1. Field of the Invention
The present invention related to mattresses, specifically to quilted mattress covers and methods of making same.
2. Background of the Invention
Mattresses with quilted mattress covers are well-known in the art. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,896,605 describes a conventional mattress construction with an inner coil spring unit surrounded on the top and bottom by padding which provides a barrier and cushion against the metal springs. An additional wire grid is further provided as a barrier between the padding and the spring unit. The unit is then padded on its top and bottom by layers of foam, cotton, and other materials. The typical outer construction of a mattress includes a top and bottom cover panel and a border which surrounds the four sides or perimeter of the spring unit. The panels and border are usually quilted fabric available in a variety of colors and print patterns, thus providing the initial aesthetic appeal to the customer.
A flange formed by a strip of strong fabric is attached to the boundaries or peripheries of the top and bottom panels prior to the final assembly of the mattress. The top and bottom flanges extend over the side edges of the spring unit and are anchored to the springs using metal rings, commonly referred to as “hog rings.” The flanges fix the padded layers in place on the top and bottom of the spring unit, so that during prolonged use the various layers are not dislodged. The flanges also serve to resist the tensile forces around the perimeter of the bed resulting from a body resting on top of the mattress.
A specialized tape edge machine, mounted on a special table, is used to attach the border to the top and bottom covers after the flanges of the covers have been attached to the spring unit. Wads of cotton material are often inserted just prior to the covers' attachment in order to round and pad the corners of the mattress. Also, stiffening members may be affixed to upper and lower border wires (when such wires or rods are used) along the mattress sides prior to final assembly, for people who sit on the edge of the bed and require extra support therein.
In the final assembly of the mattress, a decorative tape or welting is folded over the outside edges of the panel, flange, and border materials by an operator. The operator must manually position the tape over the raw edges while walking backward, as the machine moves around the mattress and stitches the tape to form a welt around the finished side of the mattress perimeter. This is done for the top panel attachment to the border, and also for the bottom panel attachment to the border. The tape edge machine and its required components are quite costly, and a highly skilled operator is required to produce quality mattresses.
The components of a conventional mattress constructed as above are illustrated in FIG. 1. Layers of padding are placed between the cover panels 12, 14 and a coil spring unit 38, with the layers repeated in order on the unit's two finished (sleeping) surfaces. The mattress typically includes a foam pad 40, a cotton pad 42, a padding 44, and a grid 46 which is placed closest to springs 48 of the unit 38. Flanges 52 and 58 are secured to coil springs 48 (one shown) by hog rings 54.
A border 16 is attached to panels 12, 14 by welting 35 at seam 34 (on the top corner) and welting 35 at seam 36 (on the bottom corner) with its finished side facing outward. This attachment is typically made by stitching through the welting, border 16, flange 52 or 58, and cover panel 12 or 14 on the finished (customer-facing) side of the seam.
Padding 44 adds a cushioning layer and prevents the foam and cotton pads 40, 42 from becoming lodged in, or pushed through, the grid 46 and/or the springs 48.
The presence of welting 35 on seam 34 (i.e., on the top corner edge of the mattress) has often been cited as a cause of some discomfort by users. It is also known to trap dirt and crumbs. More significantly, the need to use a specialized tape edge machine, mounted on a special table, with the concomitant requirement for a specially skilled operator, increases production costs.
It would therefore be desirable to provide a mattress having a mattress cover without an outside welt, and a method of seaming such mattress cover without the need for a skilled operator and specialized equipment for assembly, such as a tape edge machine and/or a special table.
A mattress having an inverted top panel/border seam, with optional appended decorative rope welting on the border is described. The invention uses an inverted seam to sew the top panel (i.e., the top sleeping surface) to the border or side portion of a mattress cover in a way that eliminates the bumps and creases of the conventional welted top seam. Manufacturing costs may be reduced by eliminating the need for an expensive table-mounted tape edge closure machine and specially-skilled operator as the present invention may be flay sewn with a conventional sewing machine or even hand-stitched. Alternatively, a conventional tape edge machine can be used with less-skilled labor and or reduced tape/welting material, as all of the stitches and welting are hidden inside the mattress by the inverted seam.
According to one aspect of the invention, a mattress covering with an inverted seam includes a top panel having a perimeter edge and a finished side, and a border having a perimeter edge and a finished side. The border is attached to the panel, with the finished side of the panel facing the finished side of the border, along the perimeter edge of at least one of the panel and the border to form the inverted seam.
According to another aspect of the invention, a method of forming a mattress covering having an inverted seam includes arranging a panel on a mattress, the panel having an unfinished side facing the mattress, a finished side opposite the finished side and forming a sleeping surface, and a perimeter; and positioning a border having a perimeter, a free perimeter and a finished side in such a way that the perimeter of the border is positioned proximate to the perimeter of the panel and the finished side of the panel faces the finished side of the border, The border is secured to the panel along the perimeter edge of at least one of the panel and the border to form the inverted seam.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, a mattress includes a mattress core; and a mattress cover disposed on the mattress core and having at least a top cover panel and a border. The border is attached to said top cover panel by an inverted seam that is obscured from view.
Embodiments of the invention may include one or more of the following features. The inverted seam does not require special equipment and can be sewn flat on a standard sewing machine. The inverted seam can include a tape encompassing said attached border and panel on a side opposite the finished side of the border and panel, wherein tape is obscured from view when viewed from the outside of the mattress, i.e., said finished sides of said panel and said border. The mattress cover may also include a decorative welting, such as a decorative rope, attached to said finished side of said panel and said border proximate to said inverted seam.
The inverted seam can be formed by sewing, flat-sewing, gluing, heat-setting and stapling. To strengthen the seam, the positioned border and panel can be folded over so that the folded unfinished side of the panel faces the unfinished side of the panel disposed on the top surface of the mattress core. In addition, a tape so can be applied to encompass the folded border and panel and the tape, the border and the panel can be sewn along the perimeter edges to form the inverted seam.
After the inverted seam is formed, the border can be folded over the inverted seam and a side of the mattress, so that the finished side of the border faces outwardly, i.e., away from the mattress, thereby obscuring the inverted seam from view from said finished sides of said panel and said border. A second panel can be secured to the free perimeter edge of the border so as to enclose the mattress between the panel, the second panel and the border.
The mattress core can be an open spring unit, or can include a tray, such as a tray made of rubber or plastic foam, which encompasses the spring. The latter arrangements obviates the need for padding between the border and the springs.
The present disclosure may be better understood and its numerous features and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings.
The use of the same reference symbols in different drawings indicates similar or identical items.
Although only a top flange 252 is shown as being attached to top seam 240, it will be understood that flanges can also be provided as needed at the bottom seam 260. Padding 40, 42, 44 need not be separate layers, but can be implemented as a single layer using materials commonly employed in the manufacture of mattresses, such as rubber or plastic foam, drilling, etc.
An exemplary assembly process for the mattress cover with the inverted seam 240 and for a mattress having such mattress cover will now be described.
As shown in
The seam 240 is then stitched or sewn by conventional means (represented by dashed line 250). This sewing step may include, but is not limited to, flat sewing (i.e., with both the panel 210 and border 220 laid flat on a conventional sewing machine table and fed into a standard flat sewing machine), lacing, or hand-stitching. Other means for permanently attaching panel 210 to border 220, such as stapling, heat fusing, or gluing may also be employed with the inverted seam technique to achieve the salutary effects of the present invention. A conventional tape edge machine can also be used to close the seam.
The mattress is finished by folding down the panel 220 over the side of the mattress, as illustrated in
As mentioned above, the welting tape 230 may be omitted as a cost- and complexity-reducing measure. In yet another alternate embodiment, a decorative rope welting (216 in FIG. 2), as is conventionally seen on mattresses, may be attached to, or formed on, the outside (finished) surface 222 of border 220. This technique, commonly called self-welting, need not be part of the actual seam 240 and can be added as decorative edge treatment—either before or after forming the inverted seam—without sacrificing the ease of assembly provided by the inverted seam.
As mentioned above, the exemplary inverted seam is advantageously located on the side of the mattress forming the sleeping surface, whereas the bottom panel 230 on the opposite surface not used for sleeping can be attached using a conventional seam, that can be of lesser quality. Such mattresses are typically referred to as one-side mattresses. One-sided mattresses can be placed on or in a foundation. The springs can extend to the corners of the mattress, in which case the corners of the mattress may have to be packed with a soft material to reduce wear of the fabric. Alternatively, the inner coil spring unit can be a least partially encompassed by padding made of, for example, foam rubber, cotton and other materials commonly used in mattress construction, in which case the corner packing can be omitted. In another alternative embodiment, the inner coil spring unit of the mattress could be placed inside a tray having a bottom section and side sections (not shown), with the aforedescribed mattress cover placed over the tray and provided with an inverted seam according to the method of the invention. The tray can be made of a soft material, such as latex or rubber foam.
The bottom panel of one-sided mattresses need not be made of padding and fabric, as in the conventional double-sided mattress depicted in
The order in which the steps of the present method are performed is purely illustrative in nature. In fact, the steps can be performed in any order or in parallel, unless otherwise indicated by the present disclosure.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention in its broader aspect and, therefore, the appended claims are to encompass within their scope all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit of this invention.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/274,455, filed Oct. 17, 2002, and now U.S. Pat. No. 6,804,849 issued Oct. 19, 2004.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1328248 | Hawn | Jan 1920 | A |
1596209 | Mulkey | Aug 1926 | A |
2201361 | Bennett | May 1940 | A |
3778852 | Penn et al. | Dec 1973 | A |
4606087 | Alivizatos | Aug 1986 | A |
4689844 | Alivizatos | Sep 1987 | A |
5475881 | Higgins et al. | Dec 1995 | A |
5896605 | Branman | Apr 1999 | A |
6088858 | Juster et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6574815 | Freeman et al. | Jun 2003 | B2 |
6804849 | Van Patten | Oct 2004 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040261187 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 10274455 | Oct 2002 | US |
Child | 10894971 | US |