Our present invention relates to a brassiere and, more particularly, to a brassiere with laminated back wings which may be an integral part of the brassiere or may be marketed separately and assembled with brassiere cups to form the brassiere. The invention also relates to a method of making a brassiere and to an improved method of providing adjustable closures for the back of the brassiere.
In a back-closure brassiere, the back of the brassiere structure is conventionally formed by a pair of wings, one of which can be provided with at least one male closure member while the other is provided with at least one female closure member cooperating with the male closure member. The male closure member can be, for example, a metal hook while the female closure member can be an eye.
More recently, it has been proposed to provide closure members which are equivalent to hook and eye fasteners but are fabricated from plastic, e.g. by injection molding the fastener members onto tapes which are stitched or bonded otherwise to the fabric of the wings forming the back of the brassiere. Reference may be had to U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,321,419 and 6,557,232 in that regard. A unique property of the plastic fasteners there described is that they also have a push-button function, i.e. the male member can be snapped into the female member by the application of pressure, in addition to being engageable with it in a sliding hook and eye function.
Generally the fabric wings of a brassiere are somewhat elastic for comfort and for that purpose are composed of elastic fabric. The straps carrying the fastener can be applied by stitching, in which case the wings of the brassiere may have several stitched seams. Stitched seams, however, are not always comfortable and in some cases may prove to be an irritant to the wearer.
Mention should also be made of the fact that any fastener member applied to the fabric of a brassiere wing in the past has projected from the surface of the fabric to an extent that it also could prove to be an annoyance to the wearer.
Finally it should be noted that the wings forming the back of a brassiere frequently are anchor points for shoulder straps of the brassiere. In the past the location of the anchor point for the shoulder strap along the brassiere has not generally been adjustable and it has also not generally been possible to select the manner in which the shoulder strap is secured at the anchor point. In short, the versatility of a brassiere with respect to adjustment of shoulder straps to the wings forming the back of the brassiere has left much to be desired.
It is, therefore, the principal object of the present invention to provide an improved brassiere and particularly an improved wing construction for a brassiere whereby the aforementioned drawbacks are avoided.
A more specific object of the invention is to provide a brassiere with an improved back wing construction which is more comfortable, more versatile and more easily fabricated than earlier brassieres.
Another object of this invention is to provide for increased comfort of plastic snap-button hook and eye fasteners for the back wing of a brassiere.
A further object of this invention is to provide an improved method of making a brassiere.
It is also an object of the invention to provide a brassiere of greater versatility with respect to shoulder strap attachments.
Another object of this invention is to provide an improved male fastener system for the brassiere wings of the aforementioned application which tends to resist the bending of the outer flap away from the inner flap when the back fasteners are engaged.
It is also an object of this invention to provide an improved sandwich system D-ring, particularly for the improved brassiere of the prior application but also for any lingerie applications.
These objects are attained, in accordance with the invention by providing brassiere wings which form the back of a brassiere and can be attached to the cups which form the front of the brassiere and which are of a laminated construction, i.e. are formed by at least two layers of an elastic fabric sandwiching between them a layer of a cushioning material, e.g. a fabric such as a so-called distance knit which, in the laminate, provides a certain degree of compressibility in a direction perpendicular to the fabric plane.
When we refer to a laminate here, we mean that the fabric layers are bonded together without the formation of a seam, e.g. by thermal bonding or welding or by the use of adhesive such as a hot melt adhesive at selective locations or even by less preferred methods utilizing bonding foils or films between the layers. Each wing as thus formed can be completely free from any stitching seam and the wing closures not provided with a continuous bonding film, can remain permeable to air or breathable. Where the cushion layer extends over the full area of the wing, it should also be elastic, although it is preferably nonelastic where it is provided only in regions in which the fasteners are disposed.
According to the invention the male and female fasteners of the combined snap and hook and eye type are applied directly to the laminated wing and likewise form a sandwich structure with one part lying on one surface of the wing and another part lying on the opposite surface of the wing but welded to the first part through the laminate so that the laminate is in turn sandwiched between the two fastener parts. Because a cushion layer is provided, as has been described, the fastener is pressed into the laminate and is in part reset therein to prevent that fastener from pressing against the skin of the wearer and contributing to wearer discomfort. It will be clear that the fasteners are provided directly on the wings and thus are not initially provided on a strap which must be secured to the wing. They indeed may even be injection molded directly on the wing if desired.
In accordance with the principles of this invention, at least one of the fastener halves, e.g. the male or female fastener half and preferably the female fastener half may be provided in at least one row on the respective wings so that a degree of adjustability is provided when the wings are connected together with those fasteners.
In accordance with a feature of the invention, a plurality of button-type fasteners may be provided in a row along an upper edge of the wing for selective engagement by a button on a shoulder strap, thereby providing a degree of adjustability for connection of the shoulder strap to that wing. One or more D-rings may be connected to each wing as well, also by having the support for the D-ring engage the laminate in a sandwich construction for use when a D-ring attachment of the shoulder strap is desired.
With respect to the method of fabrication, while the wings may be part of the brassiere structure originally and can have the fasteners then applied thereto, we can make the wings themselves, apart from the brassiere as a whole, apply the fasteners to them and deliver the completed wings to a brassiere manufacturer who can been join the prefabricated wing with the cup to produce the brassiere.
While the button fasteners which were used in the system originally described in the aforementioned application, namely, the button-type fasteners of U.S. Pat. No. 6,557,232 have been found to be highly successful, we have noted that the overlying flap when the wings are connected together, may have a tendency to stand away from the back of the wearer. We have now found that we are able to counteract that tendency by providing the fastener on the outer flap with a bar-shaped extension which appears to obviate that tendency and indeed can allow the outer fastener member to be made somewhat thinner and thus reduce the overall thickness of the interconnected back wings.
With respect to the attachment of the strap to the wings, we have discovered that it is advantageous to provide D-rings in a sandwich structure with a loop which can be opened and closed to allow insertion of the brassiere strap and its retention without operations involving threading of an end through the D-ring.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages will become more readily apparent from the following description, reference being made to the accompanying drawing in which:
In
At the back of the brassiere, formed by the wings 15 and 16, the straps 17 and 18 engage in D-ring fasteners which will be described in greater detail in connection with
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As is also apparent from
The members 26 and 27 thus sandwich the laminate formed by the wing 15 between them.
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From
The wings can each also have a row of snap fasteners 42, 43, 44 at which snaps 45 on a shoulder strap 46 can selectively engage. Alternatively the D-ring fastener 47 can engage a shoulder strip 48. The D-ring 47 can have its shields 49, 50 welded together through the laminate 51 by pins or spikes 52 on the shields which pierce the laminate (see
In the embodiment of
Naturally, in accordance with the invention, the wings may be laminated from two layers of elastic fabric without any cushion between them if desired.
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In
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Alternatively, the cylindrical head 93′ forming the male formation can be snapped into the crescent-shaped seat 95′ forming the female formation. Other locking systems can be used to secure the D-ring in its closed position.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of our copending application Ser. No. 10/978,238 filed 29 Oct. 2004.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10978238 | Oct 2004 | US |
Child | 11025679 | Dec 2004 | US |