US2373195A - Method of making puckered fabrics - Google Patents

Method of making puckered fabrics Download PDF

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Publication number
US2373195A
US2373195A US405684A US40568441A US2373195A US 2373195 A US2373195 A US 2373195A US 405684 A US405684 A US 405684A US 40568441 A US40568441 A US 40568441A US 2373195 A US2373195 A US 2373195A
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United States
Prior art keywords
areas
fabric
shrinkage
treated
heated
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Expired - Lifetime
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US405684A
Inventor
Wedler Frederick Charles
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Akzo Nobel UK PLC
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American Viscose Corp
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Publication date
Application filed by American Viscose Corp filed Critical American Viscose Corp
Priority to US405684A priority Critical patent/US2373195A/en
Priority to GB653/42A priority patent/GB555292A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2373195A publication Critical patent/US2373195A/en
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06QDECORATING TEXTILES
    • D06Q1/00Decorating textiles
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06QDECORATING TEXTILES
    • D06Q1/00Decorating textiles
    • D06Q1/02Producing patterns by locally destroying or modifying the fibres of a web by chemical actions, e.g. making translucent

Definitions

  • This invention relates to improved methods of making puckered fabrics of the type disclosed and claimed in William G. Luttge's application Serial Number 405,617, filed August 6, 1941.
  • yarns comprising stretched artificial filaments or fibers such as those of polyvinyl chloride, the co-polymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate, the chlorinated co-p'olymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate, cellulose acetate, etc., are fabricated into textile products, such as woven, braided, or knitted fabrics, and preselected areas of the fabric are subjected to a heated instrument at a temperature above the shrinkage or softening temperatures of the stretched filaments or fibers in the fabric.
  • the unheated areas are permitted to move freely, whereby the shrinkage effects which occur at the heated areas result in a puckering or milling of the adjacent unheated areas.
  • preselected areas of the fabric composed of yarns of the stretched artificial filaments or fibers mentioned above-are treated in such a. manner as to impart to them a different susceptibility to the subsequently applied heat treatment than the susceptibility of the remainder of the fabric not so pretreated.
  • This preliminary treatment to alter the susceptibility of the selected areas of the fabric may involve either increasing the susceptibility of the treated areas so that subsequent heat treatment for a shorter time or at a lower temperature will affect the pretreated areas without affecting the remainder of the fabric, or I the pre-treatment may involve decreasing the susceptibility of the treated areas so that the application of the subsequent heat treatment results in a shrinkage of the areas not pretreated and the puckering of the areas pre-treated.
  • the procedure involves the application of the pre-treatment steps in localized fashion and the application of the subsequent heat treatment to the entire fabric without localization.
  • both the pre-treatment and the subsequent heat treatment may be applied locally, in which case the areas subjected to pretreatment may or may not :be of the same size as the areas subjected to the heat treatment subsequently.
  • the heat treated areas may correspond exactly or may be larger or smaller than the pie-treated areas and furtherplasticizing material may be applied to the areas" or lines desired to be shrunk and between which thepuckered areas are to be made.
  • the plasticizer may be applied to the local areas by hand painting, by textile printing methods, by spraying, by brushing through a stencil, or otherwise.
  • plasticizers depend upon the particular composition of the yarns in the fabric.
  • such compounds as dimethoxy ethyl phthalate, dimethylene glycol monomethyl ether and methylene glycol dipropionate are suitable plasticizers for chlorinated or unchlorinated copolymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate.
  • suitable plasticizi ng substances are dimethyl phthalate, dibu tyl phthalate, diethyl tartrate, dibutyl tartrate, and triacetin.
  • Liquid plasticizers may be applied without dilution while either liquid or solid plasticizers may be applied in solution, preferably in a. solvent which is also a solvent for the material of which the yarns re composed.
  • the fabric After the fabric has absorbed suflicient plasticizer at the areas treated, it maythen be subjected to the heat treaatment, at a temperature below the shrinkage temperature of the unplasticized regions but sufficiently above the shrinkage temperature of the pre-treated areas to efiect rapid shrinkage thereof. Since this heat treatment may be an overall treatment, the entire fabric may be placed within an atmosphere having the desired temperature. The atmosphere may-consist of heated air or any other heated gas orliquid inert chemically to the fabric material Alternatively, the fabric may be submerged or immersed in a heated liquid', such as hot water or other non-solvent liquid.
  • a heated liquid' such as hot water or other non-solvent liquid.
  • a second embodiment of the invention involves the application in the desired pattern of a, wetting agent.
  • Suitable wetting agents are the sulfonated alkyl naphthalenes, fatty alcohol sulfates, and the sulmore, the heat treated areas may coincide, overso the Dre-treated areas are impregnated more I material be entirely water-insoluble.
  • preselected areas of the fabric are protected by the application of a-resist material, such as a gum, wax, lacquer or resin coating.
  • a-resist material such as a gum, wax, lacquer or resin coating.
  • this resist coating acts as an heat insulator, thereby preventing the activation or shrinkage of the protected areas prior to the shrinkage of the unprotected areas.
  • It is not essential ligat the resist It is sufilcient for effective operation to apply watersoluble material provided it is applied in a sufiiciently thick layer or coating as to prevent complete removal or complete heat transfer by the subsequent heat-treating fluid, which may be air or water, before the shrinkage of the unprotectedv areas can occur.
  • Any means or instrumentality may be employed to efiect the subsequent heat-treatment to cause shrinkage and puckering.
  • a tool having a blunt heated point may be drawn over the fabric by hand or an engraved heated roller may be'employed.
  • the use of a heated roller lacks the advantages of the fluid heated bath in that in the bath, the fabric being treated may be freely and limply suspended whereas the heated engraved roller necessitates the employment of special care to see that the heated areas are not cooled while maintained in a taut condition by the roller.
  • a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched filaments or fibers of a vinyl co-polymer the steps of pretreating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a plasticizer and then treating said fabric in a heated fluid medium while permitting free movement of the fabric therein thereby to apply heat to said fabric sufiicient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas but insufilcient in amount and intensity to aifect substantially the remaining group of areas.

Description

Patented Apr. 10, 1945 METHOD or MAKING woman memos Frederick Charles Wedler, Media, Pa., assignor to American Viscose Corporation,- Wilmington, Dei., a corporation of Delaware No Drawing. Application August 6, 1941,
, Serial N0. 405,684
9 Claims.
This invention relates to improved methods of making puckered fabrics of the type disclosed and claimed in William G. Luttge's application Serial Number 405,617, filed August 6, 1941.
In accordance wtih the Luttge application referred to, yarns comprising stretched artificial filaments or fibers, such as those of polyvinyl chloride, the co-polymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate, the chlorinated co-p'olymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate, cellulose acetate, etc., are fabricated into textile products, such as woven, braided, or knitted fabrics, and preselected areas of the fabric are subjected to a heated instrument at a temperature above the shrinkage or softening temperatures of the stretched filaments or fibers in the fabric. During the application of heat, or at least before the heated fabric has cooled sumciently to result in a setting of the fabric structure, the unheated areas are permitted to move freely, whereby the shrinkage effects which occur at the heated areas result in a puckering or milling of the adjacent unheated areas. I
In accordance with the present invention, preselected areas of the fabric, composed of yarns of the stretched artificial filaments or fibers mentioned above-are treated in such a. manner as to impart to them a different susceptibility to the subsequently applied heat treatment than the susceptibility of the remainder of the fabric not so pretreated. This preliminary treatment to alter the susceptibility of the selected areas of the fabric may involve either increasing the susceptibility of the treated areas so that subsequent heat treatment for a shorter time or at a lower temperature will affect the pretreated areas without affecting the remainder of the fabric, or I the pre-treatment may involve decreasing the susceptibility of the treated areas so that the application of the subsequent heat treatment results in a shrinkage of the areas not pretreated and the puckering of the areas pre-treated. Es-
sentially, the procedure involves the application of the pre-treatment steps in localized fashion and the application of the subsequent heat treatment to the entire fabric without localization. If desired, however, both the pre-treatment and the subsequent heat treatment may be applied locally, in which case the areas subjected to pretreatment may or may not :be of the same size as the areas subjected to the heat treatment subsequently. In other words, the heat treated areas may correspond exactly or may be larger or smaller than the pie-treated areas and furtherplasticizing material may be applied to the areas" or lines desired to be shrunk and between which thepuckered areas are to be made. The plasticizer may be applied to the local areas by hand painting, by textile printing methods, by spraying, by brushing through a stencil, or otherwise. The substances applicable as plasticizers depend upon the particular composition of the yarns in the fabric. For example, such compounds as dimethoxy ethyl phthalate, dimethylene glycol monomethyl ether and methylene glycol dipropionate are suitable plasticizers for chlorinated or unchlorinated copolymers of vinyl chloride and vinyl acetate. For cellulose acetate, suitable plasticizi ng substances are dimethyl phthalate, dibu tyl phthalate, diethyl tartrate, dibutyl tartrate, and triacetin. Liquid plasticizers may be applied without dilution while either liquid or solid plasticizers may be applied in solution, preferably in a. solvent which is also a solvent for the material of which the yarns re composed. After the fabric has absorbed suflicient plasticizer at the areas treated, it maythen be subjected to the heat treaatment, at a temperature below the shrinkage temperature of the unplasticized regions but sufficiently above the shrinkage temperature of the pre-treated areas to efiect rapid shrinkage thereof. Since this heat treatment may be an overall treatment, the entire fabric may be placed within an atmosphere having the desired temperature. The atmosphere may-consist of heated air or any other heated gas orliquid inert chemically to the fabric material Alternatively, the fabric may be submerged or immersed in a heated liquid', such as hot water or other non-solvent liquid.
A second embodiment of the invention involves the application in the desired pattern of a, wetting agent. This'may be applied in the formoffa solution which after application is dried upon the fabric, or it'may be applied in the form of a powder in which case the powdered material is worked thoroughly into the fibers or filaments of the yarns at the desired areas of the fabric. Suitable wetting agents are the sulfonated alkyl naphthalenes, fatty alcohol sulfates, and the sulmore, the heat treated areas may coincide, overso the Dre-treated areas are impregnated more I material be entirely water-insoluble.
rapidly than and are shrunk differentially with respect to the untreated areas.
In another form of the invention, preselected areas of the fabric are protected by the application of a-resist material, such as a gum, wax, lacquer or resin coating. In effect, this resist coating acts as an heat insulator, thereby preventing the activation or shrinkage of the protected areas prior to the shrinkage of the unprotected areas. It is not essential ligat the resist It is sufilcient for effective operation to apply watersoluble material provided it is applied in a sufiiciently thick layer or coating as to prevent complete removal or complete heat transfer by the subsequent heat-treating fluid, which may be air or water, before the shrinkage of the unprotectedv areas can occur.
Any means or instrumentality may be employed to efiect the subsequent heat-treatment to cause shrinkage and puckering. For example, a tool having a blunt heated point may be drawn over the fabric by hand or an engraved heated roller may be'employed. The use of a heated roller, however, lacks the advantages of the fluid heated bath in that in the bath, the fabric being treated may be freely and limply suspended whereas the heated engraved roller necessitates the employment of special care to see that the heated areas are not cooled while maintained in a taut condition by the roller.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been disclosed, the description is intended to be illustrative only, and it is to be understood that changes and variations may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Iclaim:
1. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched thermoplastic fibers,
tending to shrink at elevated temperatures, the steps of pie-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric to increase the heat-susceptibility of said areas with respect to that of the remaining group of areas and then applying heat to said fabric sufilcient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas.
2. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched thermoplastic filaments or fibers tending to shrink at elevated temperatures, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a plasticizer and then applying heat to said fabric sufficient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas but insufficient in amount and intensity to affect substantially the remaining group of areas.
3. In a method of finishin a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched thermoplastic filaments or fibers tending to shrink at elevated temperatures, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabriewith a plasticizer and then subjecting thefabric to a heated fluid medium to apply heat thereto sufllcient in amount and intensity to eifect shrinkage inv said pretreated areas but insufficient in amount and intensity to affect substantially the remaining group of areas.
4. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched filaments or fibers of a vinyl copolymer, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a plasticizer and then applying heat to said fabric suflicient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas but insufficient in amount and intensity to affect substantially the remaining group of areas.
5. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched filaments or fibers of a vinyl co-polymer, the steps of pretreating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a plasticizer and then treating said fabric in a heated fluid medium while permitting free movement of the fabric therein thereby to apply heat to said fabric sufiicient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas but insufilcient in amount and intensity to aifect substantially the remaining group of areas.
6. In a method'of finishing a fabric containing I yarns comprising stretched thermoplastic filaments or fibers tending to shrink at elevated temperatures, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a wetting agent and then applying heat to said fabric sufficient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said pre-treated areas.
7. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched thermoplastic filaments or fibers tending to shrink at elevated temperatures, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a wetting agent and then subjecting the fabric to a heated fluid medium to apply heat thereto sumcient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage of said pre-treated areas.
8. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched filaments or fibers of a vinyl co-polymer, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a wetting agent and then applying heat to. said fabric'sufiicient in amount and intensity to effect shrinkage in said p're-treated areas.
9. In a method of finishing a fabric containing yarns comprising stretched filaments or fibers of a vinyl co-polymer, the steps of pre-treating a group of selected areas of said fabric with a wetting agent and then subjecting said fabric to a
US405684A 1941-08-06 1941-08-06 Method of making puckered fabrics Expired - Lifetime US2373195A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

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US405684A US2373195A (en) 1941-08-06 1941-08-06 Method of making puckered fabrics
GB653/42A GB555292A (en) 1941-08-06 1942-01-16 Improvements in the production of puckered and like fabrics

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524895A (en) * 1945-10-31 1950-10-10 Celanese Corp Puckering a thermoplastic fabric by heating one side thereof
US2627644A (en) * 1950-06-24 1953-02-10 Us Rubber Co Single-ply corrugated fabric and method of making the same
US2713193A (en) * 1950-01-14 1955-07-19 Bates Mfg Co Textile fabrics and methods for producing the fabrics
US2988800A (en) * 1958-01-30 1961-06-20 Collins & Aikman Corp Methods of producing fabrics having depressed surface areas
DE1114770B (en) * 1952-06-20 1961-10-12 Bleachers Ass Ltd Method and device for ornamenting strips of flat, compressible material
DE1155081B (en) * 1958-01-30 1963-10-03 Collins & Aikman Corp Process for the production of a textile fabric consisting of a base fabric and a pile
US4383404A (en) * 1981-08-26 1983-05-17 Milliken Research Corporation Method and apparatus to produce post heated textured yarn

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524895A (en) * 1945-10-31 1950-10-10 Celanese Corp Puckering a thermoplastic fabric by heating one side thereof
US2713193A (en) * 1950-01-14 1955-07-19 Bates Mfg Co Textile fabrics and methods for producing the fabrics
US2627644A (en) * 1950-06-24 1953-02-10 Us Rubber Co Single-ply corrugated fabric and method of making the same
DE1114770B (en) * 1952-06-20 1961-10-12 Bleachers Ass Ltd Method and device for ornamenting strips of flat, compressible material
US2988800A (en) * 1958-01-30 1961-06-20 Collins & Aikman Corp Methods of producing fabrics having depressed surface areas
DE1155081B (en) * 1958-01-30 1963-10-03 Collins & Aikman Corp Process for the production of a textile fabric consisting of a base fabric and a pile
US4383404A (en) * 1981-08-26 1983-05-17 Milliken Research Corporation Method and apparatus to produce post heated textured yarn

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Publication number Publication date
GB555292A (en) 1943-08-16

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