The present invention relates to the field of carpets manufactured with markings on its backing. More particularly, the present invention relates to the field of carpets with directional guide markings on its backing to aid in properly orienting pieces of carpet that are being seemed together.
In general, carpet is manufactured by tufting yarn into a primary backing material that is unrolled and fed into the tufting machine. Consequently, a “machine direction” is established for the carpet, namely, the direction in which the carpet was tufted. In addition, other operations such as shearing, coating or printing are performed on the carpet as it passes through a line. For the purposes of this specification, the term “machine direction” is intended to mean the direction in which the carpet is tufted.
It is important for the installer of carpet to be aware of the machine direction of the carpet so that all the adjacent pieces of carpet can be laid down with the same orientation. With some styles, the orientation with respect to machine direction is readily detectable from the face of the carpet. For example, if the carpet uses a particular tufting pattern with different colours of yarn, the resulting carpet face may have a patently directional appearance. Likewise, a carpet may be printed with a pattern that is patently directional.
In contrast, other styles of carpet have directional differences that are not so obvious from the face of the carpet. In particular, the tufting operation itself imparts directionality in the pile, which directionality may not be readily apparent on the face of the carpet. Nevertheless, if two pieces of carpet are laid next to each other with different orientations, the mismatch can be unsightly.
In addition to the directionality of the pile, the particular tufting pattern and colours of yarn used may produce a pattern on the face of the carpet that is similar in both directions, but not identical. Likewise, the directionality of a particular printed pattern may be less than obvious. In addition, various operations performed on the carpet during manufacture, such as tip shearing or coating, may produce subtle directional differences. Such subtle differences may only become apparent after installation, particularly when two pieces of carpet are laid next to each other in a seam.
One solution to this problem has been for the carpet manufacturers to print arrows showing the machine direction on the back of the carpet along one or both of the carpet's edges. Typically, these arrows would be printed on the back of the carpet at or near the end of the carpet manufacturing process. Naturally, printing these arrows requires an additional manufacturing step. The problem with this solution is that the outer edge of the carpet may get cut off so that the installer ends up with a piece without any directional guide. In addition, it is important for some carpet manufacturing processes to maintain the same orientation for post-tufting operations. For example, operations such as printing, shearing or coating should be performed in the same direction in order to insure uniformity between several rolls of the same style of carpet. Printing arrows on the back of the carpet at the end of the carpet manufacturing process does not provide the manufacturer with a directional guide soon enough in this process to aid in the above-mentioned operations.
Another solution to the problem is to print spaced-apart linear patterns that run along the length of a carpet roll. The problem with this solution is that a piece of carpet may be cut lengthwise such that the piece has no linear pattern on its back. This leaves the installer in the situation of not having a directional guide marked on the piece to aid in the proper installation and seeming the piece with another piece of carpet.
It is, therefore, desirable to have a carpet with directional guide markings that will always appear on a carpet when it is cut lengthwise as it comes off of a carpet roll.
A carpet having a carpet backing is provided that includes directional guide markings for orienting the carpet with respect to machine direction and left to right orientation. An embodiment of the present invention is a carpet having a primary backing through which fibres are looped or tufted and a secondary backing underneath the primary backing, the secondary backing having a downward-facing lower surface that is visible from the lower side of the carpet. The secondary backing can be a coarsely-woven fabric having warp threads running the length of the carpet, parallel to the machine direction, that are interwoven with weft threads running perpendicular to the warp threads. Alternatively, the secondary backing can be a finely woven fabric or textile sheet material. In another embodiment, the carpet may have an “old-style” construction which includes a single backing layer woven with warp and weft threads through which the carpet fibres are looped or tufted into.
In accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, visible linear patterns are disposed on the downward-facing lower surface of the carpet that run side-to-side across the width of a carpet as it comes off of a carpet roll. The linear patterns can be generally perpendicular to the left and right sides of the carpet although it should be obvious to one skilled in the art that the linear patterns could run diagonally from side to side. In another embodiment, a plurality of the linear patterns is disposed in a spaced-apart fashion on the lower surface of the carpet. All of the linear patterns are oriented in the same general direction. In this manner, the linear patterns on the carpet and their orientation will be visible when the carpet is cut along its length when preparing a piece for seaming to another piece no matter what the width of the cut piece is. This will allow an installer the match the machine direction of the cut piece to the machine direction of another piece of carpet when seaming the pieces together.
In one embodiment of the present invention, the linear patterns are generally parallel to one another. In another embodiment, the linear patterns are generally perpendicular to the sides of the carpet. The linear patterns can be lines of text printed onto or woven into the carpet's backing. The text can be any message or information such as the manufacturer's name, the model name of the carpet, the date of manufacture, the lot number and so on. The actual text printed is not as important as having all of the lines of text printed in the same orientation so as to provide a directional guide to an installer.
In another embodiment, the linear patterns can consist of a first linear sub-pattern and a second linear sub-pattern that are visually distinct from one another. The first sub-pattern can a line of a first colour while the second sub-pattern can be a line of a second colour, the two colours being visually distinct from one another. In another embodiment, the first sub-pattern can be one of a dashed line and a solid line whereas the second sub-pattern is the other. In yet another embodiment, the first sub-pattern can be a first dashed line and the second sub-pattern can be a second dashed line visually distinguishable from the first dashed line. In another embodiment, the first and second sub-patterns are solid lines of visually different widths.
In instances where the carpet of the present invention comprises a woven backing with warp and weft threads, the first and second sub-patterns can be first and second weft threads, each of a different colour. Alternatively, the second sub-pattern can include a third weft thread of the same colour as the second weft thread or of a third colour, the second weft thread disposed between the first and third weft threads. In another embodiment, the first, second and third weft threads are all of the same colour with the distance between the first and second weft threads visually different from the distance between the second and third weft threads.
Broadly stated, one aspect of the present invention involves a carpet, comprising an upward-facing upper surface having a plurality of carpet fibres or loops extending upwards therefrom, and a downward-facing lower surface; an edge running substantially along the length of said carpet on a left side and on a right side of said carpet; and a plurality of spaced-apart linear patterns visible on said lower surface, said patterns running across at least a portion of the width of said carpet between said left and right sides, said linear patterns all oriented in substantially the same direction thereby providing a guide for orienting said carpet when said carpet is cut along its length.
The present invention, together with attendant objects and advantages, will be best understood with reference to the detailed description below in connection with the attached drawings.
Referring to the figures,
Similarly, the selection of the material for the primary backing 14 can be made from a variety of materials. An example of such a material is a woven polypropylene fabric as sold by Amoco under the designation POLY BAC®.
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Secondary backing 16 is a fabric material that can be selected from a wide variety of materials such as polypropylene, fibreglass, polyester, jute and combinations thereof. Secondary backing 16 can be a finely woven sheet textile material or it can be a coarsely woven material such that the warp and weft threads are clearly visible. For the purposes of this specification, the warped threads run lengthwise with the carpet as it comes off a roll and are parallel to the machine direction of the carpet whereas the weft threads run crosswise along the width from edge to edge of the carpet and are perpendicular and interwoven with the warp threads. An example of a material suitable for secondary backing 16 is a woven polypropylene material sold by Amoco under the designation ACTION BAC®. This particular material has warped threads of slit film polypropylene and weft threads of polypropylene spun yarn.
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In viewing the invention as shown in FIGS. 2 to 8, it should be obvious that the visual linear patterns can be printed on secondary backing 16 whether backing 16 is a finely woven textile fabric or a coarsely woven fabric having warp and weft threads. It should also be obvious that the visual patterns need not be printed such that they are substantially perpendicular to the machine direction of the carpet as shown. Rather, the visual patterns can be printed diagonally across the width of the carpet from edge to edge.
In respect of the embodiments of the present invention shown in
As noted above, one method of applying linear patterns to the carpet and backing is to weave different coloured yarns into the backing material. This provides the advantage that the directional guide is provided integrally with the carpet backing. That is, the carpet manufacturer can obtain the carpet backing with the directional guide already present. As a result, the carpet manufacturer does not need to add any steps to its process, such as printing a directional guide on the carpet backing. Also, the directional guide is available to the carpet manufacturer as soon as the backing is applied to the carpet. Thus, the carpet manufacturer can use the directional guide to insure that rolls of carpet are oriented the same as they go through operations such as printing, shearing or coating.
It should also be noted that, although much of the discussion has involved woven carpet backings, other types of backing fabrics could also be used. For example, non-woven fabrics such as spun-bond polyester can also be used. In addition, polyester fleece can also be used. Although much of the discussion has involved the method of weaving coloured yams into a woven fabric backing, the linear patterns may be applied by other means such as printing or dyeing. For the purposes of this specification, “printing” linear patterns onto carpet backings shall include the “dyeing” of those patterns as well. Certainly, these and all other modifications that are within the ordinary skill in the art to make are considered to lie within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
Although embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications might be made without departing from the scope of the invention. The terms and expressions used in the preceding specification have been used herein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims that follow.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2539456 | Mar 2006 | CA | national |