US2323507A - Reinforced seam - Google Patents

Reinforced seam Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2323507A
US2323507A US381619A US38161941A US2323507A US 2323507 A US2323507 A US 2323507A US 381619 A US381619 A US 381619A US 38161941 A US38161941 A US 38161941A US 2323507 A US2323507 A US 2323507A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
binding
line
strip
stitches
seam
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US381619A
Inventor
Alfred R Wood
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Singer Co
Original Assignee
Singer Co
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Singer Co filed Critical Singer Co
Priority to US381619A priority Critical patent/US2323507A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2323507A publication Critical patent/US2323507A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41DOUTERWEAR; PROTECTIVE GARMENTS; ACCESSORIES
    • A41D27/00Details of garments or of their making
    • A41D27/24Hems; Seams

Definitions

  • This invention relates to seams for stitched articles and is directed especially to seams for closing the opposite ends of a binding or hem of a body-material.
  • a further object of the present invention is the provision of a simple but highly efficient method of producing a reinforced seam adapted particularly for closing the open ends of a binding or a hem.
  • the invention comprises the devices, combinations and arrangements of parts hereinafter set forth and illustrated in the accompanying drawing of a preferred embodi ment of the invention, from which the several features of the invention and the advantages attained thereby will be readily understood by those skilled in the art.
  • Fig. 1 shows the article in the process of manufacture with the binding strip being stitched to the body-material and the reinforcing strip properly positioned within the folded binding strip for securement to the body-material.
  • Fig. 2 illustrates the article after the completion of the binding-securing stitches, showing in dotted lines the reinforcing strip secured along its lower edge to the body-material by the binding-securing stitches.
  • Fig. 3 illustrates the article after the completion of the transverse line of superposed zigzag stitches employed for closing the open end of t binding.
  • Fig. 4 represents the completed article after the extended end of the binding strip and superfluous portion of the reinforcing strip have been severed from the article.
  • Fig. 5 represents an enlarged sectional view taken along the line 5-5, Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 6 represents a view similar to Fig. 5, but showing the present invention as applied to a hem of a body-material.
  • the invention is shown as embodied in an article comprising a body-material l of knitted or extensible fabric having secured about its raw edge 2 preferably by a suitable covering seam 3 a knitted binding strip 4 having its marginal edges in contact with the opposite faces of the bodymaterial I.
  • a reinforcing piece or section 5 consisting of buckram or the like, the lower edge 6 of which rests upon the marginal edge 2 of the body-material I and is stitched thereto by the covering seam 3.
  • a row of zigzag stitches 8 Disposed transversely of the binding strip 4 and in a line substantially in register with the side edge 1 of the body-material l is a row of zigzag stitches 8 which penetrate the two plies of the binding strip 4 and the reinforcing piece 5 to close and finish off the end of the binding.
  • the reinforcing piece 5 preferably is approximately the same width as the binding strip 4.
  • the reinforcing piece functions to take up any strain which might be applied to the line of zigzag stitches 8 lengthwise thereof and thereby prevents permanent deformation of the knitted binding strip 4 adjacent the line of zigzag stitches 8.
  • the reinforcing 'piece 5 being secured between the bodymaterial I and one of the plies of the binding strip 4 by the stitches 3 and between the two plies of the binding strip 4 by the zigzag stitches 8, provides stiffening for the end of the bindingstrip 4, thereby maintaining the end of the binding substantially fiat and its closed end in substantial register with the side edge 1 of the bodymaterial I.
  • the binding strip 4 can be stitched to the body-material l by a commercial sewing machine of the type disclosed in the U. S. Patents to G. S. Gatchell, Nos. 1,335,374 and 1,479,907, issued Mar. 30, 1920, and Jan. 8, 1924, respectively.
  • a common form of binding attachment is fitted thereon which folds the binding strip 5 into substantially U-shape and about the raw edge 2 of the body-material l and directs the Work thus arranged to the stitching mechanism.
  • the pre-cut reinforcing piece 5 is introduced between the plies of the binding strip 4 so that it to the work-clamp of a tacking machine of the type disclosed in my pending application, Serial No. 335,935, filed May 18, 1940.
  • This machine effects the production of the transverse line of zigzag stitches 8 shown in Fig. 3.
  • the sewing machine disclosed in the above noted application begins its stitching at the point A in Fig. 3 and proceeds transversely of the binding strip 4 up to point B, where it reverses and lays upon the first line of zigzag stitches a second line of zigzag stitches terminating at point A.
  • the method of finishing a stitched article of the class described including the steps of applying a binding about the end of a body-material and securing the same with a line of stitching, positioning Within said binding a piece of reinforcing material of less length than said binding and stitching the same along one of its edges to said body-material with the line of stitches which secures the binding, applying a line of tacking stitches through said binding and reinforcing material transversely of said binding and in substantial register with a side edge of said bodymaterial, and cutting said binding and reinforcing material closely adjacent the line of tacking stitches.
  • An article of the class described comprising a bodymaterial, a binding of extensible material enveloping one end of and contacting the opposite faces of said body-material, a reinforcing piece of less length than said binding disposed within the binding and having one of its edges overlapping the enveloped end of said body-material, said binding and reinforcing piece terminating in substantial register with each other, a line of stitches securing said binding to said bodymaterial and penetrating the two plies of said binding, the body-material and said reinforcing piece, and a line of tacking stitches penetrating the two plies of the binding and the reinforcing piece and overlapping the end of said line of stitches which secures said binding to said bodymaterial.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Sewing Machines And Sewing (AREA)

Description

July 6, 1943. A, R w
REINFORCED SEAM Filed March 4, 1941 Alfi-ed R. %0d
Patented July 6, 1943 REINFORCED SEAM Alfred R. Wood, Bridgeport, Conn, assignor to The Singer Manufacturing Company, Elizabeth, N. .L, a corporation of New Jersey Application March 4, 1941, Serial N0. 381,619
2 Claims.
This invention relates to seams for stitched articles and is directed especially to seams for closing the opposite ends of a binding or hem of a body-material.
Heretofore it has been common practice in the manufacture of articles composed of knitted fabric, such for example as hospital sheets and the like, to apply a split tube binding of the same type of knitted fabric about each of the opposite raw edges of the article by means of a covering-stitch sewing machine fitted with an appropriate bind ing attachment. In stitching the binding strip to the body-material the binding strip is extended for a short distance beyond each of the side edges of the body-material to provide pro-- jecting binding ends. Subsequently one end of the article is placed in a suitable tacking ma chine which applies a lin of zigzag stitches transversely of the binding strip and along a line substantially in register with the side edge of the body-material. At the completion of the tacking operation and while the article is still in the tacking machine a cutter mechanism embodied in the machine is operated to sever the binding strip closely adjacent the line of tacking stitches.
The article produced by the above described method is acceptable when it is first completed.
l-lowever, after repeated laundering the closing seam of the bin-ding strip frequently becomes permanently deformed, inasmuch as the knitted binding strip ofiers. little resistance to the trans verse stretching thereof. This permanent deformation results in an unsightly closing seam and consequently lowers the quality of the finished article.
It is therefore the principal object of the present invention to provide a reinforced seam adapted for closing the open ends of a knitted binding or hem of an extensible body-material, which seam possesses considerable resistance to any permanent deformation resulting from excessive strains applied lengthwise of the seam.
A further object of the present invention is the provision of a simple but highly efficient method of producing a reinforced seam adapted particularly for closing the open ends of a binding or a hem.
With the above and other objects in view, as will hereinafter appear, the invention comprises the devices, combinations and arrangements of parts hereinafter set forth and illustrated in the accompanying drawing of a preferred embodi ment of the invention, from which the several features of the invention and the advantages attained thereby will be readily understood by those skilled in the art.
In the drawing, which shows by way of illustration one embodiment of the present invention, Fig. 1 shows the article in the process of manufacture with the binding strip being stitched to the body-material and the reinforcing strip properly positioned within the folded binding strip for securement to the body-material.
Fig. 2 illustrates the article after the completion of the binding-securing stitches, showing in dotted lines the reinforcing strip secured along its lower edge to the body-material by the binding-securing stitches.
Fig. 3 illustrates the article after the completion of the transverse line of superposed zigzag stitches employed for closing the open end of t binding.
Fig. 4 represents the completed article after the extended end of the binding strip and superfluous portion of the reinforcing strip have been severed from the article.
Fig. 5 represents an enlarged sectional view taken along the line 5-5, Fig. 2.
Fig. 6 represents a view similar to Fig. 5, but showing the present invention as applied to a hem of a body-material.
Referring more in detail to the drawing, the invention is shown as embodied in an article comprising a body-material l of knitted or extensible fabric having secured about its raw edge 2 preferably by a suitable covering seam 3 a knitted binding strip 4 having its marginal edges in contact with the opposite faces of the bodymaterial I. Interposed between the two plies of the binding strip 4 is a reinforcing piece or section 5 consisting of buckram or the like, the lower edge 6 of which rests upon the marginal edge 2 of the body-material I and is stitched thereto by the covering seam 3. Disposed transversely of the binding strip 4 and in a line substantially in register with the side edge 1 of the body-material l is a row of zigzag stitches 8 which penetrate the two plies of the binding strip 4 and the reinforcing piece 5 to close and finish off the end of the binding.
The reinforcing piece 5 preferably is approximately the same width as the binding strip 4. In the completed seam, see Fig. 4, the reinforcing piece functions to take up any strain which might be applied to the line of zigzag stitches 8 lengthwise thereof and thereby prevents permanent deformation of the knitted binding strip 4 adjacent the line of zigzag stitches 8. Also the reinforcing 'piece 5, being secured between the bodymaterial I and one of the plies of the binding strip 4 by the stitches 3 and between the two plies of the binding strip 4 by the zigzag stitches 8, provides stiffening for the end of the bindingstrip 4, thereby maintaining the end of the binding substantially fiat and its closed end in substantial register with the side edge 1 of the bodymaterial I.
The construction of the novel reinforced seam is such as to lend itself to convenient production with the aid of high speed sewing machines. Referring to Fig. 1 it will be understood that the binding strip 4 can be stitched to the body-material l by a commercial sewing machine of the type disclosed in the U. S. Patents to G. S. Gatchell, Nos. 1,335,374 and 1,479,907, issued Mar. 30, 1920, and Jan. 8, 1924, respectively. In using such a sewing machine, a common form of binding attachment is fitted thereon which folds the binding strip 5 into substantially U-shape and about the raw edge 2 of the body-material l and directs the Work thus arranged to the stitching mechanism. At the proper time in the stitching cycle, the pre-cut reinforcing piece 5 is introduced between the plies of the binding strip 4 so that it to the work-clamp of a tacking machine of the type disclosed in my pending application, Serial No. 335,935, filed May 18, 1940. This machine effects the production of the transverse line of zigzag stitches 8 shown in Fig. 3. In performing its stitching operation, the sewing machine disclosed in the above noted application begins its stitching at the point A in Fig. 3 and proceeds transversely of the binding strip 4 up to point B, where it reverses and lays upon the first line of zigzag stitches a second line of zigzag stitches terminating at point A. Immediately upon the completion of the stitching operation the cutting mechanism with which the machine is fitted is automatically actuated to cut the binding strip 4 and the reinforcing piece 5 along a line C, see Fig. 3, which is closely adjacent the line of stitching 8. The finished article is shown in Fig. 4.
While the method above described involves the use of specific types of commercial sewing machines, it is to be understood that other types of sewing machines may be employed in practicing the method, or the sewing operations may be performed by hand. In effecting the production of the seam illustrated in Fig. 6, the marginal por-- tion of the body-material is edge-folded or hemmed instead of being enclosed by a bindingstrip. Whether or not the raw edge of the bodymaterial is enclosed by a binding strip or is edgefolded or hemmed, there is provided a flattened tubular portion having opened ends which must be properly closed. The present invention is applicable to any case wherein the edge-portion thereof is of tubular form.
Having thus set forth the nature of the invention, what I claim herein is:
l. The method of finishing a stitched article of the class described including the steps of applying a binding about the end of a body-material and securing the same with a line of stitching, positioning Within said binding a piece of reinforcing material of less length than said binding and stitching the same along one of its edges to said body-material with the line of stitches which secures the binding, applying a line of tacking stitches through said binding and reinforcing material transversely of said binding and in substantial register with a side edge of said bodymaterial, and cutting said binding and reinforcing material closely adjacent the line of tacking stitches.
2. An article of the class described comprising a bodymaterial, a binding of extensible material enveloping one end of and contacting the opposite faces of said body-material, a reinforcing piece of less length than said binding disposed within the binding and having one of its edges overlapping the enveloped end of said body-material, said binding and reinforcing piece terminating in substantial register with each other, a line of stitches securing said binding to said bodymaterial and penetrating the two plies of said binding, the body-material and said reinforcing piece, and a line of tacking stitches penetrating the two plies of the binding and the reinforcing piece and overlapping the end of said line of stitches which secures said binding to said bodymaterial.
ALFRED R. WOOD.
US381619A 1941-03-04 1941-03-04 Reinforced seam Expired - Lifetime US2323507A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US381619A US2323507A (en) 1941-03-04 1941-03-04 Reinforced seam

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US381619A US2323507A (en) 1941-03-04 1941-03-04 Reinforced seam

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2323507A true US2323507A (en) 1943-07-06

Family

ID=23505715

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US381619A Expired - Lifetime US2323507A (en) 1941-03-04 1941-03-04 Reinforced seam

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2323507A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2433046A (en) * 1945-10-23 1947-12-23 Nobelt Inc Garment band
US2834309A (en) * 1954-08-05 1958-05-13 Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Overedge sewing machine for making safety seam
WO2002096230A1 (en) * 2001-05-30 2002-12-05 Tekerekoglu Tekstil Sanayi Ve Ticaret A.S. A skirt made of a double fabric
US20050211147A1 (en) * 2004-03-24 2005-09-29 Waterfield Laura M Translucent applique cutwork machine embroidery and method
US20050235420A1 (en) * 2005-03-02 2005-10-27 Keith Timothy F Bedding hem with associated interlining
US20080146387A1 (en) * 2006-12-18 2008-06-19 Paul Gait Over-Folded Mesh

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2433046A (en) * 1945-10-23 1947-12-23 Nobelt Inc Garment band
US2834309A (en) * 1954-08-05 1958-05-13 Willcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Overedge sewing machine for making safety seam
WO2002096230A1 (en) * 2001-05-30 2002-12-05 Tekerekoglu Tekstil Sanayi Ve Ticaret A.S. A skirt made of a double fabric
US20050211147A1 (en) * 2004-03-24 2005-09-29 Waterfield Laura M Translucent applique cutwork machine embroidery and method
US20050235420A1 (en) * 2005-03-02 2005-10-27 Keith Timothy F Bedding hem with associated interlining
US20060195985A1 (en) * 2005-03-02 2006-09-07 Standard Textile Co., Inc. Bedding hem with associated interior space interlining
WO2006093606A1 (en) * 2005-03-02 2006-09-08 Standard Textile Co., Inc. Bedding hem with associated interlining
US7325262B2 (en) 2005-03-02 2008-02-05 Standard Textile Co., Inc. Bedding hem with associated interlining
US20080146387A1 (en) * 2006-12-18 2008-06-19 Paul Gait Over-Folded Mesh

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2667132A (en) Bagmaking method and apparatus
US2323507A (en) Reinforced seam
US2172224A (en) Toilet seat lid cover and method of attaching drawstrings to the edges thereof
US3335682A (en) Pocket machine
US2078874A (en) Closure
US3675247A (en) Method for fabricating panty hose
US4395963A (en) Method of making lap seams
US1799132A (en) Seam-opening device
US2671903A (en) Bound garment opening
US2426057A (en) Sewing seam and method of making same
JPS6357090A (en) Method and device for sewing belt on cloth
US1480538A (en) Embroidery for finishing the edges of fabrics
US2767673A (en) Method of making bound buttonholes
US1211832A (en) Kimono.
US2676327A (en) Bifurcated garment
JPH08299627A (en) Sewing method for fabric
US1963309A (en) Belt
US2053144A (en) Finish for rubber goods and method of making and applying the same
US2042629A (en) Garment construction
US2839018A (en) Sewing machine attachment
US1524190A (en) Method of manufacturing stitched articles
US2348469A (en) Manufacture of lamp shades
US3710742A (en) Method and apparatus for producing shirt cuffs and the like
US5027729A (en) Method of manufacturing a pocket construction provided with a welt
JP3007602B2 (en) Shirt manufacturing method