This invention relates to wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, (hereinafter referred to as antibacterial/antifungal, antibacterial/bacteriostatic, or antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal), and low friction apparel and methods for producing same, such as clothing, fabrics and the like. More particularly, the invention relates to wicking, antibacterial/antifungal, low friction apparel which incorporates fabrics or chemicals which wick, have antibacterial/antifungal properties and low coefficient of friction either overall or in specific areas of the apparel that will minimize the development of irritation of a person's skin and related bacterial and fungal infections. The invention also includes methods for producing the wicking, antibacterial/antifungal and low friction apparel and methods for using wicking, antibacterial/antifungal and low friction materials to reduce moisture, friction and the resulting bacterial and fungal infections due to skin moisture and irritation. More particularly, the invention relates to apparel, which incorporates fabrics or chemicals having antibacterial/antimicrobial, wicking, and low friction coefficient of friction properties either overall, or in specific areas of the apparel that will minimize the development of irritation of an apparel wearer's body surface. The invention also includes methods for producing the antibacterial/antifungal, wicking and low friction apparel and methods for using antibacterial/antifungal, wicking and low coefficient of friction materials to reduce irritation and infections.
The invention relates to apparel with an interior wicking surface against the skin that also has antibacterial/antifungal properties with an exterior low friction surface and methods for producing same. More particularly, the invention relates to apparel with a wicking surface against the skin which incorporates fibers or chemicals that have antibacterial/antifungal properties and a low friction outer surface which incorporates fibers or chemicals having a low coefficient of friction either overall or in specific areas of the apparel, such that the wicking, antibacterial/antifungal surface will be on the interior of the apparel and the low friction surface will be presented on the exterior of the apparel.
Skin when rubbing against another surface of skin causes irritation, breaks down and becomes irritated. Perspiration is usually also present in areas where skin rubs together. Intertrigo, or a rash in body folds, develops. Affected skin is reddened and uncomfortable. Body folds are prone to inflammatory rashes because the skin has a relatively high temperature, moisture from insensible water loss and sweat cannot evaporate, and friction from movement of adjacent skin results in chafing. Bacteria, fungus and yeasts, which are normally resident on the skin, multiply in such environments and may result in further damage to the skin.
It can appear anywhere two skin surfaces lie next to each other and rub together, but most often occur in the skin folds of the groin, the inner thigh area, underarms, between the ribs, and under and between the breasts. This condition is most common in warm climates and during the summer months. Intertrigo will appear as a reddish color rash that might be sore or itchy. It normally progresses gradually, starting as a mild chafing, then slowly, with continued exposure to moisture and friction, develops into a persistent itchy rash. Sometimes a secondary bacterial or fungal infection may occur, causing the formation of pustules and weeping and oozing of the skin, as well as severe itching and pain. Severe Intertrigo on the groin or thighs can limit or affect mobility. Intertrigo primarily affects overweight people who perspire heavily and people with diabetes. It can also occur in any individual where fat distribution causes two surfaces of the skin to rub together. Persons who suffer from urinary incontinence are at increased risk of developing Intertrigo in the groin area. Once a person develops Intertrigo it is usually chronic and reoccurring.
Previous patents have addressed part of the problem, that is, the addition of fibers with low co-efficient of friction into apparel to reduce friction. Or, conversely, patents exist which only address wicking properties, especially garments designed for incontinence problems. In doing so, they only addressed part of the problem with skin irritation. None have addressed both factors, that is, moisture and friction as being the causative agents for creating Intertrigo. Prior art has failed to combine wicking and low friction materials to solve the problem and with obesity becoming an epidemic world wide a solution to this problem is important.
Robert T. Gunn's patents U.S. Pat. No. 5,752,278, May 19, 1998, U.S. Pat. No. 5,829,057, Nov. 3, 1998, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,752,278, May 19, 1998 acknowledge that irritation is caused by moisture and friction. He states, “the addition of low friction material to the fiber, yarn, fabric or article can also be useful to wick away moisture from the skin to help guard against irritation as well as wetness.” However, according to the DuPont Technical Information brochure, TEFLON® PTFE, Properties, Processing, and Applications, which he makes reference to, the moisture regain percentage for TEFLON® is 0.0%. All of the garments heretofore known suffer from a number of disadvantages:
Since irritation of the skin is known to result from moisture and friction, the addition of a fiber with 0.0% moisture absorption properties while serving to facilitate wicking would not work as efficiently as a fiber whose sole function is to wick and absorb perspiration.
Gunn's patent's primarily teach the addition of low friction materials which are incorporated into both sides of the material. When he teaches plating as a method, he only includes weaving, not knitting, as the preferred method.
Gunn's patents include apparel with seams in the inner thigh area. The addition of seams in the inner thigh area causes irritation of the skin. His patent does not address the addition of an inner thigh panel or circular knitting techniques, which eliminate seams altogether, as a preferred method of constructing a garment. His solution is the addition of low friction fibers to the seams instead of the elimination of seams altogether in this area.
Gunn's patents do not add any fiber or chemical which are antibacterial/antifungal into the garment to help with infections that are secondary to skin irritation once moisture and friction are present.
Gunn's patents teach the use of low friction materials on the exterior of both sides of the inner surfaces of the thigh areas. This method can be used, however, exterior plating on one surface of the inner thigh area is sufficient to reduce friction on both surfaces and he does not teach this.
Apparel is made out of many materials, natural and man-made as well as blends. They can be natural such as cotton, silk, linen, or leather. They can also be man made such as nylon, vinyl, spandex, polyester, TEFLON®, rayon, or any combination of natural or manmade fibers.
Accordingly, several objects and advantages of my invention are:
the addition of a layer of wicking fibers or chemicals to the interior surface of the apparel to absorb all perspiration to keep the skin dry.
the addition of antibacterial/antifungal fibers or chemicals into the moisture absorption layer of the apparel to protect the skin from infections.
the method of plating wicking fibers on the interior surface, with antibacterial/antifungal properties, and low friction fibers on the exterior surface instead of the fibers all being woven together.
the method of knitting instead of weaving as the preferred method of plating the fibers since knitted garments contour to the body more easily and cause less friction because they conform more.
the method of constructing the garments on a circular knitting machine as a way of avoiding seams, especially in the inner thigh or underarm areas, as the preferred method of constructing the garments. Or, the method of sewing a plated panel or gusset with wicking, antibacterial/antifungal and low friction properties into the garment, for example, in the inner thigh or underarm areas, which eliminate seams in these areas.
the addition of antibacterial/antifungal fibers or chemicals into the garment to help with infections that are secondary to skin irritation once moisture and friction are present.
the use of low friction materials on only one, versus both, exterior surface of the inner thigh areas or underarm areas, to reduce friction between the legs, or under the arms, as a means of cutting down heat and friction between the legs, or under the arms. TEFLON® and other low friction fibers, such as nylon, are high heat retention fibers. Thus, to only plate one side of an area in apparel where two sides oppose each other, for example, one side of the inner thigh area, for example, the right side, where the left side is not plated, or one side of the underarm area, for example the top or bottom portion of the gusset with the opposite area not being plated, would be an added advantage in terms of heat reduction.
the use of low friction materials, which are costly, on one side only of an inner thigh or underarm area, would significantly reduce costs for manufacturers and consumers.
It would be highly desirable to have apparel which has a wicking, anti-bacterial/antifungal inner layer plated with an exterior low friction material in areas of high body surface contact such that irritations and the secondary skin infections are avoided.
It is the principle object of the invention to is provide wicking, antibacterial/- bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction apparel which avoids or minimizes the development of skin irritations due to moisture and friction which can lead to the development of skin infections.
From the description above, my knit sewn in leg panel, a cut and sew leg panel, gussets, or a plated area in a circular knit method has the additional advantages in that:
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing the wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction apparel by chemically treating the wicking yarns or fibers or the like of the material from which the apparel is made prior to or after production with antibacterial/-bacteriostatic/antifungal chemicals.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction apparel by incorporating wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction yarns and fibers into the fabric from which the apparel is made.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing a wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction inner leg panel by incorporating wicking and low friction, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, yarns and fibers into the fabric from which the apparel is made.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing a wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction underarm gusset by incorporating wicking and low friction yarns and fibers into the fabric and chemically treating them with antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal chemicals which the apparel includes.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing a wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal inner leg panel by incorporating wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, yarns and fibers into the fabric from which the apparel is made.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing a wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, gusset by incorporating wicking yarns and fibers into the fabric and chemically treating them with antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal chemicals which the apparel includes.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing a wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction apparel by incorporating wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction yarns and fibers into the fabric from which the apparel is made where only one side of the leg panel, that is, the right or left one, or either the top or bottom portion of the underarm gusset, have low friction fibers on the exterior surface.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing apparel so that the panel or gusset which contains the antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction yarns and fibers can be incorporated into any type of apparel a manufacturer wishes to make.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing apparel so that the sewn in inner thigh panel which contains the antibacterial/-bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction yarns and fibers can be incorporated into any type of apparel a manufacturer wishes independent of a wicking and antimicrobial/bacteriostatic/antifungal gusset.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing apparel so that the underarm gusset which contains the antibacterial/-bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction yarns and fibers can be incorporated into any type of apparel a manufacturer wishes independent of a wicking and antimicrobial/bacteriostatic/antifungal leg panel.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing the wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction panels and gussets which can either be utilized on cut and sew garments or in seamless garments should the manufacturer wish.
a further object of the invention is to provide a method for producing the wicking, antibacterial/bacteriostatic/antifungal, low friction panels and gussets in any type of legwear, be it ready to wear, active wear, hosiery, or any other type.
Although the description above contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. For example, the gusset can have other shapes such as oval, trapezoidal, triangular, etc. The inner leg panels can be tailored to accommodate the various types of garments manufactured and can be made larger or smaller as size determines. It can also have other shapes, such as oval, trapezoidal, etc. The seams can be of any type. The length of the garment can be any type the manufacturer wishes. All parts of the garment may include stretch fibers for memory and shape retention. The amount of spandex can range from as little as 0% to as much as 40% for shapewear. The knits can be of any type such as, but not limited to, warp knits and circular knits. Circular knits, such as jersey knits, are ideal for bodywear, sportswear, and hosiery. Closures may be zippers, VELCRO®, buttons, snaps or any other type of closure the manufacturer wishes to utilize.
Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than the examples given.
While the specification concludes with claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which is regarded as forming the present invention, it is believed that the present invention will be better understood from the following description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
Description
The novel features of the present invention are incorporated and illustrated in
An important aspect of this invention is to provide the garment with the knit sewn in leg panel 38, which is generally shown in
The criteria for wicking yarns or fibers are as follows: Tactel®, a type of wicking yarn is used on the inside of the plated area and Tactel®, cotton, polyester, viscose, and or wool, for example, would be utilized on the outside of the plated areas. Or, a yarn or fiber with a higher DPF, denier per filament, is plated on the inside of a fabric, and a yarn or fiber with a lower DPF, is plated on the outside of a surface of a fabric. The higher DPF material has fatter, larger filaments and the lower DPF material has more smaller, thinner filaments. As a result the moisture on the inside of a person's skin is wicked away by the material with the larger DPF to the surface of the fabric with the lower DPF. The surface of the wetted area on exterior surface of the garment is greater than the surface of the wetted area on the inside. The result is that a person's skin stays dry.
Another method of producing wicking would be to plate fibers or yarns with different shapes together. For example, if moisture is on a person's skin, it will wick from an surface comprised of yarns or fibers that has few “lobes” or “clover leafed” shapes into a surface which is comprised of yarns or fibers that have many “lobes” or “clover leafed” shapes. The surface of the wetted area on exterior surface of the garment is greater than the surface of the wetted area on the inside. The result is that a person's skin stays dry.
A perspective view of the sewn in leg panel 38 in
Description
An additional embodiment is shown in
An important aspect of this invention is to provide the garment with the “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138, that eliminates the need for an inner thigh seam, which is generally shown in
Sewn together front and back pattern pieces without the sewn in leg panel 125 is represented in
A perspective view of the sewn together front and back pattern pieces without the sewn in leg panel 125 is represented in
The panel sections from above the knee to the crotch area 136b are comprised of a knit plated or knit double-faced fabric that wicks on the inside and is slick on the exterior of the garment. The slickness of the exterior reduces friction between the legs for the wearer. The crotch portion of sewn in panel 134 is comprised of a wicking material that is treated with an anti-bacterial, antifungal and or bacteriostatic chemical to reduce infections and odors for the wearer. Or, it is plated as well, with a wicking fiber on the inside and an anti-bacterial, antifungal or bacteriostatic fabric on the outside. In both the upper portions from above the knee to the crotch area 136b and the crotch panel 134 the wicking yarns can be chemically treated to be antibacterial, antifungal, and bacteriostatic. To save money for the manufacturer, the friction reducing yarn can be plated on one side only of the upper portion from above the knee to the crotch area 136b to save money for the manufacturer and the consumer without loosing a decrease in function for the wearer. The hem seam of “cut and sew” panel 162, leg opening of “cut and sew” sewn in panel 164 and bottom of “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 166 finish the sewn in leg panel 138.
A perspective view of the sewn in leg panel 138 in
Description of
The knit sewn in leg panel 38 and the “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138 can be made part of any type of garment whether it is seamless or “cut and sew” and there are various possibilities regarding the design of the garments that can utilize the sewn in leg panel 138 whether of a knit or “cut and sew” construction.
Some examples of the types of garments that can utilize the knit seamless sewn in leg panel are represented in
A three-quarter view of a maternity seamless garment worn by a woman, with a waistline 22 in the midriff area, and is below the knee length is represented in
The “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138 can also be utilized in “cut and sew” garments as represented in
A three-quarter view of a “cut and sew” garment worn by a woman with a waistline 22 in the “bikini” position, is ankle length, and has an oblique below the knee seam 168 detail on the “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138 is represented in
A three-quarter view of a “cut and sew” garment worn by a woman with a natural waistline, and is a boy cut length with a separate sewn on waistband 35 is represented in
Description of Style Options
The
The garment 20 can have any type of identifying label sewn onto the back of the waistband 22. If the garment 20 is “seamless” and has a waistband 22, it can be knit into the waistband 22. Identifying information can be heat sealed onto the waistband 22. The garments 20 and 120 can be any length, “boy cut”, “mid-thigh”, “three-quarter thigh”, “above the knee”, “below the knee”, “Capri”, “flood”, “midi”, “ankle”, or any variation of the length up or down the leg. The garments 20 and 120 can also be manufactured without legs, for example as a “thong”, and any other version thereof, and only contain the unique features of the crotch portion of knit sewn in panel 34 and the crotch portion of “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 134.
To help prevent the garment 20 from riding up the leg, in the knit “seamless” construction, five rows of jersey stitches 44 and five rows of diamond-patterned stitches 46 can be incorporated into the garment 20 but are not mandatory. The type of stitches at the hemline can be changed at the manufacturer's discretion to prevent the garment from riding up or down the leg. The alternating five rows of jersey stitches 44 and five rows of diamond-patterned stitches 46 are not mandatory for the function of the garment. Other types of materials, such as a silicone strip, may also be added to the inside of the hems 48 and 144 to prevent them from riding up at the manufacturers discretion. The “cut and sew” versions of the garment 120 do not contain these stitches. First and second leg opening 50a and 50b respectively of hem 50 can have any detailing the manufacture wishes to incorporate into the garment 120 to hold the garment in place such as a strip of silicone. Other types of seam placement such as princess seams on the torso portion of the garment 23 are also at the manufacturer's discretion and will not affect the function of the knit sewn in leg panel 38 or the “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138.
The shape of the knit sewn in leg panel 38, that eliminates the need for an inner thigh seam, can be long and rectangular, short and rectangular, hourglass, tapered or not depending on the length of the garment 20. In a “seamless” version of garment 20 the crotch portion of sewn in panel 24 may be made narrower to form the hourglass shape by increasing the tension on the stitches in the crotch portion of the sewn in panel 24. On an ankle length version of garment 20, the hem 50, can be made narrower. This can be accomplished by either increasing the tension in the stitches at the hem 50. Cutting the lower portion of the inner leg portion of the knit sewn in leg panel from an area from the ankle to above the knee in a tapered fashion out of knit tubular fabric will also accomplish a tapered effect. If the knit sewn in leg panel 38 is knit as a separate piece, and is not cut from a long tubular piece of fabric, the number of stitches may be increased or decreased, as the pattern requires achieving the desired shape. The shape of the knit sewn in leg panel 38 will vary depending on the size and length of the garment 20 but the pattern should always be cut to cover the part of leg and crotch of body 40 to be functional. It can be cut to cover an area larger than the inner part of leg and crotch of body however if the manufacturer wishes.
Regarding the “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel 138 required for a “cut and sew” garment, once again, the pattern piece is cut in a tapered hourglass shape for an ankle length version of garment 20. The shape of the sewn in leg panel 138 will vary depending on the size and length of the garment 120 but the pattern should always be cut to cover the part of leg and crotch of body 140 to be functional. It can be cut to cover an area larger than the inner part of leg and crotch of body 140 however if the manufacturer wishes.
Description
Another embodiment of the present invention is incorporated and illustrated in
An important aspect of this invention is to provide the garment with the plated knit inner thigh leg area 242, and plated crotch gusset 236, which is generally shown in
Tactel®, a type of wicking yarn is used on the inside of the plated area and Tactel®, cotton, polyester, viscose, and or wool, for example, would be utilized on the outside of the plated areas. Or, a yarn or fiber with a higher DPF, denier per filament, is plated on the inside of a fabric, and a yarn or fiber with a lower DPF, is plated on the outside of a surface of a fabric. The higher DPF material has fatter, larger filaments and the lower DPF material has more smaller, thinner filaments. As a result the moisture on the inside of a person's skin is wicked away by the material with the larger DPF to the surface of the fabric with the lower DPF. The surface of the wetted area on exterior surface of the garment is greater than the surface of the wetted area on the inside. The result is that a person's skin stays dry.
Another method of producing wicking would be to plate fibers or yarns with different shapes together. For example, if moisture is on a person's skin, it will wick from an surface comprised of yarns or fibers that has few “lobes” or “clover leafed” shapes into a surface which is comprised of yarns or fibers that have many “lobes” or “clover leafed” shapes. The surface of the wetted area on exterior surface of the garment is greater than the surface of the wetted area on the inside. The result is that a person's skin stays dry.
Description
Another embodiment of the present invention is incorporated and illustrated in
An important aspect of this invention is to provide the garment with the plated knit inner thigh area 336, a plated crotch gusset 334, and which is generally shown in
Description
The plating of these yarns in areas where there is moisture, heat and friction of skin rubbing against skin is very important in the reduction of Intertrigo for the wearer of the garments. Affected areas can include areas between and below the breasts as in
It is understood that the invention is not limited to human apparel. The invention can also be used in pet apparel, and the like.
It is also understood that the invention is not restricted to the detailed description of the invention, which may be modified without departure from the accompanying claims.
From the description above, a number of advantages of my knit plated areas become evident:
Although the description above contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. For example, the gusset can have other shapes such as oval, trapezoidal, triangular, etc. The inner leg panels or plated areas can have other shapes, such as oval, trapezoidal, etc as long as the inner thigh area is covered.
The seams can be flat locked, French seamed; simulated French seamed, double-stitched, flat-felled, hairline, double-stitched, over edge-stitched, topstitched, double topstitched, lapped, tucked, etc. The style lines for the seam placement in the “cut and sew” garment's “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel can be placed either above the knee or below it in any area to the ankle and can be horizontal or oblique. All parts of the garment including the inner leg panels, crotch areas, and gussets may contain a stretch fiber for memory and shape retention. An illustrative example of the spandex type of yarn may take the form of DuPont's® Lycra® brand spandex or Bayer's® and Dorlastan®. The spandex fiber can be covered, wrapped, with other fibers—natural or man-made—and is often used in this form in hosiery, narrow fabrics and wovens for ready-to-wear. The spandex can be covered in five ways: single-covered, double-covered, corespun, interlaced or air-covered and core-twisted as the manufacturer wishes. The knits can be warp knits, such as a Raschel knit, or a Tricot knit, and is ideal but not limited to bodywear and active sportswear. Circular knits, such as jersey knits, are ideal for bodywear, sportswear, and hosiery. In hosiery and ready to wear, where circular knitting machines are utilized such as a Santoni® machines, the spandex can also be “laid in” between rows of knitting, or knitted into every stitch, the latter producing superb fit and uniformity in the stitches.
The amount of spandex can range from as little as 1% to as much as 30% for shapewear. The bodies of the garments may be made of many materials whether man-made or natural or any and all blends of man-made fibers and synthetics. They include cotton, wool, silk, leather, linen, vinyl, Model, nylon-polyamides and polyamide co-polymers, LYCRA® spandex in different filament configurations, orlon, polyvinylidene fluoride, such as KNAR® polyester, for example, polyethylene terepthalate, glycol modified polyesters, such as PETG®, KODURA®, rayon, orlon cellulosic fiber blends, and the like, as well as blends of the above. The choice of materials to make the bodies of the garment out of is left to the discretion of the manufacturer. Closures may be zippers, Velcro®, buttons, snaps or any other type of closure the manufacturer wishes to utilize. The fly closure may be made in any design as the manufacturer wishes.
Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.
Number Identities
20. Garment.
21. Plated turtleneck collar.
22. Folded over waistband.
23. Torso portion of garment.
24. Front portion.
25. Fly closure, men's garment.
26. Back portion.
27. Zipper closure with zipper pull.
28. Person, unless otherwise identified, as a man or woman.
29. Long sleeve.
30. Perforated line to indicate where the torso portion of garment 23 is connected to the leg portion of the garment 39.
31. Wrist hem seam.
32. A region of the angle formed by the junction of the legs or crotch.
33. Hem of sleeve.
34. Crotch portion of sewn in panel.
35. Separate sewn on waistband.
36. Inner leg portion of knit sewn in leg panel, consisting of a lower portion from an area from the ankle to above the knee 36a, and an upper portion from above the knee to the crotch area 36b.
37. Plated underarm gussets sewn into the sleeve and body of the garment.
38. Knit sewn in leg panel; sides of knit sewn in leg panel represented by 38a and 38b for sewing purposes.
39. Leg portion of the garment.
40. Inner part of leg.
42. Front and back leg panel seam that are identical.
44. Five rows of jersey stitches.
46. Five rows of diamond patterned stitches.
48. Hem seam.
49. Foot.
50. First and second leg openings of the hem 50a and 50b respectively.
52. Circular knit tube, sides represented by 52a and 52b for sewing purposes.
54. Top of Circular knit tube.
56. Top of folded over waistband.
58. Waistband seam.
60. Bottom of circular knit tube 60a and 60b respectively.
62. Front and back center cut lines that are identical, 62a and 62b respectively.
64. Bottom of sewn in leg panel 64a and 64b respectively.
66. Outer friction reducing yarn or fiber.
68. Inner wicking yarn or fiber.
70. Outer antibacterial, antifungal and or bacteriostatic yarn or fibers.
72. Armhole seam.
74. Turtleneck seam.
120. “Cut and sew” garment.
122. Folded over waistband, 122a and 122b, representing front and back respectively.
123. Torso portion of garment.
124. Torso front portions of pattern pieces 124a and leg front portions of pattern pieces 124b.
125. Sewn together front and back pattern pieces without the sewn in leg panel.
126. Torso back portions of pattern pieces 126a and leg back portions of pattern pieces 126b.
127. Torso center front and back seam, 127a and 127b respectively.
128. Person.
130. Perforated line to indicate where the torso portion of garment 123 is connected to the leg portion of the garment 139.
132. A region of the angle formed by the junction of the legs or crotch.
134. Crotch portion of sewn in panel.
136. Inner leg portion of sewn in panel, consisting of a lower portion from an area from the ankle to above the knee 136a, and an upper portion from above the knee to the crotch area 136b.
138. “Cut and sew” sewn in leg panel, comprised of crotch portion 134 and inner leg portion 136a and 136b. Sides are represented by 138a and 138b for sewing purposes.
139. Leg portion of the garment, 139a and 139b, right and left respectively.
140. Inner part of leg.
142. Leg panel seam.
144. Hem seam.
146. Leg opening of hem.
148. Foot.
150. Right pattern piece of “cut and sew” garment.
152. Left pattern piece of “cut and sew” garment.
154. “Cut and sew” pattern piece tops, 154a and 154b, representing front and back respectively.
156. Top of folded over waistbands, 156a and 156b, representing front and back respectively.
158. Waistband seams, 158a and 158b, representing front and back respectively.
160. Bottom of pattern pieces.
162. Hem seam of “cut and sew” panel.
164. Leg opening of “cut and sew” sewn in panel.
166. Bottom of “cut and sew” sewn in leg panel.
168. Seam holding the lower portion “cut and sew” leg panel 136a to upper part of “cut and sew” leg panel 136b together.
170. Seam holding the upper portion of “cut and sew” leg panel 136b to the crotch portion of the panel 134.
220. Pantyhose garment with plated inner thigh area, plated crotch and plated bottom and sides of foot.
222. Folded over waistband.
223. Torso portion of pantyhose garment.
224. Front portion of garment 220.
226. Back portion of garment 220.
227. Torso center front and back seams 227a and 227b respectively.
228. Person, unless otherwise identified, as a man or woman.
230. Perforated line to indicate where the torso portion of garment 223 is connected to the leg portion of the garment 239.
232. A region of the angle formed by the junction of the legs or crotch.
236. Plated crotch gusset.
238. Outer “bright” yarn or friction reducing yarn.
239. Leg portion of the garment.
240. Inner part of leg.
241. Outer antimicrobial, antifungal and or antibacterial yarns or fibers.
242. Plated knit inner thigh leg area.
243. Inner wicking yarn.
244. Plated bottom and sides of foot.
245. Toe seam.
246. Top of knit tube.
248. Top of folded over waistband.
250. Seam and seam placement 250a and 250b respectively of folded over waistband.
252. Front of right and left knit tubes forming pantyhose garment.
254. Outer sides of knit tubes forming pantyhose garment.
256. Inner sides of knit tubes forming pantyhose garment with the cut edges of knit tubes, 256a the front, 256b the back, forming front and back pantyhose seams 227a and 227b respectively.
320. Blow the knee garment with plated inner thigh area.
322. Folded over waistband.
323. Torso portion of garment.
324. Front portion of garment 320.
325. Top of folded over waistband.
326. Back portion of garment 320.
327. Torso center front and back seams, 327a and 327b respectively.
328. Person, unless otherwise identified, as a man or woman.
329. Hem of folded over waistband.
330. Perforated line to indicate where the torso portion of garment 323 is connected to the leg portion of the garment 339.
332. A region of the angle formed by the junction of the legs or crotch.
334. Plated crotch gusset.
336. Plated knit inner thigh leg area of garment.
338. Hem seam.
340. Bottom of folded edge of hem.
342. Inner wicking yarn.
344. Outer “bright” yarn or friction reducing yarn.
345. Inner part of leg.
346. Outer antimicrobial, antifungal or antibacterial yarns or fibers, or antimicrobial, antifungal or antibacterial yarns or fibers.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US03/16885 | 5/27/2003 | WO | 00 | 11/23/2004 |
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WO03/099559 | 12/4/2003 | WO | A |
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