US1685168A - Preparation of fur for shrinking and felting - Google Patents

Preparation of fur for shrinking and felting Download PDF

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Publication number
US1685168A
US1685168A US105314A US10531426A US1685168A US 1685168 A US1685168 A US 1685168A US 105314 A US105314 A US 105314A US 10531426 A US10531426 A US 10531426A US 1685168 A US1685168 A US 1685168A
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fur
acid
felting
shrinking
preparation
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US105314A
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John H Martin
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D01NATURAL OR MAN-MADE THREADS OR FIBRES; SPINNING
    • D01CCHEMICAL OR BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF NATURAL FILAMENTARY OR FIBROUS MATERIAL TO OBTAIN FILAMENTS OR FIBRES FOR SPINNING; CARBONISING RAGS TO RECOVER ANIMAL FIBRES
    • D01C3/00Treatment of animal material, e.g. chemical scouring of wool

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  • the fur In the preparation of fur hair or fur (as it may be designated for brevity) for felting and for the shrinking which must accompany the felting, particularly in the manufacture of hats the fur, is subjected to the action of chemicals which so affect the character of the fur as to promote the shrinking and the felting, the chemical emplo ed, generally in solution, being sometimes rushed into the fur on the skin, the fur being subsequently removed from the skin, and beingsometimes used as a bath in which the fur is immersed after removal from the skin. After treatment with the chemical, the fur is dried and is thereafter subjected to shrinking and felting and dyeing processes, to which the treatment referred to is preliminary.
  • glycolic acid and the lactic acid are hydro acids of the fatty acid series and the use 0 other hydroxy acids of the same series will suggest itself.
  • acetic acid has been mentioned as anexample of the organic acids and sulphuric
  • hydrochloric and nitric acids have been mentioned as examples of inorganic acids, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the use of the acids named and that an acid maybe employed within the scope o the invention, provided it is of such a character and is used in such strength as to be capable of acting upon the fur substance without destroying it or destroying its shrinking and felting qualities.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Animal Husbandry (AREA)
  • Molecular Biology (AREA)
  • Wood Science & Technology (AREA)
  • Zoology (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Treatments For Attaching Organic Compounds To Fibrous Goods (AREA)
  • Fats And Perfumes (AREA)

Description

Patented Sept. 25,
UNITED STATES JOHN H. MARTIN, OF CENTRAL PARK, NEW YORK.
PREPARATION OF FUR FOR SHBINKING AND FELTING.
80 Drawing.
In the preparation of fur hair or fur (as it may be designated for brevity) for felting and for the shrinking which must accompany the felting, particularly in the manufacture of hats the fur, either on the skin or after its removal from the skin, is subjected to the action of chemicals which so affect the character of the fur as to promote the shrinking and the felting, the chemical emplo ed, generally in solution, being sometimes rushed into the fur on the skin, the fur being subsequently removed from the skin, and beingsometimes used as a bath in which the fur is immersed after removal from the skin. After treatment with the chemical, the fur is dried and is thereafter subjected to shrinking and felting and dyeing processes, to which the treatment referred to is preliminary. The method heretofore employed and even now com- 20 monly employed has involved the use of nitrate of mercury, which gives satisfactory results so far as the shrinking and felting qualities of the fur are concerned, but is known to be exceedingly harmful to those who apply it and to those who handle the fur in subsequent processes. Other chemicals, such as sodium peroxide, have been proposed, but have been found to give less satisfactory results so far as-concerns the effect on the fur. Still other chemicals have been proposed and have been found to give satisfactory results, although the discovery of their-effectiveness has been so recent that they have not yet come into wide use. In the further investigation of the subject and in the development of the present i'nvention,-it has been found that acids, bot organic and inorganic, used alonedo not ave the desired effect on the fur, but when used with a small admixture of a hydroxy acid of the fatty acid series, such as glycolic acid or one of its homologues, will produce results not only fully equal to those produced by nitrate of mercury without its harmful effect, but even superior in the felting quality of the fur and in the absence of undesirable effects on color. The acid used must be water-soluble and ma be either an organic acid, such as acetic acid, or an inorganic acid, such as sulphuric acid, hydrochloricacid, nitric acid, etc. As will be well understood by those experienced in the art, the
Application filed April 28, 1926. Serial No. 105,814.
noted, it being understood that the solution is applied to the fur in the usual manner, I
either to the fur before it is removedfrom the 'slkrin or to the fur after it is removed from the s 1n:
(1) To 1000 cubic centimeters of a 10% solution of sulphuric acid is added 20 grams 55 of glycolic acid.
(2)To 1000 .cubic centimeters of a 6% solution of hydrochloric acid is' added 20 grams of lactic acid.
(3) To 1000 cubic centimeters of a 12% solution of acetic acid is added 5 grams of glycolic acid.
The glycolic acid and the lactic acid, as is well understood, are hydro acids of the fatty acid series and the use 0 other hydroxy acids of the same series will suggest itself. Furthermore, while acetic acid has been mentioned as anexample of the organic acids and sulphuric, hydrochloric and nitric acids have been mentioned as examples of inorganic acids, it will be understood that the invention is not limited to the use of the acids named and that an acid maybe employed within the scope o the invention, provided it is of such a character and is used in such strength as to be capable of acting upon the fur substance without destroying it or destroying its shrinking and felting qualities.
In the present application it 1s sought to cover broadly the use of such an acid as that 00 just referred to, whether organic or inorganic, with an admixture of a hydroxy acid of the fatty acid series and, specifically, the use of such an organic acid with an admixture of a hydroxy-acid of the fatty-acid series, the admixture of such an inorganic acid, with a hydroxy acid of the fatty acid series being made the subject of a separate application.
I claim as my invention:
1. Theimprovement in the-artof preparing fur for shrinking and felting, which consists in subjecting the fur to. the action of an acid i with an admixture of a hydroxy acid of the acetic acid with an admixture of a hydroxy fatty acid series. acid of the fatty acid series.
2. The improvement in the art of pregar- 4. The improvement in the art of reparing fur for shrinking and felting, w ich ing fur for shrinking and felting, which con- 5 consists in subjecting the fur to the action of sists in subjecting the fur to the action of an 15 an organic acid with an admixture of a hyorganic acid with an admixture of glycolic droxy acid of the fatty acid series. :IClCl.
3. The improvementin the art of prepar- This specification signed this 23d day of ing fur for shrinking and felting, which con- April, A. D. 1926. 1 sists in subjecting the fur to the action of 7 JOHN H. MARTIN.
US105314A 1926-04-28 1926-04-28 Preparation of fur for shrinking and felting Expired - Lifetime US1685168A (en)

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2517573A (en) * 1950-03-23 1950-08-08 Harrison W Jones Modification of wool with beta-propiolactone
US2672397A (en) * 1952-08-22 1954-03-16 Harold P Lundgren Reaction of wool with beta-propiolactone and water

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2517573A (en) * 1950-03-23 1950-08-08 Harrison W Jones Modification of wool with beta-propiolactone
US2672397A (en) * 1952-08-22 1954-03-16 Harold P Lundgren Reaction of wool with beta-propiolactone and water

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