US3664156A - Garment and method of making it - Google Patents

Garment and method of making it Download PDF

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Publication number
US3664156A
US3664156A US43672A US3664156DA US3664156A US 3664156 A US3664156 A US 3664156A US 43672 A US43672 A US 43672A US 3664156D A US3664156D A US 3664156DA US 3664156 A US3664156 A US 3664156A
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United States
Prior art keywords
body portions
knitting
shoulder regions
stitches
joined
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Expired - Lifetime
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US43672A
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English (en)
Inventor
Max W Betts
Frank Robinson
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Akzo Nobel UK PLC
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Courtaulds PLC
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B1/00Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes
    • D04B1/22Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes specially adapted for knitting goods of particular configuration
    • D04B1/24Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes specially adapted for knitting goods of particular configuration wearing apparel
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41BSHIRTS; UNDERWEAR; BABY LINEN; HANDKERCHIEFS
    • A41B1/00Shirts
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41DOUTERWEAR; PROTECTIVE GARMENTS; ACCESSORIES
    • A41D1/00Garments
    • A41D1/04Vests, jerseys, sweaters or the like
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A41WEARING APPAREL
    • A41HAPPLIANCES OR METHODS FOR MAKING CLOTHES, e.g. FOR DRESS-MAKING OR FOR TAILORING, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • A41H3/00Patterns for cutting-out; Methods of drafting or marking-out such patterns, e.g. on the cloth
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04BKNITTING
    • D04B1/00Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes
    • D04B1/22Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes specially adapted for knitting goods of particular configuration
    • D04B1/24Weft knitting processes for the production of fabrics or articles not dependent on the use of particular machines; Fabrics or articles defined by such processes specially adapted for knitting goods of particular configuration wearing apparel
    • D04B1/246Upper torso garments, e.g. sweaters, shirts, leotards
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D10INDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBLASSES OF SECTION D, RELATING TO TEXTILES
    • D10BINDEXING SCHEME ASSOCIATED WITH SUBLASSES OF SECTION D, RELATING TO TEXTILES
    • D10B2403/00Details of fabric structure established in the fabric forming process
    • D10B2403/03Shape features
    • D10B2403/033Three dimensional fabric, e.g. forming or comprising cavities in or protrusions from the basic planar configuration, or deviations from the cylindrical shape as generally imposed by the fabric forming process
    • D10B2403/0333Three dimensional fabric, e.g. forming or comprising cavities in or protrusions from the basic planar configuration, or deviations from the cylindrical shape as generally imposed by the fabric forming process with tubular portions of variable diameter or distinct axial orientation

Definitions

  • Garments according to the invention can be knitted on a flat bar knitting machine having at least one pair of opposed needle beds, means for operating the needles independently of one another and yarn carriers to supply yarn for the production of knitted loops on the needles.
  • Machines of this kind are well known and details of such machines and of the methods of programming their needles and yarn carriers will, therefore, not be described at length in this specification.
  • a flat V-bed knitting machine which incorporates needles and means of operating them so that stitches can be transferred from needles of one bed to needles of another bed
  • the machine described in British Pat. No. l,048,322 may be referred to.
  • the machine described in British Pat. No. 99l,943 may be referred to.
  • British Pat. Nos. 448,795, 846,636 and 910,885 describe transfer elements for use in such machines for shifting loops between needles and also describe mechanisms for operating the transfer elements.
  • circular knitting machines having needles arranged in two opposed needles beds and operable in a manner analogous to flat V-bed knitting machines.
  • the invention can also be carried out on such machines.
  • the methods normally employed for making gannents involve a considerable amount of making up and an object of this invention is to provide knitted garments and methods of making them which involve considerably less making up than conventional garments and methods of making them.
  • a blank for the manufacture of a knitted sleeved garment according to the invention comprises front and rear upper body portions each constituted by a piece of flat fabric and having side edges joined, on the knitting machine, to shoulder regions of the sleeves, the said shoulder regions having extensions arranged to be joined to upper edges of the said front and rear upper body portions.
  • a method according to the invention of machine knitting a blank for a sleeved garment includes knitting front and rear upper body portions of the garment each as a separate piece of flat fabric and joining the side edges of these portions, on the machine, to shoulder regions of the sleeves and knitting extensions of the said shoulder regions in such a way that they are arranged for joining to upper edges of the said front and rear upper body portions.
  • the joining of the shoulder regions of the sleeves to the side edges of the front and rear upper body portions can be carried out by first knitting those parts of the shoulder regions to be joined to the side edges and subsequently knitting the front and rear upper body portions as flat pieces of fabric and joining these portions by knitting them, as they are formed, to the shoulder regions, that is by intermeshing stitches of the front and rear upper body portions with stitches of the shoulder regions.
  • the shoulder regions and the front and rear upper body portions then constitutes a single piece of knitting.
  • the joining of the extensions of the shoulder regions to the upper edges of the front and rear upper body portions can be carried out as the extensions are formed by knitting them onto these upper edges, that is by intermeshing stitches of the extensions as they are formed with stitches at the upper edges of the body portions.
  • the extensions are preferably knitted on auxiliary needle beds movable longitudinally of the main beds and each extension can be knitted as a series of U-shaped courses, each end of each of these courses being joined on the machine to the end of a wale of one of the upper body portions.
  • course is used generally in the knitting art and in this specification to mean a row of loops in the fabric fonned in the direction along an array of needles.
  • a wale is a column of loops comprising loops in successive courses.
  • FIGS. 1, 2, 3 and 10 show different garment blanks according to the invention
  • FIGS. 4 to 7 are a series of diagrammatic representations of stages in the knitting of a garment blank according to the invention on a flat V-bed knitting machine with opposed needle beds, and
  • FIGS. 8 and 9 are diagrammatic representations of two stages in the knitting of a garment blank according to the invention on a flat V-bed knitting machine with opposed needle beds and provided with stitch transfer elements.
  • the garment blanks shown in FIGS. 1, 2 and 3 are advantageously knitted on a flat V-bed knitting machine having, in addition to the main needle beds, two pairs of auxiliary beds containing arrays of needles, the auxiliary beds being movable longitudinally of the main beds of the machine.
  • a machine of this general kind is described in British Pat. No. 991,943 and a machine having auxiliary beds mounted and operated in the manner described in that specification can be used in carrying out the present invention.
  • the machine is advantageously equipped, in place of a normal take-down mechanism which is arranged to pull fabric evenly from the needles across the whole width of the machine, with hold down elements as described in U.S. Pat. application Ser. No. 874,938 of M.W. Betts et a1.
  • Such hold down elements are carried on a single member which is so mounted that it can be moved to bring the two hold-down elements alternately into an operative position in which the operative elements extends beneath the active needles of the opposed arrays of latch needles of the knitting machine, the said member being arranged to carry the hold-down elements along the arrays of needles in synchronism with the actuation of the needles and the operative hold-down element being arranged to hold down the knitting so that opened latches move up through the loops on the needles as the needles rise during knitting and are closed by the loops as the needles descent.
  • the garment blank shown in FIG. 1 comprises a tubular body portion 5 with a front upper body portion 6 and a corresponding rear upper body portion, the two upper body positions being knitted as flat pieces of fabric each on one of the two opposed needle beds of a that V-bed knitting machine.
  • Two tubular sleeves 7 and 8 also knitted on the machine have shoulder regions 9 and 10, respectively.
  • the shoulder regions are joined to side edges of the upper body portions,the two joins 13 and 14 between these regions and the body portion-6 being shown in FIG. 1.
  • the direction of the wales in sleeve 7 is indicated by the lines 15.
  • the direction of the wales in the body portions 6 is indicated by the lines 16.Courses run in each case perpendicular to the wales and thus the joining of the shoulder regions of the sleeves to the upper body portions involves joining the ends of wales of the shoulder regions with the ends of courses of the body portions.
  • each extension is formed on the shoulder region of each sleeve, each extension having two edges each joined on the machine to an upper edge of an upper body portion of the garment.
  • the two extensions are designated by the numerals l7 and 18 in FIG. 1.
  • Each comprises a series of U-shaped courses the wales of which are extensions of wales of the shoulder region of the associated sleeve.
  • Each end of each U-shaped course is joined to an end of a wale of a body portion of the garment.
  • the garment blank which is shown in FIG. 1 before a neck opening has been cut out, is of the saddle shoulder type.
  • mock rib borders 2] are formed at the free ends of the body and sleeves in known manner.
  • the sleeve 8 shown in chain lines in FIG. 1 illustrates a stage in the method of knitting the garment, which method will now be described with reference to FIGS. 4 to 7.
  • auxiliary needle beds 24 and 25 only of the knitting machine used to knit the blank are shown in FIGS. 4 to 7. These auxiliary beds 24 and 25 are those used to knit the sleeve 8.
  • the tubular portion 5 of the garment body and the tubular portions of the sleeves are first knitted, in the direction from waist and cuff, respectively, the body portion on the main needle beds of the machine indicated at 22 and 23 in FIGS. 4 to 7 and the sleeves on pairs of auxiliary beds movable longitudinally with respect to the main beds, auxiliary beds 24 and 25 being used to knit the sleeve 8.
  • tubular body portion 5 and the tubular portion of the sleeve 8 are completed and hang from the beds of the machine, the body portion 5 as shown in FIG. 1 in full lines and the sleeve 8 as shown in chain lines.
  • FIGS. 4 to 7 and8 and 9 the number of stitches shown is less than would be present in an actual garment.
  • the front and rear of the body 5 are shown as having a width of only seven stitches and the sleeve 8 is shown as having a width of only four stitches, although in practice many more stitches would be used.
  • FIG. 5 shows four successive stages in the formation of a vertical join 14 between a side edge of the body and a shoulder region of the sleeve 8. Only the front main needle bed 23 and the front auxiliary bed 25 are shown. In the join 14, end stitches of courses of the body portion 6 are joined to end stitches of wales of the sleeve The courses of the portion 6 extend across the front of the garment perpendicular to the lines of the wales 16 in FIG. 1. The courses of the rear upper body portion also extend across the garment.
  • the join 14 is produced by knitting a course of the body portion 6 on needles of the front main bed 23, moving the auxiliary bed 25 inwardly of the main bed 23, and transferring the sleeve loop 28 onto the same needle as the body loop 29. (The inward movement of the auxiliary bed 25 is not shown in FIGS. 4 to 7). A further course of the body portion 6 is then knitted on the main bed 23 and a single loop 31 of this course is drawn through the two loops 28 and 29. Loop 30 is then transferred to the needle holding the loop 31 and a further course of the body portion 6 is knitted.
  • loop 32 of the sleeve is transferred to he same needle as loop 33 of the portion 6 and loop 34 of the sleeve is transferred to the same needle as loop 35 of the portion 6 and so on.
  • loop 34 of the sleeve is transferred to the same needle as loop 35 of the portion 6 and so on.
  • join I4 and the corresponding sleeve-to-body join at the rear of the garment and the corresponding joins for the sleeve 7 can be formed simultaneously and when these joins have been completed, the knitting of the extensions 17 and 18 of the shoulder regions of the sleeves can be started. If these extensions are to be continued to the center of the garment, as shown in FIG. I, it will normally be necessary to knit the extensions successively to avoid clashing of the two pairs of auxiliary beds at the center region of the main beds.
  • the auxiliary beds 24 and 25 will each still carry a small number of stitches of the sleeve 8 corresponding to the desired width W of the extension 18 from the course at the upper edge 38 of the body portion 6 to the top of the garment. (This is the vertical height of the extension in FIG. 1). In FIG. 6, three stitches are shown on each auxiliary bed.
  • a series of U-shaped courses is knitted on the auxiliary beds 24 and 25 using a single yarn carrier and after each U-shaped course has been formed, in order to join the sleeve extension to the upper edges of the front and rear upper body portions, the outermost stitches of the front and rear upper body portions are transferred to the needles carrying the innermost end stitches of the U-shaped course.
  • the path 39 of the yarn carrier in forming one U-shaped course of extension 18 is indicated together with the subsequent transfer of end stitches 40 and 41 of the upper body portions to the needles 42 and 43 of auxiliary beds 24 and 25 which are carrying the innermost end loops of the U-shaped course.
  • FIG. 7 shows the next reciprocation of the yarn carrier to form the next U-shaped course and the transfer of the adjacent pair of stitches 46, 47 of the body to the needles 42 and 43.
  • U-shaped courses are formed and are joined by intermeshing of stitches to end stitches of wales of the front and rear upper body portions.
  • Theauxiliary beds 24 and 25 are moved inwardly until the point 48 (FIG. 1) is reached and the knitting of the extension 18 has been completed.
  • the fabric is then pressed off the needles of beds 24 and 25, beds 24 and 25 are withdrawn and the extension 17 is knitted and joined to the body in the same manner as extension 18.
  • the beds 24 and 25 may be moved outwardly at the same time as the auxiliary beds on which the extension 17 is knitted are moved inwardly.
  • the extensions 17 and 18 can be knitted simultaneously, clashing of the two pairs of auxiliary beds being avoided by transferring the stitches of the U-shaped courses inwardly to other needles of the same beds, the beds being moved outwardly to maintain these stitches in the same positions relative to the main beds of the machine.
  • Needles capable of transferring stitches and methods of operating such needles are described in British Pat. No. 1,048,322 previously mentioned.
  • transfer needles can only transfer stitches to needles in an opposite bed, it is necessary in order to transfer loops between adjacent needles of the same bed to carry out two transfer operations, first transferring a loop to a needle in an opposite bed and then transferring the loop back to a needle of the first bed adjacent the needle which originally held the loop.
  • the machine can be equipped with transfer elements capable of picking up loops from needles, shifting them along a needle bed and depositing them on different needles of the same or a different bed.
  • transfer elements capable of picking up loops from needles, shifting them along a needle bed and depositing them on different needles of the same or a different bed.
  • Such elements and means for operating them are described, for example, in British Pat. Nos. 910,885, 846,636 and 448,795.
  • An example of a knitting procedure employing transfer stitches is illustrated in FIGS. 8 and 9 in which the stitches carried on the needles of each of the beds 24, 25 are all moved inwardly by one needle pitch (FIG. 8) and the beds 24, 25 are moved outwardly by one needle pitch to the positions shown in FIG. 9.
  • the beds 24 and 25 are subsequently moved inwardly on knitting further U- shaped courses.
  • the transfer of stitches can be effected, for example, by means of transfer needles or by transfer points or elements as mentioned above.
  • the exact order of the operations of forming courses, transferring stitches and shogging the auxiliary beds in forming the vertical and horizontal joins is susceptible of a number of variations. For example, in joining the U- shaped courses to the body, transfer of a body stitch to a needle carrying one end stitch of the U-sh'aped course may be effected after only half the course has been knitted. The course will then be completed before transfer of a body stitch to the needle carrying the other end stitch of the course is effected.
  • the sleeve extensions can be knitted without joining them to the upper body portions during the knitting process and can then be joined to these portions after removal of the blank from the knitting machine.
  • This joining operation can be carried out, for example, by seaming or linking.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates two further garments knitted according to the invention.
  • the body portion 5 is first knitted.
  • the front and rear upper body portions are then knitted as flat pieces of fabric and are joined to the sleeves as in the garment of FIG. 1, but the initial courses 6a of these portions are made successively shorter, thus forming a join 14 with the shoulder region of the sleeves, the join 14 being inclined to the vertical direction of the body.
  • the courses of the upper body portions knitted subsequently to the courses 6a are all of the same length as in the garment of FIG. 1, and thus a vertical join 14 is formed.
  • the first stage of forming the sleeve-to-body join comprises knitting a number of U-shaped courses 50 around the whole of the sleeve and joining the ends of these U-shaped courses to the stitches at the ends of wales in the upper edge of the tubular body portion to form a horizontal join 51.
  • the upper body portions are then knitted as flat pieces of fabric and are joined to the ends of the wales of the sleeves to form a vertical join 14.
  • sleeve extensions, such as extension 17 are knitted and are joined to the upper edges, such as edge 38, of the body by horizontal joins.
  • the body portion 5 is knitted as a tube, and upper body portions, such as the front portion 6, are knitted as flat pieces of fabric but are progressively narrowed throughout the whole of their height.
  • the shoulder regions of the sleeves are knitted by forming U- shaped courses which are made successively shorter, needles being taken out of action successively from the inner ends of the shoulder regions.
  • the shoulder regions When the shoulder regions have been completed, they are joined to the side edges of the upper body panels in the manner described above,to form inclined sleeveto-body joins l4".
  • Sleeve extensions 17 and 18 are knitted as U-shaped courses and are joined to the upper edges 38 of the body by horizontal joins as described above.
  • the body portion 5 is knitted as a tube and front and rear upper body portions are knitted as flat pieces of fabric, the front upper body portion 6 being shown in FIG. 10.
  • the upper body portions are progressively narrowed throughout the whole of their height to provide inclined side edges 54a and 54b for the formation of inclined sleeve-to-body joins.
  • the sleeves, shoulder regions of the sleeves, and sleeve extensions are all knitted on a single pair of auxiliary beds of the knitting machine.
  • the sleeve 7 is knitted first as a tube on a pair of auxiliary beds up to the course of knitting indicated by the broken line 55.
  • a shoulder region 9 of the sleeve is thereafter knitted by forming a series of U-shaped courses on the needles of the auxiliary beds, as described with reference to FIGS. 6 and 7, and the ends of these courses are joined to stitches lying in the side edges 54a of the front and rear upper body portions, also as described with reference to FIGS. 6 and 7.
  • Knitting is then continued into the sleeve extension 17 which is also formed by knitting U-shaped courses on the auxiliary beds. The stitches at the ends of these courses are joined to stitches at the ends of wales of the central region 56 of the upper edges of the front and rear upper body portions.
  • the sleeve extension 18 is next knitted and joined to the front and rear upper body portions in the same way as the extension 17 and knitting is continued into the shoulder region which is knitted in the same way as the region 9 and joined to stitches lying in the side edges 54b of the upper body portions. Finally the sleeve 8 is knitted in tubular fonn.
  • the sleeves 7 and 8 may be long or short.
  • the wales of the sleeve 7, the shoulder region 9, sleeve extensions 17 and 18, the shoulder region 10, and the sleeve 8 are continuous so that these parts are all integral with one another.
  • the neck opening is cut out and trimmed.
  • a blank for the manufacture of a knitted sleeved garment comprising tubular sleeves terminating in shoulder regions, a tubular lower body portion, front and rear upper body portions comprising pieces of flat fabric having upper and side edges, said side edges being integrally joined by knitted stitches to the shoulder regions of said sleeves, and sleeve extensions running from the shoulder regions of said sleeves and positioned for joining to the upper edges of said upper body portions.
  • a method of machine knitting a blank for a sleeved garment which comprises knitting tubular sleeve members terminating in shoulder regions, knitting upper front and rear body portions as flat pieces of fabric having side and upper edges, transferring stitches between a portion of the shoulder regions of said sleeves and the side edges of said front and rear body portions to join said shoulder regions to said body portions and knitting extensions of the'portions of said shoulder regions not joined to said body portions for joining to the upper edges of said body portions.
  • a method as claimed in claim 6 including knitting the parts of the shoulder regions to be joined to the side edges of the front and rear upper body portions and subsequently knitting the front and rear upper body portions as flat pieces of fabric and joining these portions by intermeshing stitches of these portions as they are formed with stitches of the shoulder regions.
  • a method as claimed in claim 6, including the step of joining the extensions of the shoulder regions to the front and rear upper body portions by intermeshing stitches of the extensions, as they are formed, with stitches at the upper edges of the body portions.
  • a method as claimed in claim 8 including the step of knitting each extension as a series of U-shaped courses, each end of each of these courses being joined to the end of a wale of one of the upper body portions.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Knitting Machines (AREA)
  • Outer Garments And Coats (AREA)
  • Knitting Of Fabric (AREA)
  • Corsets Or Brassieres (AREA)
  • Details Of Garments (AREA)
US43672A 1969-06-18 1970-06-05 Garment and method of making it Expired - Lifetime US3664156A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

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GB3086669 1969-06-18

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US3664156A true US3664156A (en) 1972-05-23

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US (1) US3664156A (de)
AU (1) AU1601970A (de)
BE (1) BE752179A (de)
CA (1) CA935296A (de)
CH (1) CH526658A (de)
CS (1) CS151555B2 (de)
DE (1) DE2029041A1 (de)
ES (1) ES192534Y (de)
FR (1) FR2052776A5 (de)
GB (1) GB1309239A (de)
IE (1) IE34262B1 (de)
LU (1) LU61154A1 (de)
NL (1) NL7008301A (de)
ZA (1) ZA703726B (de)

Cited By (13)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3956908A (en) * 1974-02-05 1976-05-18 Courtaulds Limited Knitting method
US4095441A (en) * 1976-08-10 1978-06-20 Courtaulds Limited Knitting method
US4111008A (en) * 1976-08-10 1978-09-05 Courtaulds Limited Sweater blank and method of knitting same
US4844546A (en) * 1987-03-31 1989-07-04 Nissan Motor Company, Ltd. Seat with arm rest
US5203185A (en) * 1990-06-05 1993-04-20 Shima Seiki Mfg. Ltd. Fabric connecting method and fabric having connections
US5487282A (en) * 1991-03-07 1996-01-30 Universal Maschinenfabrik Process for knitting tubular fabric on a flat bed knitting machine
EP0857800A2 (de) * 1997-02-07 1998-08-12 H. Stoll GmbH & Co. Verfahren zur Herstellung eines mit Ärmeln versehenen Kleidungsstücks auf einer Zweibett-Flachstrickmaschine
US20130213094A1 (en) * 2012-02-20 2013-08-22 Ansell Limited Zonal cut resistant glove
WO2015153012A1 (en) * 2014-04-03 2015-10-08 Nike Innovate C.V. Method of forming a unitary knit article using flat-knit construction
US20170311681A1 (en) * 2016-04-29 2017-11-02 Aknit International Ltd. Shoe body-forming piece and manufacturing method thereof
US10918149B2 (en) * 2017-03-09 2021-02-16 Under Armour, Inc. Article of apparel
US11812805B2 (en) 2020-05-27 2023-11-14 Puma SE Article of apparel and related manufacturing methods
US11910889B2 (en) 2019-12-06 2024-02-27 Dee Volin Method of manufacturing and using a multi-function and multi-orientation carapace system

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
ES8700343A1 (es) * 1985-11-25 1986-10-16 Picaza Azpiroz Jose Maria Proceso de tisaje de una prenda sin costuras en tricotosas rectilineas

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US2521786A (en) * 1949-04-09 1950-09-12 Granov Walter Knitting machine
US2877635A (en) * 1955-05-26 1959-03-17 Ralph C Powell Method and machine for knitting seamless gloves
US3195147A (en) * 1960-12-30 1965-07-20 Yamamura Kohei Method of tailoring shirts from tubular knitted fabrics
US3474643A (en) * 1966-06-07 1969-10-28 Courtaulds Ltd Knitting process
US3561000A (en) * 1964-02-28 1971-02-02 Bentley Eng Co Ltd Knitted garment and method

Patent Citations (5)

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US2521786A (en) * 1949-04-09 1950-09-12 Granov Walter Knitting machine
US2877635A (en) * 1955-05-26 1959-03-17 Ralph C Powell Method and machine for knitting seamless gloves
US3195147A (en) * 1960-12-30 1965-07-20 Yamamura Kohei Method of tailoring shirts from tubular knitted fabrics
US3561000A (en) * 1964-02-28 1971-02-02 Bentley Eng Co Ltd Knitted garment and method
US3474643A (en) * 1966-06-07 1969-10-28 Courtaulds Ltd Knitting process

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3956908A (en) * 1974-02-05 1976-05-18 Courtaulds Limited Knitting method
US4095441A (en) * 1976-08-10 1978-06-20 Courtaulds Limited Knitting method
US4111008A (en) * 1976-08-10 1978-09-05 Courtaulds Limited Sweater blank and method of knitting same
US4844546A (en) * 1987-03-31 1989-07-04 Nissan Motor Company, Ltd. Seat with arm rest
US5203185A (en) * 1990-06-05 1993-04-20 Shima Seiki Mfg. Ltd. Fabric connecting method and fabric having connections
US5487282A (en) * 1991-03-07 1996-01-30 Universal Maschinenfabrik Process for knitting tubular fabric on a flat bed knitting machine
EP0857800A2 (de) * 1997-02-07 1998-08-12 H. Stoll GmbH & Co. Verfahren zur Herstellung eines mit Ärmeln versehenen Kleidungsstücks auf einer Zweibett-Flachstrickmaschine
DE19704646A1 (de) * 1997-02-07 1998-08-13 Stoll & Co H Verfahren zur Herstellung eines mit Ärmeln versehenen Kleidungsstückes auf einer Zweibett-Flachstrickmaschine
EP0857800A3 (de) * 1997-02-07 2000-03-15 H. Stoll GmbH & Co. Verfahren zur Herstellung eines mit Ärmeln versehenen Kleidungsstücks auf einer Zweibett-Flachstrickmaschine
DE19704646B4 (de) * 1997-02-07 2005-02-03 H. Stoll Gmbh & Co. Verfahren zur Herstellung eines mit Ärmeln versehenen Kleidungsstückes auf einer Zweibett-Flachstrickmaschine
US20130213094A1 (en) * 2012-02-20 2013-08-22 Ansell Limited Zonal cut resistant glove
WO2015153012A1 (en) * 2014-04-03 2015-10-08 Nike Innovate C.V. Method of forming a unitary knit article using flat-knit construction
CN106133224A (zh) * 2014-04-03 2016-11-16 耐克创新有限合伙公司 使用横编织结构形成整体编织物品的方法
US10100445B2 (en) 2014-04-03 2018-10-16 Nike, Inc. Method of forming a unitary knit article using flat-knit construction
US10480109B2 (en) 2014-04-03 2019-11-19 Nike, Inc. Method of forming a unitary knit article using flat-knit construction
EP3591105A1 (de) * 2014-04-03 2020-01-08 NIKE Innovate C.V. Eine serie gestrickter komponenten beinhaltend einen einheitlichen strickartikel hergestellt unter verwendung einer flachstrickkonstruktion
US20170311681A1 (en) * 2016-04-29 2017-11-02 Aknit International Ltd. Shoe body-forming piece and manufacturing method thereof
US10918149B2 (en) * 2017-03-09 2021-02-16 Under Armour, Inc. Article of apparel
US11910889B2 (en) 2019-12-06 2024-02-27 Dee Volin Method of manufacturing and using a multi-function and multi-orientation carapace system
US11812805B2 (en) 2020-05-27 2023-11-14 Puma SE Article of apparel and related manufacturing methods

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
NL7008301A (de) 1970-12-22
GB1309239A (en) 1973-03-07
CA935296A (en) 1973-10-16
IE34262B1 (en) 1975-03-19
BE752179A (fr) 1970-12-01
AU1601970A (en) 1971-12-09
CH526658A (de) 1972-08-15
ES192534U (es) 1974-11-01
CS151555B2 (de) 1973-10-19
FR2052776A5 (de) 1971-04-09
ZA703726B (en) 1971-01-27
ES192534Y (es) 1975-02-16
DE2029041A1 (de) 1971-01-21
LU61154A1 (de) 1970-08-21
IE34262L (en) 1970-12-18

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