Claims
- 1. A process for heat treating warp yarns in a loom during a weaving process, the process comprising:unwinding a sheet of parallel warp yarns (3) from a single warp beam(1); passing said sheet over a back-rest roller (4); forming a shed (9) by means of healds (7,8), said shed being defined, in the direction of advance of the warp, at the entrance of the shed by an opening point (15) and on the other side by a fell point (10); inserting a weft yarn (16) into the shed in the vicinity of the fell point (10) in order to form a cloth; and pulling and uniformly winding up the cloth; wherein the process further comprises heating only a portion of the warp yarns (3) and cooling the warp yarns; and further comprising, after passing the sheet over the back-rest roller, separating the sheet into two series of yarns (33, 34) and maintaining a gap between the two series of yarns (33, 34) wherein only one of the two series of yarns is subjected to the heating operation.
- 2. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the heating is carried out on the warp yarns at a temperature high enough to cause an elongation and a local reduction in the elastic modulus thereof.
- 3. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein the process further comprises a subsequent heat treatment step or a treatment in a free state.
- 4. The process as claimed in claim 3, wherein the treatment in the free state comprises a scalding step.
- 5. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein the process further comprises a calendering step.
- 6. A textile cloth obtained according to the process as claimed in claim 1.
- 7. The textile cloth as recited in claim 6, wherein the warp yarns are crepe yarns.
- 8. The textile cloth as recited in claim 6, wherein the textile cloth comprises several different weft yarns.
- 9. The process as claimed in claim 1, further comprising contacting only the heated portion of the warp yarns with a transfer paper, the transfer paper carrying dye patterns, wherein the transfer paper moves in speed relationship with the warp yarns and wherein the dye patterns are transferred only to the heated warp yarns.
- 10. The process as claimed in claim 9, wherein the transfer paper comprises a pattern of parallel stripes in the direction of run of the paper and in that at least one of the boundaries of said stripes is brought close to that portion of the warp yarns on which the printing takes place.
- 11. A woven cloth obtained according to the process of claim 9, wherein the cloth comprises a plurality of parallel stripes.
- 12. The cloth as claimed in claim 11, wherein each stripe has selvedges where the intensity of the shade is higher than the rest of the stripe.
- 13. The cloth as claimed in claim 11, wherein at least one of the stripes has at least shades.
- 14. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the heating operation is practiced in the vicinity of the opening point of the shed.
- 15. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cooling of the warp yarns is practiced in the shed before the warp yarns reach the healds.
- 16. A textile cloth obtained according to the process of claim 9, wherein the cloth comprises a plurality of parallel stripes and wherein each stripe has selvedges wherein the intensity of the shade is higher than the rest of the stripe.
- 17. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein heating only a portion of the warp yarns is practiced prior to forming the shed.
- 18. A process for heat treating warp yarns in a loom during a weaving process, the process comprising:unwinding a sheet of parallel warp yarns (3) from a single warp beam(1); passing said sheet over a back-rest roller (4); forming a shed (9) by means of healds (7,8), said shed being defined, in the direction of advance of the warp, at the entrance of the shed by an opening point (15) and on the other side by a fell point (10); inserting a weft yarn(16) into the shed in the vicinity of the fell point (10) in order to form a cloth; and pulling and uniformly winding up the cloth; wherein the process further comprises heating only a portion of the warp yarns (3) and cooling the warp yarns; wherein the heating is carried out on the warp yarns at a temperature high enough to cause an elongation and a local reduction in the elastic modulus thereof, and wherein the process further comprises a subsequent heat treatment step or a treatment in a free state.
- 19. The process as claimed in claim 18, wherein the treatment in the free state comprises a scalding step.
- 20. A process for heat treating warp yarns in a loom during a weaving process, the process comprising:unwinding a sheet of parallel warp yarns (3) from a single warp beam(1); passing said sheet over a back-rest roller (4); forming a shed (9) by means of healds (7,8), said shed being defined, in the direction of advance of the warp, at the entrance of the shed by an opening point (15) and on the other side by a fell point (10); inserting a weft yarn (16) into the shed in the vicinity of the fell point (10) in order to form a cloth; and pulling and uniformly winding up the cloth; wherein the process further comprises heating only a portion of the warp yarns (3) and cooling the warp yarns, and wherein the process further comprises a calendaring step.
- 21. A textile cloth obtained according to a process comprising:unwinding a sheet of parallel warp yarns (3) from a single warp beam(1), passing said sheet over a back-rest roller (4); forming a shed (9) by means of healds (7,8), said shed being defined, in the direction of advance of the warp, at the entrance of the shed by an opening point (15) and on the other side by a fell point (10); inserting a weft yarn(16) into the shed in the vicinity of the fell point (10) in order to form a cloth; and pulling and uniformly winding up the cloth; wherein the process further comprises heating only a portion of the warp yarns (3) and cooling the warp yarns, and wherein the warp yarns are crepe yarns.
- 22. The textile cloth as recited in claim 21, wherein the textile cloth comprises several different weft yarns.
- 23. A process for heat treating warp yarns in a loom during a weaving process, the process comprising:unwinding a sheet of parallel warp yarns (3) from a single warp beam(1); passing said sheet over a back-rest roller (4); forming a shed (9) by means of healds (7,8), said shed being defined, in the direction of advance of the warp, at the entrance of the shed by an opening point (15) and on the other side by a fell point (10); inserting a weft yarn (16) into the shed in the vicinity of the fell point (10) in order to form a cloth; and pulling and uniformly winding up the cloth; wherein the process further comprises heating only a portion of the warp yarns (3) and cooling the warp yarns; and further comprising contacting only the heated portion of the warp yarns with a transfer paper, the transfer paper carrying dye patterns, wherein the transfer paper moves in speed relationship with the warp yarns and wherein the dye patterns are transferred only to the heated warp yarns; and wherein the transfer paper comprises a pattern of parallel stripes in the direction of run of the paper and in that at least one of the boundaries of said stripes is brought close to that portion of the warp yarns on which the printing takes place.
- 24. A woven cloth obtained according to the process of claim 23, wherein the cloth comprises a plurality of parallel stripes.
- 25. The cloth as claimed in claim 24, wherein each stripe has selvedges where the intensity of the shade is higher than the rest of the stripe.
- 26. The cloth as claimed in claim 24, wherein at least one of the stripes has at least two shades.
Priority Claims (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
99 03124 |
Mar 1999 |
FR |
|
99 03125 |
Mar 1999 |
FR |
|
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
This application is a continuation of PCT application PCT/FR00/00567 filed on Mar. 8, 2000, which claimed the priority of French application FR 99.03125 filed Mar. 10, 1999 and French application FR 99.03124 filed Mar. 10, 1999.
US Referenced Citations (6)
Foreign Referenced Citations (6)
Number |
Date |
Country |
1 124 049 |
May 1982 |
CA |
28 40 179 |
Mar 1980 |
DE |
0 461 048 |
Dec 1991 |
EP |
1.433.270 |
Feb 1966 |
FR |
2 751 350 |
Jan 1998 |
FR |
59026550 |
Feb 1984 |
JP |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
PCT/FR00/00567 |
Mar 2000 |
US |
Child |
09/948980 |
|
US |