1. Field of Invention
The invention applies to sewing aids. More specifically the invention applies to devices for setting corded piping a desired spacing.
2. Prior Art
Corded piping historically is made when a strip of fabric is cut wide to cover the filler cord (or cords) and extending long enough to allow the seam allowance and trim waste. The fabric is then folded in half by the longest dimension and the filler cord is inserted in the fold. It is then sewn by the machine, usually immediately adjacent to the cord. Trimming or grading the seam to the seam width desired is accomplished by one or two prior art methods typically.
After making the corded piping, one has to measure and mark the seam allowance by using scissors to cut along the marked line cutting off the excess fabric. This is the most accurate prior art way to make corded bias piping.
Another method is to cut the fabric twice the width of the finished seam allowance plus the diameter of the filler cord used to make the piping. When sewing with this method, it is necessary to be very careful to make sure the cut edges of the fabric are lined exactly and that one knows exactly the diameter of the filler cord. The method can only be used when making piping with fabric cut on the straight of the grain. This is not an accurate method to use when making bias corded piping because the fabric stretches, becoming narrower after it is assembled when sewing in the cord and thereby losing the accuracy of the seam allowance.
Corded piping or sew cords are decorative fabric covered cord sewn into or adjacent to a seam. Corded piping is a fabric covered cord which typically has a seam allowance attached for purposes of sewing it together with an outfit. The cord is used as a filler to make a rounded ridge at the fold of the fabric; and this fold allows for the cord to be held within the corded piping or sew cord.
There are several types of corded piping. One is bias piping. Bias fabric strips are cut on a forty-five degree angle to the fabric straight of grain. Bias piping is flexible, allowing it to be sewn around curves and remain flat.
The second basic type of corded piping is straight of grain piping. Fabric strips are cut on fabric straight of grain. Straight of the grain piping is not flexible. It cannot be sewn around curves. It is used on straight edges when a non stretch edge is needed for durability.
There are several reasons to use piping. Piping is used to accent seams and or stiffen edges. It adds a fashionable and inexpensive accent to seams. Corded piping can be added to any edge where seams are joined. To add durability, corded piping will help hold an over stuffed cushion together. Upholstered boat seats are over stuffed and tufted in a diamond tuck and roll configuration for comfort and durability. Adding corded piping helps prevent the stuffing from migrating and maintains cushion shape. Upholstered chair and couch cushions benefit when corded piping is used in edge seams to make the edges crisp and help to prevent the cover from shifting keeping the cushion neat and adding durability and strength to the edges.
Piping is used on clothing, upholstery, home decorations, fashion accessories, car and boat seats, and mattresses as examples. In garment construction corded piping is used to accent seams. Corded piping is used in garment construction when the edge of a garment needs to be turned with a sharp finish as in a collar or lapel of a jacket or coat or when pattern pieces are joined and corded piping is inserted in the seam as part of the overall design. In upholstery piping is used to define the edges of furniture detail and stiffen cushion edges. In home decorations corded piping is used in window valances, decorative cushions, quilts, duvets, etc. It can also be used on purses and shoes in order to add strength, support or for decorative purposes.
Piping can be relatively inexpensive to make, but it can be time consuming unless there is a way to adjust the seam allowances properly.
It is a desirable accent as it provides visual and dimensional texture. Piping can be made of the same fabric as the project or a complimentary color. It can be made with the same allowance to equal the seam allowances of the pattern pieces. It can be an easy method of modifying existing patterns.
The only piping made available to the home seamstress is made of stiff fabric with a ¼ seem allowance in limited colors. By allowing for the manufacture of seam allowances by the seamstress, or tailor a great deal more variety is allowed.
If patterns may be used with a seam allowance of other than ¼ inch. All pattern pieces or piping used must be trimmed to a ¼ inch which is one reason why it is difficult to make assemblies with of the shelf seam allowance materials. If the seam allowance is not trimmed one must measure the distance when sewing the piping to the pattern piece which is an extremely time consuming and inaccurate method of putting together patterns.
When all the elements of a garment or upholstery are assembled, unless one maintains an accurate seam allowance, the pieces which make up the project will not fit together correctly. The present device is made to be used with a rotary cutter 60 preferably which has a sharp edge 57 and a roller 61 where the roller can move along the edge 8 of the seam gauge 7. Alternatively, a mark can be made along the line defined by the edge 8 of the seam gauge. The invention is used by cutting fabric for piping using a chart for approximate fabric width. Fabric width does not have to be exact. Extra seam width is needed for trimming.
The wider the seam width, the better, for an easier trim. For a minimum seam allowances, a ¼ inch seam should be cut 1 and ¼ inch wide, a ½ inch seam should be cut 2 inches wide, a ⅜ inch seam should be cut 2 inches wide, and a ⅝ inch seam should be cut 2 and ½ inches wide.
Once the cord is in place, the user will place the piping on the cutting mat and align the groove of the seam gauge for the desired seam allowance over the piping. Typically the piping seam allowance is cut from the bottom to the top although the direction of the cut is largely discretionary.
The user continues cutting the open perimeter marking if it is going to be marked, for later cutting, and sliding the seam gauge along the piping cord.
It is also helpful to spray starch thin, soft or silky fabric before cutting bias strips. Starching stabilizes the bias. Where starch is not used, it is helpful to cut the strips 1 inch wider than the suggested width. It is a good idea to stretch the fabric as the piping is sewn. Stretching helps to make a snug fit to prevent wrinkles from fabric shifting when sewing the piping. Fabric edges do not have to be even before trimming, but at least one fabric layer should be wide enough for trimming to the desired seam width. This stretching is easier because the piping holds the sew cord while it is stretched and stitched in certain embodiments. It can be helpful to use an adjustable zipper foot to move the needle close to the inside curve and the zipper foot. Using a 3 mm to 3.5 mm stitch length the user can stitch the bias around the cord. There should be a little ease between the stitching line and the cord. When attaching (basting) piping to the project, the same stitching line can be used. The machine needle is moved closer to the edge of the foot when sewing the final seam. The original stitching should be enclosed within the seam allowance.
It is therefore a purpose to provide a seam guide for holding seam and piping for later attachment. A further purpose of this is to provided for faster, more accurate seam allowance cutting and also to allow for a choice of multiple seam allowances.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention will become better understood hereinafter from a consideration of the specification with reference to the accompanying drawings forming part thereof, and in which like numerals correspond to parts throughout the several views of the invention.
For a further understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like parts are given like reference numerals and wherein:
a shows a close up of the embodiment of
a shows the use of two rollers for moving material in conjunction with the embodiment shown in
Referring to
This base 15 has a top surface 18 where the handle or indention may be provided for and also has a bottom surface 19 along the base 15 which defines, in this embodiment, four separate notches 21, 22, 23, and 24 which preferably have a width which is approximately equal to the width 30 of the sew cord 6 which would fit into the particular notch, here notch 22 in
On the edge or side 33 of the base is a reduced depth section 29 which allows for an edge of a cutting knife or for the users hand to move along the top section 32 of this reduced depth section 29 so that a straight cut can be made utilizing the sharp right angle straight side 33 between the reduced section top 32 and the base 15. A second reduced depth section 29a is available on the other side as well, so that more seam allowance dimensions may be allowed than would be possible if only a left side or a right side was available.
In this case, the seam allowances (and hence the distances from the notches to the edges) on the left are a ¼″–3/8″ and on the right are ½″ and 1″, although it is obvious that metric measurements and slightly different measurements could be utilized without departing from the invention concept embodied herein.
The particular invention which is shown in
The length of the seam allowance 5 is crucial in the construction when the sew cord 6 comprised of cord 1 and fold 2 is attached to the base material 11 with base stitches 12 in order to obtain the desired overall effect.
The prior art is full of examples of various locations where a sew cord is utilized in connection with an outfit. In some cases, joined sew cords 8 are utilized in order to obtain a particular effect.
In all these cases, the seam allowance 5 is critical in the overall appearance of the item.
Another improvement is where two separate sew cords 6 are provided and previously attached at attachment points and in this case one is lower than the next by virtue of the design. In order to accommodate this, instead of two adjacent notches, there is a double notch 36 as shown in
In the embodiments shown in
This is the most simple embodiment.
Where this is attached to a sewing machine presser foot post 43, there may be multiple locations, holes 14, for receiving the post 43 as shown in
As can be seen by reference to the embodiment in
Rollers 68 and 69 may grip the cloth and pull it from the back 53 of the gauge 7 where the notch 22 may widen to help feed the sew cord 6 to the front where excess cloth 55 is cut away leaving the seam allowances.
In this case rather than sliding the guide over piping the piping would be slid under the guide and the ends of the seam guide may be curved or smoothed in order to prevent the material from catching and in order to allow a smooth cut.
The seam allowance 5 is important because if it is not perfect, then the pieces of the outfit will not fit together perfectly and in more advanced outfits and more advanced other products utilizing sew cords numerous seams may be used in a single product for structural purposes, effect or both.
Hand marking along the length is inadequate and seams must be made in different lengths of material. Hence, while in the most simple embodiment, only one seam allowance would be provided for, there are at least four different seam allowance measurements desirable in the preferred embodiment made possible by the four notches 20–24 and their distance from one edge 33 of the body 49. While historically seam allowances have been defined using a mark from the completed sew cord (the combination of the cord and the fold), from which the edge 52 of the seam allowance 5 may be cut, as shown in
As can best be seen by reference to
As can best be seen by reference to
The device is an aid for preparing seam allowances in a seam cloth having a thin side forming a seam allowances which has an end which is free and an end which folds over to cover a cord and is sewn together to form an expanded sew cord.
In practice, the finished sew cord is used with a stitching machine, typically a sewing machine, that stitches free end into a fold in the base cloth.
The simple embodiments show a holding means, here the notched body, for mechanically holding the seam cord on at least two (three) sides within the notch while allowing the seam cord to move from the front to back of the body.
The distance between the notch and the edge forms a measuring means for measuring the end of the seam allowance.
At least one cutting blade, two in the case scissors are used, may be used in conjunction with the invention, particularly in the embodiment shown in
The notch is approximately the same size as the sew cord so that it frictionally holds the sew cord and hence different size notches may be provided for different size sew cords.
As is shown in the preferred embodiments, the base defines a plurality of notches which are at different distances from the edges to allow for different seam allowances, preferably 1/4″ and 3/8″ from the left edge and ½″ and 1″ from the right edge.
To follow the cloth as it moves through the notch, the body is transparent in the preferred embodiment and is made of plexiglass or other suitable plastic material.
The alternative designs allowing the seam allowance to be cut as the cloth feeds through the notch may provide that the cutting means is at least one blade attached to the holding means, here the body through a notch or the cutting means is at least one blade attached to the stitching machine. In the preferred embodiment, where the cloth is cut by hand, the blade is guided by the same edge that marks the end of the length of the seam allowance.
While in the preferred embodiment the individual feeds the cloth forward by sliding the body over the sew cord, in other embodiments the sewing machine would have a tooth dog for feeding the cloth forward through the holding means as the cloth is fed through the sewing machine. In such as case, the foot post of the sewing machine may be used to holding the body in place relative to the scissors or needle of the sewing machine or both. In such a case, the mounting of the body would have to be varied or several different bodies would have to be provided to provide for different seam allowances. All of these embodiments, described generally in
The invention may be described as a process utilizing the product so described wherein the process is one for producing seam allowances comprising the steps of holding the sew cord below a body having a length and a width, said defining a notch along the length of the body so that the sew cord is held within the notch; moving the sew cord forward along within the notch; cutting the seam cloth at the seam allowance from the edge of the body; and wherein the step of cutting comprises the step of cutting the seam allowance at the edge of the body.
With a sewing machine process, the process may include the steps of simultaneously cutting the seam allowance and sewing the cord within a fold of the seam allowance cloth or sequentially sewing the cord within a fold of the seam allowance cloth and cutting the edge of the seam allowance and sequentially sewing the seam allowance within a fold of the base material. Where the excess seam cloth is cut away, the process may even sequentially include the step of feeding the seam allowance and base cloth between stitching a feeder means.
Because many varying and different embodiments may be made within the scope of the inventive concept herein taught and because many modifications may be made in the embodiment(s) herein detailed in accordance with the descriptive requirements of the law, it is to be understood that the details herein are to be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
This patent claims priority in U.S. Provisional Patent No. 60/450,833 filed Feb. 28, 2003 to Alma Johnson Gulsby.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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60450833 | Feb 2003 | US |