This application is a 35 U.S.C. § 371 National Stage of International Patent Application No. PCT/JP2017/010858, filed Mar. 17, 2017, designating the United States and claiming priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2016-085828, filed Apr. 22, 2016. The above identified application is incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to the grading of knitted products such as shoe uppers.
In knitted products such as shoe uppers, knitwears for sports or body correction, and knitted products for industrial materials, a common basic design is developed for designs of various sizes. If knitted products of different sizes are similar to each other, data of a knitted product for one size may be reduced or expanded to obtain data for other sizes. However, the knitted products of separate sizes are often not similar to each other, and thus it is necessary to repeatedly test knit knitted products for each size. For example, the group of shoe uppers have 13 sizes from 24 cm to 30 cm with an interval of 0.5 cm. It is a labor-consuming job to repeatedly test knit shoe uppers of 13 sizes in order to get the knitting data for satisfactory shoe uppers.
Patent Literature 1 (JP2015-175082A) proposes the simulation on the knitting data of sizes of knitted fabrics in order to obtain the knitted fabrics of satisfactory sizes, without performing the test knitting. Further, if the errors in the sizes of the knitted fabrics may be simulated, the pattern data representing the designs of the knitted fabrics or the like may be corrected, and the knitted fabrics of the desired sizes may be knitted. However, in particular, in the case of shoe uppers, highly accurate knitted sizes are required, and it is difficult to simulate the exact knitted sizes after knitting in consideration with the influences of physical properties of knitting yarns and the mechanisms of the knitting machine, and the like. Accordingly, it has not been practical to acquire knitting data for the desired sizes without performing the test knitting. The same applies to other knitted products which need highly accurate knitted sizes.
Patent Literature 1: JP2015-175082A
It is an object of the present invention to reduce the number of test knitting for the grading of knitted products. In particular, it is an object of the present invention to make the test knitting of knitted product for two sizes enough for the other sizes of the knitted products so as to eliminate or reduce the test knitting for the other sizes.
A grading method according to the invention for a knitted product for obtaining knitting data of the knitted product for at least three separate sizes by means of a grading system comprises:
a: a step for inputting pattern data of the knitted product as initial pattern data to the grading system;
b: a step for inputting gauge data indicating a course directional size and a wale directional size of stitches to the grading system;
c: a step for converting the initial pattern data into initial knitting data based on the gauge data by means of the grading system and for test knitting the knitted product on a knitting machine based on the initial knitting data;
d: a step for comparing a size of the test-knitted product with a size indicated by the initial pattern data manually or by means of the grading system;
e: a step for correcting the knitting data manually or by means of the grading system and for test knitting the knitted product on a knitting machine based on the corrected knitting data, when an error between the size of the test-knitted product and the size indicated by the initial pattern data exceeds a predetermined range;
and
f: a step for repeating the steps d and e until the error between the size of the test-knitted product and the size indicated by the initial pattern data is within the predetermined range.
The grading method for the knitted product of the present invention is characterized in that
g: the steps c to f are executed on at least two separate sizes of the knitted product, and the method further comprises:
h: a step for determining correction amounts to the initial pattern data or to the initial knitting data, in order to make the initial pattern data or the initial knitting data nearer to the knitting data or to the pattern data of the test-knitted product test-knitted in the step f, by means of the grading system, when, in the step f, the error between the size of the test-knitted product test-knitted in the step f and the size indicated by the initial pattern data is within the predetermined range; and
i: a step for correcting pattern data or knitting data for sizes of un-test-knitted product through interpolation or extrapolation of the correction amounts for the at least two sizes determined in the step h, by means of the grading system.
A grading system for a knitted product according to the present invention comprises:
a memory configured to store input of initial pattern data;
a memory configured to store input values of gauge data indicating a course directional size and a wale directional size of stitches; and
a data converter configured to convert pattern data into knitting data based on the gauge data, and is characterized by:
an editing means for editing the pattern data or the knitting data according to manual input or automatically so that a size of the knitted product knitted in accordance with the knitting data is made nearer to a size indicated by the initial pattern data;
and
a corrector means configured to store correction amounts for the pattern data or the knitting data edited by the editing means for at least two sizes, and to correct pattern data or knitting data for other sizes through interpolation or extrapolation based on the stored correction amounts.
According to the present invention, the knitting data of knitted products are corrected through the test knitting for the at least two sizes. However, for the subsequent sizes starting from the third size, the initial pattern data or the initial knitting data are corrected by interpolating or extrapolating the correction amounts. Of course, the test knitting may be performed for three or more sizes and the resultant correction amounts may be used for the subsequent sizes through the interpolation or the extrapolation. When correction amounts for three or more sizes are present, interpolation and extrapolation by quadratic curves or the like are possible. Furthermore, the pattern data can be converted into the knitting data with the aid of the gauge data. Moreover, the association of the pattern data and the knitting data allows the conversion of the correction amounts for the knitting data into the correction amounts for the pattern data. In the present specification, the descriptions of the grading method are applicable to the grading system as they are, and conversely, the descriptions of the grading system are applicable to the grading method as they are. The course direction refers to one along which the stitches are connected to each other with a contiguous knitting yarn, and the wale direction refers to one along which the stitches are held and connected with each other; the wale direction is generally orthogonal to the course direction.
To associate the pattern data with the knitting data, the outlines of these data are associated with each other. Further, the outlines are associated with outlines for other sizes. To associate the outlines with each other, the correction amounts at predetermined positions along the outlines are stored and the positions along the outlines are made comparable between the separate sizes. Here, some functions or the like may be used, if they have a variable expressing the positions along the outlines and determines the correction amounts according to the positions along the outlines. In this case, the characteristic points to be described later are not explicitly used. However, such abstract procedures are difficult to carry out.
Therefore preferably, the grading method for a knitted product further comprises:
j: a step for specifying a plurality of characteristic points along an outline on the pattern data and along an outline of a knitted fabric in the knitting data by means of the grading system, wherein the plurality of characteristic points are associated with each other between the pattern data and the knitting data and are further associated with each other between pattern data for separate sizes and
k: wherein, in the step h, the grading system determines correction amounts for respective characteristic points based on shift amounts of the characteristic points between the knitting data or the pattern data of the knitted product test-knitted in the step f and the initial pattern data or the initial knitting data.
With this configuration, the pattern data and the knitting data are associated with each other by means of the characteristic points, and the characteristic points are associated with each other between the sizes. Accordingly, for example, the characteristic points with respect to knitting data for one size may be associated with the characteristic points with respect to pattern data for other sizes. Both the pattern data and the knitting data may be corrected by means of the correction amounts for the characteristic points with respect to one size, and other pattern data or knitting data for different sizes may similarly be corrected.
Preferably, the knitted product comprises a plurality of areas having different characteristics and in the step j the grading system specifies characteristic points at a border between the areas.
Not only the outlines of knitted products but also sizes of areas in the knitted products may be made nearer to the pattern data. For example, if knitted products have a design such as changes in knitting yarns, changes in the knitting structure, or the like, these designs may be made faithful to the pattern data.
Preferably, the correction amounts comprise a correction component along the course direction and a correction component along the wale direction,
the correction component along the course direction is a ratio of shift amounts of the characteristic points along the course direction and a knitting width along the course direction of the knitted product, and
in the step i, the pattern data or the knitting data is corrected by multiplying the correction component along the course direction determined through the interpolation or extrapolation and the knitting width along the course direction of the knitted product for each size.
We have found empirically that, along the course direction, the accuracy in size of a knitted product is improved by means of the correction amounts comprising the ratio of the shift amounts and the knitting width along the course direction than the correction amounts comprising the shift amounts itself determined through the interpolation or the extrapolation. In contrast, we have found empirically that, along the wale direction, the correction amounts comprising the shift amount itself and the correction amounts comprising the ratio of the shift amounts and the knitting length along the wale direction do not yield substantial difference in the results.
Preferably, the knitted product is a footwear. In general, footwears have many sizes, and in particular, pattern data for shoe uppers are not similar to each other between the sizes, and therefore test knitting in grading is particularly troublesome. Accordingly, it is particularly important to reduce the number of test knittings. Besides footwears, knitwears for body correction or for sports are appropriate for the present invention, since they need accurate sizes as defined in the pattern data and therefore need repeated test knitting. The same applies to industrial materials.
Preferably, the knitting data of the knitted product for each size is provided with a main body and a separable portion, and
the step h further comprises:
the step i further comprises:
Further preferably, in order to process a knitted product whose knitting data contains a main body and a separable portion, the grading system for a knitted product further comprises:
a sliding means for sliding the separable portion to the main body with respect to the knitting data edited by the editing means in order to obtain integrated data;
a separation means for separating the separable portion from the main body and for obtaining main body data with respect to the knitting data edited by the editing means,
wherein the corrector means generates two correction amounts of one from the initial pattern data to the integrated data and the other from the initial pattern data to the main body data, corrects for other sizes the initial pattern data through interpolation or extrapolation of the two correction amounts, generates two corrected pattern data, and generate two knitting data of corrected integrated data and corrected main body data based on each of the corrected pattern data,
a differential means for determining an area included in the corrected integrated data and not included in the corrected main body data through differentiation;
an un-sliding means for sliding, in a reverse direction to a direction in the integration, the area determined by the differential means and for generating an area representing the separable portion; and
an addition means for adding the area representing the separable portion to the corrected main body data and for generating corrected knitting data.
The separable portion may be, for example, a flechaged portion knitted through flechage, but is not limited to this. While the optimal knitting data or the optimal pattern data of the knitted product with the separable portion may be obtained through test knitting, it is difficult to recognize how to locate the boundary between the separable portion and the main body from the initial pattern data.
Accordingly, the initial pattern data is associated with the integrated data and the main body data to determine correction amounts. When the correction amounts determined for the at least two sizes are interpolated or extrapolated, the correction amounts for other sizes are determined, and the corrected integrated data and the corrected main body data are also determined. The area comprising the difference between them indicates the separable portion that has been slid toward the main body. Accordingly, when this area is slid in a reverse direction to the direction in the integration, the shape of the separable portion for each size is determined, and the addition of the separable portion to the corrected main body data yields the corrected pattern data for each size. Accordingly, the separable portion does not hinder the grading. Of course, the addition of the separable portion to the corrected main body data may be the addition of the separable portion to the data obtained by subtracting the area corresponding to the separable portion from the corrected integrated data.
Preferably, in the step i-2, the determined area is approximated as a polygon having an upper side and a lower side and the determined area is slid in such a way that the longer one of the upper side and the lower side is made flat. In the present specification, the knitted products are assumed to be knitted from the bottom to the top, and the upper and the lower sides of the relevant data are represented accordingly. And the horizontal direction in the knitting data represents the course direction in knitting.
Preferably, in the step h-1, characteristics in the shape of the separable portion prior to the integration are stored and in the step i-2, the determined area is slid so as to approximate the shape of the separable portion prior to the integration. With this configuration, the un-sliding may be performed when the separable portion has a complicated shape and both the upper and lower sides are not flat prior to the sliding.
Hereinafter, the best embodiments for carrying out the present invention will be described.
The pattern data is for example vector data and contains data of the outline of the shoe upper, data of areas in the shoe upper, and data of boundaries between the areas. Here, an area refers to a region in the knitted fabric, having the same characteristics, knitted with the same knitting yarn and in the same knitted structure, for example, and sizes of the areas are also specified in the pattern data.
From the vector data, the bent points in the outline and the areas, the start and end points of the outline and the areas, the intersections between the outline and the areas, and so on are extracted and specified as the characteristic points by the 2D converter 6 or by the CAD device 4. The positions of characteristic points change depending on the sizes of the shoe uppers, but the number and the relative positions of the characteristic points are in common among the pattern data for various sizes. If the number or the relative positions of characteristic points are dependent on the sizes of shoe uppers in the CAD program of the CAD device 4, they are pretreated to be independent of the sizes.
A printer 8 prints out the pattern data onto a paper or the like with the size specified by the pattern data. The CAD device 4 through to the printer 8 constitute the background of the present invention.
The grading system 2 accepts and stores inputs of gauge data of a knitted fabric and also of pattern data for various sizes and converts the pattern data into the knitting data. And then, shoe uppers are test-knitted based on the knitting data on a knitting machine 10 such as a flat knitting machine and are brought into the state of a product by such processes as setting and thermal treatment. Thereafter, the sizes of the shoe uppers are manually compared with the pattern data printed on the paper in order to determine the error in size. The knitting data or the pattern data is corrected so as to eliminate the error. When shoe uppers of satisfactory sizes are obtained, a correction vector for each characteristic point is determined; in the embodiment, the correction vector comprises two components, one along the course direction (x-direction) and one along the wale direction (y-direction). The correction vectors for the individual characteristic points are determined for shoe uppers of at least two sizes. The correction vectors for the individual characteristic points in the at least two sizes are interpolated or extrapolated and the pattern data or the knitting data of other sizes are corrected.
A data converter 16 converts the pattern data into the knitting data (data for driving the knitting machine 10) based on the gauge data. If a shoe upper has a plurality of areas, then, for example, the largest area is used as a representative area, and the gauge data in this area is used. Note that the sizes are specified in the pattern data, and vertical and longitudinal sizes of the stitches are specified by the gauge data. The knitting data is outputted from a system output 17, and the shoe upper is test-knitted on the knitting machine.
Because the data converter 16 can recognize which stitches in the knitting data are associated with which positions on the pattern data, the data converter 16 can associate the characteristic points with positions in the knitting data, for example, stitch positions in the knitting data. As a result, characteristic points are associated with each other between pattern data for various sizes and the characteristic points are also associated with the pattern data and the knitting data. Accordingly, for example, the characteristic points in knitting data for one size can be associated with the characteristic points in pattern data for other sizes or the characteristic points in knitting data for other sizes. Similarly, the characteristic points in pattern data for one size can be associated with the characteristic points in pattern data for other sizes or the characteristic points in knitting data for other sizes.
A memory 18 stores the initial value and the latest value of the knitting data for example. The minimal data to be stored in the memories 14 and 18 is the initial pattern data and the latest knitting data. When shoe uppers of satisfactory sizes have been test-knitted, shift amounts indicating the degree of shift amounts of the characteristic points from the initial pattern data or from the initial knitting data are determined by an arithmetic means 20, and the correction vectors for the respective characteristic points with respect to the shoe uppers in the two sizes are stored. Here, it is preferable to make the course directional component of the correction vectors Vx/x where the shift amounts Vx along the course direction of a characteristic point is divided by a knitting width x along the course direction. The wale directional component of the correction vector may be a ratio Vy/y with respect to the knitting width or maybe shift amounts amount Vy itself.
A corrector means 22 corrects the pattern data of shoe uppers of the sizes without the test knitting by interpolating or extrapolating the correction vectors of the characteristic points for the two sizes test-knitted. Based thereon, the final knitting data are obtained by the data converter 16. Alternatively, knitting data for other sizes may be directly corrected by interpolating or extrapolating the correction vectors of the characteristic points for the two sizes test-knitted. When interpolating by for example a straight line between the characteristic points as the correction of the characteristic points, the knitting data or the pattern data may be corrected.
By means of the grading system 2, for shoe uppers for example in thirteen sizes, test knitting for the two sizes are necessary, and thus test knitting of shoe uppers for the other eleven sizes are omitted. If it is clear that a further slight correction of the test-knitted shoe upper in the next test knitting results in a shoe upper of the exact size, the knitting data may be corrected without the next test knitting and may be used as the knitting data for the exact size. Furthermore, when the sizes of the test-knitted shoe upper are compared with the sizes in pattern data, the knitting data is corrected according to the embodiment, but the pattern data may be corrected.
In step S6, shoe uppers are test-knitted. In step S7, the sizes of the initial pattern data and the sizes of the test-knitted shoe uppers are compared manually or by the editing means 30 in
In step S10, shift amounts of the characteristic points between the initial knitting data and the latest knitting data are determined and are used as the correction vectors; they are composed of two components along the course direction and the wale direction. The course directional component of the correction vector is preferably a ratio Vx/x; Vx is shift amounts of characteristic points and x is the knitting width along the course direction.
In step S11, the correction vectors for the two sizes are interpolated or extrapolated to determine correction vectors of characteristic points for other sizes without test knitting, and thus their pattern data or knitting data is corrected. When the ratios Vx/x at two points are interpolated or extrapolated, the resultant Vx/x is multiplied by the knitting width x along the course direction and the product is made the correction amounts of the course directional component. When the pattern data is corrected in the step S11, the corrected pattern data is converted into knitting data in step S12.
In
The flechage in
The second embodiment will be described from a situation when the knitting data shown in
The association means 42 associates the characteristic points in the initial pattern data (
When the characteristic points are associated, the shift amount from the initial pattern data for each characteristic point is calculated by the arithmetic means 20. This process is performed, for example, for the two sizes of the largest and the smallest. For example, the two shift amounts for the two sizes of the largest and the smallest are calculated for each characteristic point. Then, the corrector means 22 generates two corrected pattern data for each intermediate size using the two correction amounts. The corrected pattern data to be generated are one corresponding to the integrated data and one corresponding to the main body data. The two corrected pattern data are converted to the two knitting data, namely, corrected integrated data and corrected main body data.
The differential means 43 calculates the differential areas between the corrected integrated data in
The corrected main body data in
In step 20, the flechaged portions are slid vertically upward in
In step 22, the characteristic points in the initial pattern data are associated with the integrated data and the main body data. Note that it is also possible to once convert the integrated data and the main body data into pattern data, and then to associate the characteristic points in the initial pattern data with the converted pattern data. Furthermore, since it is unclear which portion of the initial pattern data corresponds to the main body, it is not the case that the portion corresponding to the main body is extracted from the initial pattern data and is associated with the main body data.
In step 23, the correction amounts at each characteristic point for the initial pattern data are determined for both the main body data and the integrated data. The data are present for the largest size and the smallest size, and thus four types of correction amounts are obtained in total. Then, in step 24, the correction amounts for intermediate sizes are determined by interpolating or extrapolating the correction amounts for the largest size and the smallest size obtained from the integrated data. Similarly, the correction amounts for the intermediate sizes are determined by interpolating or extrapolating the correction amounts for the largest size and the smallest size obtained from main body data. Accordingly, for each intermediate size, the two data of the corrected pattern data are resultant, one corrected based on the main body data, and the other corrected based on the integrated data. Since the pattern data is the data indicating the outline of a knitted fabric, the corrected pattern data may be converted into knitting data where the inside of the data is filled with stitches. Accordingly, from the corrected pattern data, the two knitting data, namely, the corrected integrated data and the corrected main body data, are determined (steps 25 and 26). An example of the corrected main body data is shown in
In step 27, the difference between the corrected integrated data in
The un-sliding will be described. In
Knitting data may be represented as if they are image data; one dot corresponds to one stitch. Regarding the un-sliding, the flechaged portions are regarded as strips of stitches where the stitches are arranged along the vertical direction and the strips are arranged laterally. The strips are slid in the height direction, and in the case of
When the flechaged portions are slid in step 20, the characteristics of the shapes of the flechaged portions may be stored, and the un-sliding may be performed so that the portions are made similar to the stored shapes.
When un-sliding is performed as in
When executing steps 20 to 28 or 20 to 29, the areas representing the corrected flechaged portions are obtained for each size. Accordingly, the corrected knitting data in
The pattern data in
The flechaged portions may be provided at various portions in order to knit three-dimensional knitted products. Flechage is useful, for example, to insert inlay yarns obliquely to the longitudinal direction of a shoe upper, or to knit the shoe upper or the like into a three-dimensional shape. In these cases, main bodies are often located both over the flechaged portions and under the flechaged portions, and when the flechaged portions are separated, the main bodies over and under the flechaged portions are integrated with each other.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2016-085828 | Apr 2016 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2017/010858 | 3/17/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2017/183374 | 10/26/2017 | WO | A |
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1 329 822 | Jul 2003 | EP |
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Entry |
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International Search Report (with translation) and Written Opinion dated Jun. 13, 2017 issued in International Application No. PCT/JP2017/010858. (7 pages). |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20190119837 A1 | Apr 2019 | US |