A bed skirt is made at least partially of decorative fabric, is placed between the mattress and the bed base, such as a box-spring, and hangs from the top of the bed base to the floor. Today, bed skirts are used to give a stylish appearance to the bed and cover the bed base as well as any space underneath the bed base that may be used for storage. Historically, bed skirts were used to block drafts, which could chill the undersides of the bed.
The discussion above is merely provided for general background information and is not intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
A bed skirt includes a single panel having four sides and made of coarse utility woven or non-woven fabric and six panels made of finely woven. The six panels includes three border panels and three skirt panels. Each border panel is stitched to a respective side of the single panel along border seams. Each skirt panel is stitched to at least one of the three border panels along skirt seams. The skirt seams are configured to align with top edges of a bed base.
A bed skirt includes a platform section sized to correspond with a top surface of a bed base. The platform section including a main panel, a first longitudinal panel, a second longitudinal panel and a lateral panel. The first longitudinal panel is stitched to a first longitudinal edge of the main panel along a first longitudinal panel seam. The second longitudinal panel is stitched to a second longitudinal edge of the main panel along a second longitudinal panel seam. The lateral panel is stitched to a first lateral edge of the main panel along a lateral panel seam. The first longitudinal panel, the lateral panel and the second longitudinal panel form a border around a portion of the main panel. The bed skirt also includes three skirts. A first skirt section is stitched to the first longitudinal panel along a first longitudinal skirt seam that aligns with a first longitudinal top edge of the bed base and drops from the first longitudinal skirt seam to a floor. A second skirt section is stitched to the second longitudinal panel along a second longitudinal skirt seam that aligns with a second longitudinal top edge of the bed base and drops from the second longitudinal skirt seam to the floor. A third skirt section is stitched to the lateral longitudinal panel along a lateral skirt seam that aligns with a lateral top edge of a foot of the bed base and drops from the lateral skirt seam to the floor. The first skirt section, the first longitudinal panel, the second skirt section, the second longitudinal panel, the lateral skirt section and the lateral panel are made from the same fabric.
A method of assembling a bed includes placing a bed skirt on a bed base. The bed skirt includes a single panel of inexpensive utility fabric having four sides and six panels of more expensive fabric than the utility fabric of the single panel. The six panels include three border panels each stitched to a respective side of the single panel along border seams and three skirt panels each stitched to at least one of the three border panels along skirt seams. The bed skirt is arranged on the bed base by aligning the skirt seams with top edges of the bed base so that each skirt panel drops from each skirt seam to a floor supporting the bed base.
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. The claimed subject matter is not limited to implementations that solve any or all disadvantages noted in the background.
Bed skirts are placed on a bed base, such as a box-spring, to cover the bed base and any space between the bed base and the floor. A bed skirt has a platform section and at least three drop skirts. The platform section is sized to correspond with a top surface of the bed base and traditionally is entirely made with a utility material, usually undyed and of a coarsely woven or non-woven fabric. The three drop skirts are stitched to a pair of longitudinal sides of the platform section and to a lateral side (or foot) of the platform section and are made with a finer material, usually dyed and of a higher thread count then the platform material in the case of the platform material being made of a woven material. Because the utility material of the platform section ends and the skirts begin at the longitudinal sides and lateral foot of the bed base, the undyed utility material of past bed skirts is exposed even with a mattress laid on top of the platform section of the bed skirt because unlike the bed base, a mattress has rounded sides and edges rather than square sides and edges and because the mattress fill may have irregular sizes.
The embodiments described herein add the finer drop skirt fabric of the three drop skirts up onto the edges of the platform section of the bed skirt so that none of the undyed, utility fabric is visible. However, embodiments do not just extend the finer material of the three drop skirt pieces up onto the platform, which would fail to provide the crisp edges provided by the seams being placed at the top edges of the bed base. Instead, three additional pieces of skirt material act like borders and are used so that a total of six pieces of the same skirt material and one piece of platform material comprise the bed skirt.
As best illustrated in
Main panel or single panel 122 is made of an inexpensive, undyed coarsely woven or non-woven utility fabric and has a first longitudinal edge 130, an opposing second longitudinal edge 132, a first lateral edge 134 and an opposing second lateral edge 136. Main panel or single panel 122 includes a length 138 that is smaller than a length 140 of platform section 114 and a width 139 that is smaller than a width 141 of platform section 114. The purpose of platform section 114 is to support the three skirt sections or skirt panels 116, 118 and 120 so that they fall from the top perimeter edges of a bed base to a floor. The three skirt sections or skirt panels 116, 118 and 120 and the three border panels or first longitudinal panel 124, second longitudinal 126 and lateral panel 128 are all made of the same more expensive, dyed finely woven fabric, which has a higher thread count than the utility fabric of the main panel or single panel 122 when the utility fabric is made of a woven fabric.
First longitudinal panel or first border panel 124 has an inside edge 125 that is stitched to first longitudinal edge 130 of main panel or single panel 122 along a first longitudinal panel seam or border seam 131. As illustrated in
First skirt section or skirt panel 116 has an inside edge 117 that is stitched to an outside edge 137 of first longitudinal or border panel 124 along a first longitudinal skirt seam or skirt seam 145. As illustrated in
Still further, first longitudinal panel or first border panel 124 includes a first end 150, second longitudinal panel or second border panel 126 includes a first end 152 and lateral panel or third border panel 128 includes a first end 154 and a second end 156. First end 150 of first border panel 124, first end 152 of second border panel 126 and first end 154 and second end 156 of third border panel 128 are mitered or cut at an angle. The mitered first end 150 of first border panel 124 is joined with mitered first end 154 of third border panel 128 by stitching along a first corner seam 158 and the mitered first end 152 of second border panel 126 is joined with mitered second end 156 of third border panel 128 by stitching along a second corner seam 160.
As illustrated in
With reference back to
When placing bed skirt 100 on bed base 101, the bottom side of bed skirt 100 (illustrated in plan view in
Further, a mattress 105 is then placed on top of bed skirt 100, which is already arranged on bed base 101. As illustrated in
Although elements have been shown or described as separate embodiments above, portions of each embodiment may be combined with all or part of other embodiments described above.
Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims.
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Entry |
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Image of Restoration Hardware bed skirt, publicly available at least as early as Oct. 2014, 1 page. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170000272 A1 | Jan 2017 | US |