US508645A - Richard august sw-oboda - Google Patents

Richard august sw-oboda Download PDF

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US508645A
US508645A US508645DA US508645A US 508645 A US508645 A US 508645A US 508645D A US508645D A US 508645DA US 508645 A US508645 A US 508645A
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balls
border
same
loops
threads
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D04BRAIDING; LACE-MAKING; KNITTING; TRIMMINGS; NON-WOVEN FABRICS
    • D04DTRIMMINGS; RIBBONS, TAPES OR BANDS, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D04D5/00Fringes

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  • My invention relates to an improved apparatus for effecting the attachment of balls ot silk or similar material to the border ot textile fabrics to form a fringe and the object of the same is to eiect this attachment in a perfectly iirm and reliable manner, and without impairing the mobility of the balls.
  • the methods hitherto employed had the defect either of allowing the balls gradually to get loose, so that the border or fringe became of bad appearance, or, if this defectwas'prevented by attaching the balls to the border by means of hooked pins, which fastened the ball to loops coming from the border, these pins impaired the appearance of the border by being visible, and also the mobility ot the balls.
  • My improvement combines the advantages of those used hitherto, avoiding the defects they presented, and consists in securing the balls to the thread connecting the same with.
  • FIG. 1 is a partly sectional side elevation ot' the machine embodying my invention.
  • Fig. 2 is an end-view of the same.
  • Fig. 3 is a cross-sectional elevation, taken on line ca -cc of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 4 shows a single ball with a l loop ot' thread attached thereto.
  • FIG. 5 is a sectional plan, taken on the line y-y of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 6 illustrates a modification by which single balls are obtained.
  • Fig. 7 shows a modification of the manner in which the balls are attached to the border.
  • the machine consists of a frame having an arm of U-shaped cross-section extending at right angles to the plane of the reciprocating yneedle or plungerf, which moves in a frame c, having a guide-wayb.
  • This frame is formed with a slot dand a hook e.. ⁇ At the place where the slot d connects with the guide-way b, the latter is somewhat widened, as shown at m.
  • the guide-way b is a groove in the frame c, and the lower end of the groove is widened in such a manner that the groove is double at the bottom ot the frame c.
  • a lath 72 adapted to receive the wire hooks or staples g, which are brought one after another inthe path of the plungerfby the sliding carriage Z, pressedv toward the frontend of the lath h by a weight 0.
  • the movement of the plungerf may be obtained in any convenient manner, for instance by means of a connecting-rod and a crank on a rotating shaf t.
  • the bundle of threads a (Fig. l) is inserted from the left into the oblong guide-way b (Figs. 1 and 2); a hook gis brought into the parte by the constant pressure exerted by the sliding carriage Z.
  • the lower portion of the groove provided in the same being somewhat Widened as shown at, Fig. 5, both ends of the hook, after having seized the bundle ot threads a, are laid parallelone to another, thus forming a ring the extremities ot ⁇ the hook overlapping each other, as shown.
  • the loops lo ot the border are inserted through the slot d into the guide b, passing over the hook e, so as torbe laid upon the bundle of threads a, every time the needle f is in its upper position.
  • the U-shaped hook g being then pressed down by the needle f, seizes the loop 7c, draws the same downward and secures it to the bundle of .threads a, the latter being pressed together or narrowed at the same time, as will be seen in Fig. 1.
  • Vhen the operation has been conducted from one end of the border to the other the bundle of threads a is cut into single balls by means of a knife, and the balls are finished in the usual manner by steaming.
  • Fig. 4 shows such a single ball before the same is steamed.
  • the loops herein employed are, however, not attached one by one, but a suitable thread is made to form a loop in the manner shown in Fig. 6.
  • the place t where the thread is lying cross-wise is passed over the hook e, and thus inserted into the guide-way b by 011e end of a U -shaped hook g seizing the loop and firmly securing the same to the bundle of threads a.
  • the loops are directly secured to the balls, as described, ⁇ whereas in the second this may also be elfected by the interposition of according passing through the loops and fixed to the border at points at an equal distance from each other.
  • My improved method is accordingly applicable in two modilications,one of which has been described, and the other is performed as follows:
  • the loops lc are distributed over the Whole length of the border and divided into equal portions by means of a special cord, which is interwoven with the border at the dividing points.
  • the cord fn, Fig. 7 forms at both ends of each of the portions of loops two small eyes n n2; before 1n serting the same.through the slot d into the guide-Way b, the eyes n n2 are superposed so as to form a double eye n3, see the right half of Fig. 7, and thereby the triangular shape of the loops 7c is also obtained.
  • the eye 7131s 1nserted in the above described manner, and then the same method as in the first case is applied.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Textile Engineering (AREA)
  • Decoration Of Textiles (AREA)

Description

(No Moel.)
A R. A. SWOBODA. MACHINE EOE ATTAGEING EEINGE-BALLS To TEE BORDER 0E l TEXTILE EABEIGS. f
Patented Nov. 14 1893. y
ilil
Liec- UNITED STATES PATENT Orrrcn.
RICHARD AUGUST SVOBODA,`OF ANNABERG, GERMANY.
MACHINE FOR ATTAOHING FRINGE-BALES TO THE BORDER OF TEXTILE FABRICS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 508,645, dated November 14, 1893.
Application led November 2, 1891. Serial No. 410,661.l (Nonliodel.) Patented in Germany October 10, 1891, No. 63,337; in England OctoberZO, 1891, No. 17,998; in France October 23,V 1891, No. 216.935; in Belgium October 24, 1891, No. 96,931, and in Austria-Hungary February 27, 1892, No. 49,749 and No. 83,496,
dated October 20, 1891; in Austria-Hungary,` No. 49,749 and No. 83,496, dated February 27, 1892; in France, No. 216,935, dated October 23, 1891, and in Belgium, No. 96,931, dated,
October 24, 1891,) ot' which thc followingis an exact specification.
My invention relates to an improved apparatus for effecting the attachment of balls ot silk or similar material to the border ot textile fabrics to form a fringe and the object of the same is to eiect this attachment in a perfectly iirm and reliable manner, and without impairing the mobility of the balls.
The methods hitherto employed had the defect either of allowing the balls gradually to get loose, so that the border or fringe became of bad appearance, or, if this defectwas'prevented by attaching the balls to the border by means of hooked pins, which fastened the ball to loops coming from the border, these pins impaired the appearance of the border by being visible, and also the mobility ot the balls.
My improvement combines the advantages of those used hitherto, avoiding the defects they presented, and consists in securing the balls to the thread connecting the same with.
the border by means of a U-shaped hook ot wire, which at the same time is used to form the balls out of a bundle of threads, as hereinafter more clearly shown.
I will now proceed to describe the construction and operation of myimproved apparatus,
by the aid of the accompanying drawings, ot' which- Figure 1 is a partly sectional side elevation ot' the machine embodying my invention. Fig. 2 is an end-view of the same. Fig. 3 is a cross-sectional elevation, taken on line ca -cc of Fig. 1. Fig. 4 shows a single ball with a l loop ot' thread attached thereto.
`Fig. 5 is a sectional plan, taken on the line y-y of Fig. 2. Fig. 6 illustrates a modification by which single balls are obtained. Fig. 7 shows a modification of the manner in which the balls are attached to the border.
Similarletters refer to similarparts throughout the several views.
. The machine consists of a frame having an arm of U-shaped cross-section extending at right angles to the plane of the reciprocating yneedle or plungerf, which moves in a frame c, having a guide-wayb. This frame is formed with a slot dand a hook e.. `At the place where the slot d connects with the guide-way b, the latter is somewhat widened, as shown at m. The guide-way b is a groove in the frame c, and the lower end of the groove is widened in such a manner that the groove is double at the bottom ot the frame c. Within the arm 't' is a lath 72 adapted to receive the wire hooks or staples g, which are brought one after another inthe path of the plungerfby the sliding carriage Z, pressedv toward the frontend of the lath h by a weight 0. The movement of the plungerf may be obtained in any convenient manner, for instance by means of a connecting-rod and a crank on a rotating shaf t.
The bundle of threads a (Fig. l) is inserted from the left into the oblong guide-way b (Figs. 1 and 2); a hook gis brought into the parte by the constant pressure exerted by the sliding carriage Z. The lower portion of the groove provided in the same being somewhat Widened as shown at, Fig. 5, both ends of the hook, after having seized the bundle ot threads a, are laid parallelone to another, thus forming a ring the extremities ot` the hook overlapping each other, as shown.
The loops lo ot the border are inserted through the slot d into the guide b, passing over the hook e, so as torbe laid upon the bundle of threads a, every time the needle f is in its upper position. The U-shaped hook g, being then pressed down by the needle f, seizes the loop 7c, draws the same downward and secures it to the bundle of .threads a, the latter being pressed together or narrowed at the same time, as will be seen in Fig. 1. At
every upward movement of the needlefthe bundle of threads a is raised by hand and thus is carried to the somewhat widened opening 'm (Fig. 2). At this moment the bundle of threads a is moved to the right through the distance of two adjoining balls. At the same time the loop 7c is drawn out through the slot d and immediately afterward the next loop of the borderis inserted, whereupon the operation begins again as described.
Vhen the operation has been conducted from one end of the border to the other the bundle of threads a is cut into single balls by means of a knife, and the balls are finished in the usual manner by steaming. By the same method it is also possible to manufacture single balls with loops. Fig. 4 shows such a single ball before the same is steamed. The loops herein employed are, however, not attached one by one, but a suitable thread is made to form a loop in the manner shown in Fig. 6. The place t where the thread is lying cross-wise is passed over the hook e, and thus inserted into the guide-way b by 011e end of a U -shaped hook g seizing the loop and firmly securing the same to the bundle of threads a.
In cutting hereafter the latter into singlev balls the thread between two loops is cut at the same time, and the operation is at an end.
There are two sorts of borders fitted with balls; in the first the loops or fringes to which the balls are secured, are provided only from space to space on the border, as shown in Fig. 1, while in the second they are distributed over the whole length of the same and converge toward the ball, so that the fringes have the form of a triangle iixed by one side to the border, as shown in Fig. 7.
In the first case the loops are directly secured to the balls, as described,`whereas in the second this may also be elfected by the interposition of acord passing through the loops and fixed to the border at points at an equal distance from each other.
My improved method is accordingly applicable in two modilications,one of which has been described, and the other is performed as follows: The loops lc, as mentioned, are distributed over the Whole length of the border and divided into equal portions by means of a special cord, which is interwoven with the border at the dividing points. The cord fn, Fig. 7, forms at both ends of each of the portions of loops two small eyes n n2; before 1n serting the same.through the slot d into the guide-Way b, the eyes n n2 are superposed so as to form a double eye n3, see the right half of Fig. 7, and thereby the triangular shape of the loops 7c is also obtained. The eye 7131s 1nserted in the above described manner, and then the same method as in the first case is applied.
From the above description it will be apparent that in fact the connection of the balls with the border is incapable of getting loose and that the free mobility of the balls is preserved. But besides these important advantages my method presents that of being con- Sider-ably cheaper than those hitherto em ployed, as it is neither necessary to knit knots, nor to insert pins and to bend the same so as to form hooks; thus by my improved method goods can be manufactured which at the same timeare of greater cheapness and of far better quality. lt is of course not necessary to employ loops for'fastening the balls to the border, and single threads may be used as well to the same object.
Having thus fully described the nature of my invention, what I desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is In a machine for attaching fringe balls to the border of textile fabrics: the combination, with the reciprocating plunger f, of the guideframe c, having the guide-way b, provided with a vertical groove, and a lateral slot d, substantially as and for the purpose described.4
In testimony whereof I have signed this specification in the `presence of two subscribing witnesses.
RICHARD AUGUST SWOBODA.
Witnesses:
R. HERPICH, E. SCHULTZE.
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