Not applicable.
Not applicable.
Present aspects hereof relate to circular knitted apparel items. More specifically, exemplary aspects relate to a circular knitted garment for a lower torso that is sewn from a circular knitted tube, such as a pair of shorts or pants. Further aspects relate to a method of making a circular knitted garment for a lower torso, assembled from a single, tubular fabric body.
Athletic apparel may be constructed from a variety of materials chosen for optimal wear and enhanced athletic performance. The assembly of such materials may include the cutting and sewing of multiple pattern pieces, including numerous panels and seams formed from one or more materials that are configured into a fitted garment. Especially with respect to nonuniform garment patterns, multiple pattern pieces require the accurate orientation and sewing of multiple seams while constructing the fitted garment of a desired material.
This summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the detailed description. This summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter. Present aspects hereof are defined by the claims.
At a high level, present aspects hereof are directed toward a circular knitted garment for a lower torso. The lower torso garment is formed from a tubular fabric body and has a single seam that mates edges of front and back arched cutout portions of the tubular fabric body to provide leg openings. In one exemplary aspect, a tubular fabric body is formed from circular knitting of a fabric, from which an arched front portion and an arched back portion are removed along a portion of the lower edge of the tubular fabric body to provide front and back arched cutouts. In some aspects, one or more additional angled cutouts on the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body create an angled lower end of the tubular fabric body. In further aspects, an outer edge of a front arched cutout is mated to an outer edge of a back arched cutout, with the front arched cutout height being longer than the back arched cutout height with respect to the bottom edge of the tube. As such, upon sewing a single seam along the mated arched cutouts, a front rise of the front upper edge may be lower than the back rise of the back upper edge. Additionally, based on sewing the single seam along the mated arched cutouts, the angled cutout along the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body may shift to provide a bottom edge that is perpendicular to the vertical axis of the tubular fabric body.
In some aspects, the tubular fabric body may be constructed from a material having a particular thickness, weight, rigidity, and/or elasticity. Thus, with the edges of the front arched cutout mating to the edges of the back arched cutout, the tubular fabric body may conform to a wearer of the circular knitted garment while only having to sew a single seam along the inseam. In further aspects, a converging shape of the sides of the front arched cutout and a diverging shape of the sides of the back arched cutout provide a resulting seam that is aligned with a vertical axis of a portion of the garment.
Additional features of the tubular fabric body and corresponding cutouts improve the ease of assembly and the automatic alignment of the inseam with a vertical axis of the circular knitted garment.
Examples are described in detail below with reference to the attached drawing figures, wherein:
Present aspects hereof are directed toward a circular knitted garment for a lower torso. The lower torso garment is formed from a tubular fabric body and has a single seam that mates edges of front and back arched cutout portions of the tubular fabric body to provide leg openings. In one exemplary aspect, a tubular fabric body is formed from circular knitting of a fabric, from which an arched front portion and an arched back portion are removed along a portion of the lower edge of the tubular fabric body to provide front and back arched cutouts. In some aspects, one or more additional angled cutouts on the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body create an angled lower end of the tubular fabric body. In further aspects, an outer edge of a front arched cutout is mated to an outer edge of a back arched cutout, with the front arched cutout height being longer than the back arched cutout height with respect to the bottom edge of the tube. As such, upon sewing a single seam along the mated arched cutouts, a front rise of the front upper edge may be lower than the back rise of the back upper edge. Additionally, based on sewing the single seam along the mated arched cutouts, the angled cutout along the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body may shift to provide a bottom edge that is perpendicular to the vertical axis of the tubular fabric body.
In some aspects, the tubular fabric body may be constructed from a material having a particular thickness, weight, rigidity, and/or elasticity. Thus, with the edges of the front arched cutout mating to the edges of the back arched cutout, the tubular fabric body may conform to a wearer of the circular knitted garment while only having to sew a single seam along the inseam. In further aspects, a converging shape of the sides of the front arched cutout and a diverging shape of the sides of the back arched cutout provide a resulting seam that is aligned with a vertical axis of a portion of the garment. Additional features of the tubular fabric body and corresponding arched cutouts may improve the ease of assembly and the automatic alignment of the inseam with a vertical axis of the circular knitted garment. In another aspect, the angled cutout along the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body automatically orients the bottom edge of the sewn garment into a perpendicular orientation with respect to the vertical axis and/or the sewn inseam between the mated arched cutouts. As such, a bottom edge of a pair of shorts and/or pants may be positioned perpendicular to the vertical axis of the sewn shorts and/or pants, once the cutout arched portions are aligned along the inseam.
Accordingly, in one aspect, a circular knitted garment for a lower torso includes a tubular fabric body having a fabric front, a fabric back, a tube top, a tube bottom, and a bottom edge. In further aspects, the garment includes a front arched cutout along at least a portion of the bottom edge of the fabric front of the tubular fabric body, with the front arched cutout having a front arched cutout height along a vertical axis of the tubular fabric body, wherein the front arched cutout comprises a front arched cutout edge. Additionally, the garment includes a back arched cutout along at least a portion of the bottom edge of the fabric back of the tubular fabric body, with the back arched cutout having a back arched cutout height along a vertical axis of the tubular fabric body, wherein the front arched cutout height is greater than the back arched cutout height, and further wherein the back arched cutout comprises a back arched cutout edge. In further aspects, the front arched cutout edge is coupled to the back arched cutout edge to provide an inseam, a right leg, and a left leg formed from at least a portion of the tubular fabric body.
In another exemplary aspect, a circular knitted garment for a lower torso includes a tubular knitted body having an upper edge, a lower edge, and a vertical axis. The circular knitted garment further includes a first arched cutout on at least a portion of the lower edge, a second arched cutout on at least a portion of the lower edge, said second arched cutout shorter than said first arched cutout, and an angled cutout on at least a portion of the lower edge. In some aspects, the second arched cutout is configured to mate to the first arched cutout such that a front portion of said upper edge is in a lower position than a back portion of said upper edge upon mating the first arched cutout to the second arched cutout to provide a sewn garment. Additionally, the lower edge of the sewn garment is perpendicular to the vertical axis based on the angled cutout.
In a further exemplary aspect, a method of making a garment for a lower torso from a circular knitted tube is provided. The method includes knitting a tubular fabric body in a circular direction, extracting a first portion of the tubular fabric body to provide a front cutout edge, extracting a second portion of the tubular fabric body to provide a back cutout edge, and sewing a seam between the front cutout edge and the back cutout edge to provide a first leg and a second leg of the garment.
In aspects hereof,
In further aspects, as shown in the front view of
In some aspects, the front arched cutout 18 is offset from the back arched cutout 20 by a particular distance along the bottom edge 30 of the tubular fabric body 12. In further aspects, a bottom side portion of the arch-shaped front arched cutout 18 may be offset by a distance A along the bottom edge 30 with respect to the right leg 32 of the tubular fabric body 12. Similarly, a bottom side portion of the arch-shaped front arched cutout 18 may be offset by a distance B along the bottom edge 30 with respect to the left leg 34. Additionally, the top edge of the front arched cutout 18 is elevated a distance 92 above the top edge of the back arched cutout 20. As such, as shown in the side view of
In another exemplary aspect, the edges of the bottom side portion of the arch-shaped back arched cutout 20 are offset at an angle C from the vertical axis y, while the edges of the bottom side portion of the front arched cutout 18 are offset at an angle D from the vertical axis y. In one exemplary aspect, the amount of offset of angles C and D corresponds to the distances A and B of the correlating fabric front 14 and fabric back 16. For example, with respect to the right leg 32 of the tubular fabric body 12, the distance A along the bottom edge 30 includes a difference between a side portion of the front arched cutout edge 26 cut at an angle D and a difference between a side portion of the back arched cutout edge 28 cut at an angle C. In some aspects, at least a portion of the front arched cutout edge 26 indirectly corresponds to at least a portion of the back arched cutout edge 28, by virtue of the angle and/or height of the front and back cutouts 18 and 20, when viewed from the front, back, and side, as in
In some aspects, at least a portion of the front arched cutout 18 overlaps with at least a portion of the back arched cutout 20, based on the partially-converging arch shape of the front arched cutout 18 and the partially diverging arch shape of the back arched cutout 20. Upon mating the back arched cutout 20 with the front arched cutout 18, in some aspects, the back side 16 of the tubular fabric body 12 shifts in a first direction E with respect to the vertical axis y. Additionally, the front side 14 of the tubular fabric body 12 shifts in a second direction F with respect to the vertical axis y.
With reference to the perspective views of circular knitted garment 42 in
With continued reference to
Turning next to the back perspective view of
In the exemplary circular knitted garment 60 of
In some aspects, the right leg 32 and/or the left leg 34 may be any length of cylindrical and/or tubular portions of the circular knitted garment 60 that meet at the inseam 68 formed between front arched cutout edge 26 and back arched cutout edge 28. A portion of the inseam 68 associated with the right leg 32 includes a sewn portion of a first segment of the front arched cutout edge 26 and a first segment of the back arched cutout edge 28, while the portion of the inseam 68 associated with the left leg 34 includes a sewn portion of a second segment of the front arched cutout edge 26 and a second segment of the back arched cutout edge 28. As shown in the example of
Turning now to the flow diagram of
At block 82, a front cutout portion of the tubular fabric body is extracted to provide a front arched cutout edge. As in previous examples, the front arched cutout portion removed from the fabric front of the tubular fabric body may have a particular front cutout height. At block 84, a back arched cutout portion of the tubular fabric body is extracted to provide a back arched cutout edge. As such, the back arched cutout portion removed from the fabric back of the tubular fabric body may have a particular back cutout height. In one exemplary aspect, the front cutout height is greater than the back cutout height with respect to an original bottom edge of the tubular fabric body, while a perimeter of the front arched cutout edge is configured to mate to a perimeter of the back arched cutout edge during sewing of a single seam.
In some aspects, at block 86, a third portion of the tubular fabric body is extracted to provide an angled cutout edge. The angled cutout edge may provide an altered bottom edge of the tubular fabric body, such that the bottom edge once oriented along an x axis of the tubular fabric body is now oriented diagonally with respect to the central y axis.
In another aspect, the front cutout edge is an arch-shaped edge having two end portions that are converging. In further aspects, the back cutout edge is an arch-shaped edge having two portions that are diverging. Accordingly, at block 96, an inseam is sewn between the front arched cutout edge and the back arched cutout edge to provide a first leg and a second leg of the circular knitted garment. In some aspects, upon sewing the seam between the front arched cutout edge and the back arched cutout edge, a front upper edge of the tubular fabric body corresponding to the fabric front is shifted downward, in the direction of the bottom edge of the tubular fabric body, while the back upper edge remains oriented near the tube top of the tubular fabric body. Based on such shifting, in some aspects, a front rise at a waistline of the circular knitted garment is lower than a back rise of the waistline of the circular knitted garment.
Referring next to
The top view 104 of
Finally, in the bottom view 120 of
According to some aspects, the crotch gusset 102 may be coupled to at least a portion of the inseam 68 to provide additional space and/or range of motion for a user wearing the assembled circular knitted garment. As such, while the front arched cutout portion 48 provides a front cut border 46 for coupling at least in part to the perimeter of the crotch gusset 102 (e.g., coupling to the front edge 110 of the crotch gusset 102 to the front arched cutout 18), the back arched cutout portion 54 provides a back cut border 52 for coupling at least in part to the perimeter of the crotch gusset 102 (e.g., coupling to the back edge 112 of the crotch gusset 102 to the back arched cutout 20). In some aspects, at least a portion of the front arched cutout edge 26 may be cut having particular dimensions corresponding to the front edge 110 of the crotch gusset 102. Similarly, at least a portion of the back arched cutout edge 28 may be cut having particular dimensions corresponding to the back edge 112 of the crotch gusset 102.
Aspects of the crotch gusset 102 may be any material configured to couple to the tubular fabric body 62 of the assembled circular knitted garment 100. As such, in one aspect, the crotch gusset 102 includes a crotch fabric 114 that is the same as the garment fabric 44 used to provide the tubular fabric body 12 of the circular knitted garment 42. In another aspect, the crotch gusset 102 includes a crotch fabric 114 that is a different fabric other than the garment fabric 44, such as a moisture-wicking and/or vented fabric that promotes user comfort while wearing. The crotch fabric 114 may have one or more features configured to facilitate assembly and/or use of the assembled circular knitted garment 100, according to one aspect. As such, while the crotch gusset 102 is configured to conform to at least a portion of a user wearing the assembled circular knitted garment 100, such fitted orientation (as viewed in
Present aspects hereof have been described in relation to particular examples, which are intended in all respects to be illustrative rather than restrictive. From the foregoing, it will be seen that the present aspects are well adapted to attain all the ends and objects set forth above, together with other advantages, which are obvious and inherent to the system and method. It will be understood that certain features and subcombinations are of utility and may be employed without reference to other features and subcombinations. This is contemplated by and is within the scope of the claims.
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