The present invention relates to the application of tape strips to quilted material and, particularly, to the methods and devices for applying such tapes as decorative strips or handles to quilted mattress covers.
Mattress covers are typically formed of panels of quilted material. Typically, rectangular top and bottom panels are joined around their edges by a border panel strip around the edges of a spring or foam mattress interior to form the outer covering of the mattress. Handles are often added to the mattress edges to facilitate the turning or other handling of the mattress. These handles have been added to the border panels, which are usually quilted, in a manufacturing step that occurs subsequent to any quilting process, typically before the border panel is joined to the other panels to cover the mattress.
The application of tape strips by a post-quilting sewing step has been proposed for the addition of handles to mattresses. Tape strips have also been sewn to quilted mattress panels for decorative purposes or functional or structural purposes in forming mattress covers.
All such post-quilting steps involve some production time and add to production costs.
Primary objectives of the present invention are to simplify the mattress or other quilt production costs when tape or other material strips are to be applied to the quilted product and to reduce the costs of such production processes.
According to principles of the present invention, tape or other material strips are joined to a quilted product in the quilting process. In particular, according to embodiments of the invention, tape is applied to a mattress border panel during the border quilting process on a multi-needle quilting machine.
In the illustrated embodiments of the invention, a multi-needle quilting machine is provided with a tape guiding device that feeds a tape strip against a facing sheet of a material being quilted in the quilting machine. In the quilting machine, one or more of the series of stitches of quilting patterns that is sewn to join the layers of quilted material is also directed to attach the fed tape strip to the face of the fabric.
In particular embodiments of the invention, the stitches of the quilted pattern join a tape strip to a mattress border panel. In certain embodiments, a continuous series of stitches of the pattern joins the tape strip along sections of the length of the strip with the stitch sequences tacked at one or both ends. Then a section of the tape strip is skipped or jumped over and sewn again at a length along the strip, eight or twelve inches long, for example, to allow the tape strip in between the sewn portions of the strip to serve as a handle.
With the invention, a quilt, such as a mattress border panel, a mattress cover formed of the border panel, and a mattress are provided having tape or ribbon strips secured by the same stitches that join layers of the quilted material together. More particularly, such panels, mattress covers and mattresses are provided having handles secured by chain stitch pattern sequences that join multiple layers of quilted material together. These layers typically have a facing layer, a backing layer, a fill layer between the facing and backing layers, and a tape strip secured to the outside of the facing layer, all held together with the same chain-stitched quilted patterns.
The invention eliminates separate sewing processes or steps to apply tape to quilts and, particularly, to apply handles to border panels, mattress covers or mattresses. With the invention, mattress cover or other quilt manufacturing processes are simplified and their costs are reduced.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of the embodiments which are illustrated in the drawings, in which:
In the detailed description below, parts identified by a common number followed by a letter to distinguish multiple similar ones of such parts may be referred to as a group by the number alone. For example, border panel 10 may refer to border panels 10a, 10b.
A further embodiment of a mattress border panel 12c, formed of multiple layers of material 11a, 11b and 11c, according to principles of the present invention, is illustrated in
The strips are generally narrow relative to the widths of the web layers of the material 11 to which they are attached. Where the border panels are, for example, 8 to 16 inches wide, the strips are typically ¾ to 2 inches wide.
The border panels 12a, 12b and 12c of
According to certain principles of the present invention, the machine 20 is provided with a tape guide attachment 30 across the front thereof to feed one or more rolls of tape or ribbon 32 into the machine 20 to be sewn against the layer of facing material 11a during quilting. The ribbon 32 is fed from a spool 33 rotatably supported on a transverse shaft that extends across the front of the machine 20. The ribbon or tape 32 is fed from the spool 33 through a tension device 35 and into the machine 20 on the top of the layer of facing material 11a. In the machine 20, chain stitch sequences 13 are sewn with the simultaneous operation of the needle drive 21 and looper drive 25 to join the layers 11a, 11b and 11c together and, at the same time and with some of the same stitch sequences 13, to sew the tape or ribbon 17 to the facing layer 11a. As shown in
Although only certain exemplary embodiments of this invention have been described in detail above, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that various modifications can be made without departing from the principles of the present invention. Accordingly, all such modifications are intended to be included within the scope of this invention.
The present application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/217,607 filed Mar. 18, 2014 entitled “Method of Forming a Mattress Cover Border Panel”, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/474,247 filed May 17, 2012 entitled “Multi-Needle Quilting Tape Guide Apparatus and Method”, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,776,295 which claims the filing benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/488,844 filed May 23, 2011, the disclosures of which are each fully incorporated herein by reference.
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