This invention relates generally to a method and apparatus for stitching together fabric layers and more particularly to a fabric retaining frame adapted for manually guided movement for controlling actuation of a stitch head.
Creating decorative quilts by hand has become a popular avocation. A typical quilt is comprised of at least two fabric layers which are stacked and stitched together. Generally the quilt is comprised of a “top” layer, a “bottom” or “backing” layer, and an intermediate “batting” layer. The top layer is typically decorative and is produced as a consequence of simple and aesthetically compatible with the top. The batting layer generally provides bulk and insulation. The specific process of sewing the sandwich of the three planar layers together is generally referred to as “quilting”. The quilting process usually consists of forming long continuous patterns of the creative and artistic effort of the quilt maker. The backing layer is usually stitches which extend through and secure the top, backing, and batting layers together. Oftentimes stitch patterns are selected which have a decorative quality to enhance the overall aesthetics. A general goal of the quilting process is to produce precise consistent stitches that are closely and uniformly spaced.
Quilting traditionally has been performed by hand without the aid of a sewing machine. However, hand quilting is a labor-intensive process which can require many months of effort by a practiced person to create a single quilt. Accordingly, it appears that a trend is developing toward using machines to assist in the quilting process to allow most of the quilter's effort to be directed toward the creative and artistic aspects of the top layer.
Machine quilting can be performed in a variety of ways. For example, a user can operate a substantially conventional sewing machine in a “free motion” mode by removing or disabling the machine's feed dogs. This allows the user to manually move the stacked quilt layers relative to the machine's needle, either directly or via a quilt frame, to produce desired patterns of stitches. In practice, the sewing machine is run at a relatively constant speed as the user moves the stacked quilt materials under the needle. This process typically requires significant operator skill acquired after much practice to enable the operator to move the quilt stack in synchronism with the needle stroke to form high quality stitch patterns. Thus, free motion quilting with a conventional sewing machine requires significant user skill and yet frequently yields imperfect results, particularly when forming curved and intricate stitch patterns.
Machine quilting can also be performed by using a wide range of specialized hand guided quilting systems which have become available in recent years. The characteristics and features of such systems are discussed in an article which appeared in Quilters Newsletter Magazine (QNM), April 2003, by Carol A. Thelen. The article identifies three categories of such systems; i.e., (1) Table top set-ups, (2) Shortarm systems, and (3) Longarm systems. They are generally characterized by a table which supports a frame and a quilting/sewing machine. The frame includes rollers which hold the quilt layers so as to enable a portion of the layered stack to be exposed for stitching while the remaining layer portions are stored on the rollers. The quilting/sewing machine rests on a carriage mounted for movement (e.g., along tracks) relative to the frame and table. The carriage is generally provided with handles enabling an operator to move the machine over the surface of the quilt. The QNM article further discusses optional add-ons and accessories enabling various electronic functions, including stitch regulation, to be added to basic shortarm or longarm systems.
Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446 describes an apparatus which permits a user to manually move a stack of fabric layers across a planar bed, or plate, beneath an actuatable stitch head. The apparatus includes a detector for detecting the movement of the stack for the purpose of synchronizing the delivery of stitch strokes to the stack movement. This approach enables the insertion of uniform length stitches while allowing the user to move the stack within a wide range of speeds, to start or stop the stack movement at will, and to guide the stack in any direction across the planar bed.
The preferred embodiments described in applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446 employ a detector configured to detect stack movement within the throat space of a quilting/sewing machine by measuring the movement of at least one surface of the stack as it moves across the planar bed. As described, a preferred detector responds to energy, e.g., light, reflected from a target area on the stack surface (top and/or bottom) within the machine's throat space. The detector preferably provides output pulses representative of incremental translational movement of the stack along perpendicular X and Y directions. The output pulses are processed to determine the distance the stack moves. When the cumulative stack movement exceeds a threshold magnitude, a “stitch stroke” command is issued to cause the stitch head to insert a stitch through the stacked layers. As the user moves the stack across the planar bed, additional stitch stroke commands are successively issued to produce successive stitches.
Applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446 primarily contemplates that the user directly grasp, or touch, the stacked fabric layers to push and/or pull the stack across the planar bed. However, the application also recognizes that the user could, alternatively, mount the stack on a conventional quilt frame and then grasp the frame to move the stack across the planar bed to enable the detector to sense stack surface movement.
The present invention is directed to alternative embodiments for controlling stitch head actuation to insert uniform length stitches into a stack of fabric layers. In accordance with the present invention, a frame is provided for mounting the fabric layer stack and retaining it in a substantially taut condition. The frame is supported for user guided movement beneath a fixedly located stitch head and a detector is provided to produce signals representing the magnitude of frame translation, and thus the magnitude of stack translation. As in applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446, when the detector signals indicate a cumulative stack movement exceeding a threshold magnitude, a control means responds to actuate the stitch head.
A frame in accordance with the present invention can be supported by a variety of bearings, e.g., wheels, slides, etc, which permit the frame to be freely manually guided across a horizontally oriented planar surface supporting the frame.
A detector in accordance with the present invention can be configured in a variety of ways but preferably comprises an optical detector carried by the frame for responding to movement relative to the surface supporting the frame.
As described in applicant's U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446, a system in accordance with the present invention can operate solely in an impulse mode, or solely in a continuous proportional mode, or as a dual mode system, i.e., impulse mode at slow stack speeds and proportional mode at higher stack speeds. A frame in accordance with the present invention can be integrated into a system which includes control circuitry especially designed to accept the detector signals for actuating the stitch head. Alternatively, a frame in accordance with the present invention can be used as an accessory to a conventional quilting/sewing machine by using the detector signals to control stitch head speed via an adapter coupled to the machine's conventional foot control.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,883,446 is in its entirety incorporated herein by reference. However, for convenience sake, several of the figures and related text from that patent are expressly reproduced in this application, e.g.,
Attention is initially directed to
The machine portion 26 of
A conventional hook and bobbin assembly 52 is mounted beneath the bed 44 in alignment with the needle 48. The stitch head 28 including needle bar 46 and needle 48, operates in a substantially conventional manner in conjunction with the hook and bobbin assembly 52 to insert a stitch through the stack 22 at a fixedly located opening, or stitch site, 54 on the bed. During a stitch cycle when the needle 48 is lowered to its down position to pierce the stack layers (
The machine portion 26 of
The stitch head 28 and hook and bobbin assembly 52 operate cooperatively in a conventional manner to insert stitches through the layers of stack 22 at stitch site 54. That is, when the stitch head cycle is initiated, needle 48 is driven downwardly to pierce the stacked layers 32, 34, 36 and carry an upper thread (not shown) through the stitch site opening 54 in bed 44. Beneath the bed 44, the hook (not shown) of assembly 52 grabs a loop of the upper thread before the needle 48 pulls it back up through the stack which is held down by presser foot 50. The upper thread loop grabbed by the hook is then locked by a thread pulled off the bobbin (not shown) of assembly 52.
The system of
In typical use, an operator directly touches the fabric stack to manually guide it across the horizontally oriented bed 44 beneath the vertically oriented needle 48. The motion detector 64 in accordance with the invention is mounted to monitor a target area coincident with a surface layer (top and/or bottom) of the stack 22 as the stack is moved across the bed 44. The detector can be considered as having a window focused on the stack surface proximate to the needle penetration site. The detector can be variously physically mounted; e.g., above the stack looking down at the stack top surface or below the stack looking up at the stack bottom surface.
Although the motion detector 64 of
Suffice it to say that the accurate measurement of stack movement depends, in part, upon the stack target layer, e.g., backing layer 36, being positioned near the focus of the motion detector window. The aforementioned hold-down plate or presser foot 50 assists in maintaining the stack layers at a certain distance from the detector window. In a preferred embodiment, the hold-down plate 50 has a flat smooth bottom surface 51 for engaging the stack 22 and is fabricated of transparent material to avoid obstructing a user's view of the stack layers proximate to the needle 48.
Note in
Attention is now directed to
Block 134 compares the square of the preset switch length value with the magnitude derived from block 132. If the magnitude of the resultant movement is less than the preset stitch length, then operation cycles back via loop 136 to the initial block 120. If on the other hand, the resultant magnitude exceeds the preset stitch length, then operation proceeds to block 138 to initiate a stitch. In block 140, the X and Y counts are cleared before returning to the initial block 120.
Operation in the impulse mode 155 involves block 157 which is executed to assure deactivation of the proportional mode. Thereafter, block 148 is executed which involves waiting for a signal from the bobbin hook sensor. The motor (or clutch) is then actuated in block 142 and actuation terminates when a terminating pulse is recognized from the shaft position sensor (block 146). Block 158 then deactuates a motor/clutch relay and/or actuates a brake after a stitch recognized in block 146 to park the needle in its up position.
Operation in the proportional mode 156 includes step 159 which activates motor speed control operation. A motor speed control capability is a common feature of most modern sewing machines with motor speed being controlled by the user, e.g., via a foot pedal, and/or by built-in electronic control circuitry.
After block 159, decision block 160 is executed. To understand the function of decision block 160, it must first be recognized that as stack speed is increased, thus generating shorter duration stitch intervals, the shaft angle position ⊖n read in block 153 will decrease, in the absence of an adjustment of motor/needle shaft speed. In other words, a newly read shaft angle ⊖n will be smaller than a previously read shaft angle ⊖p. Block 160 functions to compare ⊖n and ⊖p if stack speed increases. If ⊖n is smaller, the motor speed must be increased (block 161) to deliver stitches at an increased rate to maintain stitch length uniformity.
On the other hand, if stack speed is reduced so that ⊖n is greater than ⊖p, motor speed is decreased (block 162) in order to produce uniform length stitches. If stack speed remains constant, then ⊖n equals ⊖p and no motor sped adjustment is called for (block 163).
The embodiments thus far described primarily contemplate that the motion detector and control circuitry, be fully integrated into a quilting/sewing machine. However, it is recognized that alternative embodiments of the invention can be provided which are more suitable for after market adaptation of a conventional sewing machine. More particularly, attention is directed to
The embodiments specifically discussed thus far primarily contemplate detecting stack surface movement within the throat space of a quilting/sewing machine to control stitch head actuation for producing uniform stitches.
More particularly, note that
Each vertical member 302 is supported on some type of bearing 308, preferably a wheel or slide, for engaging a horizontally oriented bed or table surface 310. The bearings 308 enable a user to push/pull the frame 300 to manually guide the frame over surface 310 relative to fixedly located stitch head 312 of machine 313. The stitch head 312 includes a needle 314 mounted for cyclic vertical movement from an up position remote from the plate 316 to a down position penetrating a needle opening in plate 316 and then back to the up position.
The frame vertical members 302 and bearings 308 are dimensioned to hold the stack 306 clamped to rails 3042 and 3044 at a height appropriate to enable the stack lower surface to ride on the plate 316 (mounted on machine lower arm 318) as the frame 300 translates across the table surface 310. As can be seen in
In accordance with the present invention, a motion detector 330 is coupled to the frame 300 for producing signals representing frame translational movement along perpendicular X and Y axes. Although various types of detectors can be used, it is preferred that detector 330 comprises an optical detector for responding to light reflected from table surface 310. As previously noted, such a detector can employ an optical chip of the type marketed by Agilent Technologies, e.g., ADNS2051, which can respond to the reflected light to produce X and Y signals representative of the frame and stack translational movement.
Although an optical detector responsive to reflected light appears to be the preferred choice, it is recognized that the detector 330 can be selected to respond to other forms of energy (e.g., ultrasonic, RF, magnetic, electrostatic, etc.) reflected from, or sourced by, the surface 310. Alternatively, other types of detectors for measuring frame movement can employ technologies such as accelerometers, resistive devices, encoders having wheels positioned to roll on surface 310, etc.
The frame translation signals provided by detector 330 (
From the foregoing, it should now be appreciated that applicant has described various frame embodiments for mounting a multilayer stack, typically fabric quilt materials, which can be readily manually moved by a user beneath a stitch head to control actuation of the stitch head and cause it to insert uniform stitches through the stack. Although only a limited number of embodiments have been illustrated, it will be recognized that various modifications and alternatives will occur to those skilled in the art which embody the spirit of the invention and fall within the intended scope as defined by the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US05/14375 | 4/26/2005 | WO | 8/22/2006 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60571109 | May 2004 | US |