BROODMARES AND FOALS; REHABILITATION OF INJURED HORSES; PROVIDING BREAKING AND TRAINING FACILITIES FOR THOROUGHBRED RACE HORSES;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. The invention described herein represents a significant improvement for the concealment of objects and people. Thousands of light receiving segmented pixels and sending segmented pixels are affixed to the surface of the object to be concealed. Each receiving segmented pixel receives colored light from the background of the object. Each receiving segmented pixel has a lens such that the light incident upon it is segmented to form focal points along a focal curve (or plane) according to the light's incident trajectory. In a first embodiment, this incident light is channeled by fiber optics to the side of the object which is opposite to each respective incident light segment. The light which was incident on a first side of the object traveling at a series of respective trajectories is thus redirected and exits on at least one second side of the object according to its original incident trajectory. In this manor, incident light is redirected as exiting light that mimics the incident light's trajectory, wavelength, color, and intensity such that an observer can "see through" the object to the object's background. In a second embodiment, this incident light is segmented according to trajectory, and detected electronically by photo diodes. It is then electronically reproduced on at least one second side of the object by arrayed LEDs. In this manor, incident light is reproduced as exiting light which mimics trajectory, wavelength, color, and intensity such that an observer can "see through" the object to the background. In both embodiments, this process is repeated many times, in segmented pixel arrays, such that an observer looking at the object from any perspective actually "sees the background" of the object corresponding to the observer's perspective. The object having thus been rendered "invisible" to the observer.