US197002A - Improvement in over-gaiters - Google Patents

Improvement in over-gaiters Download PDF

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US197002A
US197002A US197002DA US197002A US 197002 A US197002 A US 197002A US 197002D A US197002D A US 197002DA US 197002 A US197002 A US 197002A
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over
gaiters
gaiter
improvement
former
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41DOUTERWEAR; PROTECTIVE GARMENTS; ACCESSORIES
    • A41D17/00Gaiters; Spats

Definitions

  • Over-gaiters have heretofore been made from cloth'cut in several pieces, in such form that when joined together by seams and stitches,
  • the fibers of wool composing the bat instead of all lying in one direction, cross each other in many directions, and produce a fabric of equal strength and tenacity in all directions.
  • the fibers of wool composing the bat instead of all lying in one direction, cross each other in many directions, and produce a fabric of equal strength and tenacity in all directions.
  • This last or former is also so shaped, by curving inward at the bottom, as to give the gaiter, when fitted and dried to it, a similar inward curve or spring, which causes it to hug snugly to the foot of the wearer, especially over and around the instep and the heel.
  • the gaiter thus made and dried upon the finishing last or form will take and retain permanently the form given the last, and its outer surface may be finished in the usual manner of finishing the outer surface of hats, and pressed to give a gloss, if desired.
  • edges are then trimmed and stitched or bound, buttons attached to one end of the lap or fold, and button-holes made in the other end of the lap, a strap affixed to go under the bottom of the wearers boot or shoe, and it is ready for use.
  • an over-gaiter made in one piece, without seams or stitching, except attaching buttons or other fastenings and trimming the edges, and with lining made in form to fit the wearers foot, which form it will retain until worn out.
  • the lap to receive the button and button-holes may be strengthened, when desirable, by affixing on the inner side a strip of thin leather or other suitable material.
  • a lining may be given the gaiter by carding the first layers wound around the former of white or colored wool, the outer layers being of black or darker color than the inner layers. Over-gaiters made as described may reach above the ankle to the knee, or above, forming what is termed a legging.
  • Figure 1 shows an over-gaiter without the trimming.
  • Fig. 2 shows an over-gaiter trimmed and strapped.
  • Fig. 3 shows an over-gaiter high enough to cover to the knee.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Bedding Items (AREA)

Description

'2 SheetsSheet 1. W. W. WHITGOMB & J. 0.1)AGGETT. Over-Gaiters.
No. 197,002. .Patented Nov. 13,i877.
wirneidfd- Q {XK% i W N-FETERS FHDTO-UTHOGRAPHER, WASHINGTON, ELC- 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 W. W. WHITOOMB & J. G. DAGGETT. Over-Gaiters.
No. 197,002. Patented Nov. 13,1877.
G C} G Q C}, O Q
UNITED STATES PATENT Orrron.
WILLIAM W. WHITGOMB AND JOHN G. DAGGETT, OF BOSTON, MASS.
lM PR OVEMENT IN OVER-GAITERS.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent N0. 197,002, dated November 13,1877; application filed March 16, 1877.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that we, WM. W. WHITGOMB and J. O. DAGGETT, both of Boston, in the county of Suffolk and Commonwealth of Massachusetts, have invented an Improvement in the Manufacture of Over-Gaiters, so called, of which the following is a specification:
Over-gaiters have heretofore been made from cloth'cut in several pieces, in such form that when joined together by seams and stitches,
- and lined with canvas or other fabric, the
form desired to fit the upper part of the foot and ankle could be obtained.
Our improvement consists in making them directly from wool, by the process of carding, fitting, and falling set forth and described in United States Patent No. 105,836, issued to former is made to shift its position in relation.
to axial line of the cylinder of the carding, so that each revolution of the former receives and winds the wool from the card around it at an angle to the layer which preceded it. Thus, the fibers of wool composing the bat, instead of all lying in one direction, cross each other in many directions, and produce a fabric of equal strength and tenacity in all directions. When enough wool has thus been wound around the former to form a bat sufficient in thickness to make the over-gaiter, it is removed from the former by cutting it apart in the middle, when two gaiters'are carded together on one or more forms, and then hardened or fitted and fulled, as in hat-making, until it is of a proper consistency for a finished gaiter. It is then drawn snugly onto a last or former, which is exactly of the size and shape which it is intended the finished gaiter shall have, or a last or form which shall include in it form and size enough additional to that already described to provide material in and a part of the gaiter to form a lap when it is cut open on the side for a row of buttons and button-holes.
This last or former is also so shaped, by curving inward at the bottom, as to give the gaiter, when fitted and dried to it, a similar inward curve or spring, which causes it to hug snugly to the foot of the wearer, especially over and around the instep and the heel.
The gaiter thus made and dried upon the finishing last or form will take and retain permanently the form given the last, and its outer surface may be finished in the usual manner of finishing the outer surface of hats, and pressed to give a gloss, if desired.
The edges are then trimmed and stitched or bound, buttons attached to one end of the lap or fold, and button-holes made in the other end of the lap, a strap affixed to go under the bottom of the wearers boot or shoe, and it is ready for use. Thus we have an over-gaiter made in one piece, without seams or stitching, except attaching buttons or other fastenings and trimming the edges, and with lining made in form to fit the wearers foot, which form it will retain until worn out. The lap to receive the button and button-holes may be strengthened, when desirable, by affixing on the inner side a strip of thin leather or other suitable material. The appearance of a lining may be given the gaiter by carding the first layers wound around the former of white or colored wool, the outer layers being of black or darker color than the inner layers. Over-gaiters made as described may reach above the ankle to the knee, or above, forming what is termed a legging.
In the drawings annexed, Figure 1 shows an over-gaiter without the trimming. Fig. 2 shows an over-gaiter trimmed and strapped. Fig. 3 shows an over-gaiter high enough to cover to the knee.
We do not claim as our invention anything described and claimed as new in the patent of Palmer and others before mentioned.
We claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent- A fitted seamless over gaiter made fiom wool, in one piece, substantially in the manner and for the purpose specified.
WILLIAM W. WHITCOMB. JOHN G. DAGGETT.
Witnesses GEO. W. WILLIAMS, OH. HoUGnToN.
US197002D Improvement in over-gaiters Expired - Lifetime US197002A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050260783A1 (en) * 2003-10-31 2005-11-24 Markus Lutz Anti-stiction technique for thin film and wafer-bonded encapsulated microelectromechanical systems

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050260783A1 (en) * 2003-10-31 2005-11-24 Markus Lutz Anti-stiction technique for thin film and wafer-bonded encapsulated microelectromechanical systems

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