Claims
- 1. The method of stitching a piece of fabric such as congress cloth, linen, or needlepoint canvas that is supported within a rectangular frame, comprising the steps of:
adding stitches into the existing fabric within the frame; then stretching the fabric in two mutually perpendicular directions from each of the four corners of the frame and directly within the plane of the fabric to cause it to assume a more tightly stretched condition; then adding more stitches into the fabric; and thereafter repeating both the stretching and the stitching.
- 2. The method of stitching a piece of fabric such as congress cloth, linen, or needlepoint canvas that is supported within a rectangular frame having side and end pieces, comprising the steps of:
placing the fabric within the frame; attaching corresponding edges of the fabric along the side and end pieces of the frame; applying tension from the frame to the fabric directly in the plane of the fabric by expanding the spacing between the side pieces and concurrently expanding the spacing between the end pieces; adding stitches into the fabric while maintaining the tension thus applied to the fabric; and then again expanding the spaces between both end pieces and side pieces of the frame.
- 3. A stitchery apparatus comprising:
a rectangular frame including a pair of side bars and a pair of end bars, each side bar having a recess near each of its ends, and each end bar also having a recess near each of its ends, the combined depths of side bar recesses and end bar recesses being such that a side bar and an end bar may be placed at a right angle to each other with recesses at one end of each being interengaged to form a corner of the frame while at the same time the bars occupy a common plane; the length of the recesses in the end bars being greater than the width of the side bars, and the length of the recesses in the side bars being greater than the width of the end bars, the four bars thus forming an expandible frame in which the space between side bars may be expanded and the space between end bars may also be expanded;; four lost motion connectors at the four corresponding corners of the frame securing the respectively interengaged recessed portions of a side bar and an end bar such that there may be relative movement of the bars in two mutually perpendicular directions; and manual adjustment means associated with each corner of the frame but physically located outside the frame so that both the width and length of the frame may be manually adjusted without directly entering the space inside the frame that is intended to be occupied by the fabric.
- 4. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein each of the lost motion connectors is formed by longitudinal slots in each of the bars, and a bolt occupying both slots.
- 5. The apparatus of claim 3 wherein the manual adjustment means includes a screw.
PRIOR ART
[0001] Pertinent prior art includes U.S. Pat. No. 3,811,209.