The invention relates to systems and methods for identifying garments.
After washing garments, it is a necessity to sort them, whether at the industrial washing scale or the smaller family circle scale. It might be troublesome and time-consuming to properly sort similar garments. For example, in the family circle, matching together two socks of a given pair from a set of washed garments, in particular if other similar pairs of different sizes or age were simultaneously washed, can prove difficult.
From the document US 2002/079249, there is known a system comprising an illumination source, a fluorescent bar-code label, a camera sensor suitable to read a bar code from the label (attached to a garment) under exposure to a light ray from the illumination source, and a computerized unit in order to obtain information about the garment from the read bar code.
However, since information is pre-encoded in the bar-code label, this system is not very adaptable. For each new wash, new labels have to be printed, corresponding to the garments which have not been previously washed. In addition, the same label will always have to designate the same garment. If information about a garment will change, a new label would have to be printed for that garment, or the computerized unit would have to be re-programmed so that the old label would provide with the appropriate new information. As a consequence, this system is hardly usable in the family circle, where re-usability is a key feature for such a system.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an easily reusable system for obtaining information about a garment.
To this end, the invention provides a system for identifying a garment comprising:
said optical signal and said optical characteristic being matched so that said optical characteristic is easily recognizable by the human eye upon exposure of said identification portion to said optical signal.
Such a system makes it possible to sort the garment provided with said tag from other garments. In addition, the tags could for example be used for identifying both socks of a given pair of socks during a first washing, or for identifying all garments belonging to a given person of a family, during a subsequent washing. The tags are thus easily reusable.
In addition, the system is easy to use and cheap, since it does not need a camera and specialised computerized unit, nor a specialised printing machine.
In particular embodiments of the system, one might also use the features defined in the dependent system claims.
According to another aspect, the invention provides a method for identifying a garment comprising the following steps:
In particular embodiments of the method, one might also use the features defined in the dependent method claims.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description, drawings and claims.
In the drawings:
a to 5e are schematic views showing different possible embodiments for identifying tags, and
a to 6d are schematic views showing other possible embodiments for the identifying tags.
The invention described below provides an easily customizable system for identification of garments. In the drawings which illustrate embodiments of such a system, corresponding or similar elements bear the same reference numbers.
In
The package 1 also comprises a given number (e.g. 4, as shown in
As shown in
During manufacture, suitable fluorescent pigments may be added to the plastic of the identifying portions of the tags, in order to provide the suitable optical characteristic to the identifying tag 6. For example, the tags being described comprise about 0.1% of an organic pigment, such as “lumilux blue cd 307”, which is commercially available from Riedel-de-Haen, for providing a blue fluorescent colour. The concentration of pigment could for example range from 0.01% to 1%. Other lumilux pigments could be used for providing other colours, in particular for a second set 5 of tags 6. The optical characteristic is thus hardly recognizable under ambient lighting conditions. In practice, any suitable fluorescent pigment, organic or anorganic, could be used.
If the system comprises a plurality of sets of tags, the first set of tags, which has just been described, may be contained in a first compartment 3 of the package 1, and a second set of tags may be enclosed in a second compartment 3b of the package 1. The tags 6 of the second set all exhibit the same optical characteristic, which is different from the optical characteristic exhibited by the tags of the first set. For example, the identifying portion of the second set of tags comprises an UV fluorescent pigment which is different from the one comprised in the identifying portion of the tags of the first set. For example, the tags of the second set comprises an organic pigment “lumilux green cd 333” also available from Riedel-de-Haen, providing for green UV fluorescence.
The attachment portion 8 could be a hook, as roughly represented in
A description of the system in use will now be given with reference to
Acting in the same way for the identifying tag 6b of the sock 9b, the house person will be in a position to recognize if the fluorescent colour emitted by the tag 6b under exposure to the optical signal from UV lamp 4 is the same as the one which has been previously emitted by the first tag 6a, in which case it means that the two socks belong to the same pair. Should the colors be different, it means that the two socks belong to two different pairs. Repeating this operation with all identified garments, an easy sorting of the garments is made possible. The lamp could be turned off and put back into the package 1.
After sorting, the identifying tags 6 could be removed from the garments and placed back in right order into the package 1. Alternately the tags could be left permanently on the garments, for example if they were attached by sticking the back face of the identifying portion 7 on the garments. If the tags are permanently attached to the garment, it is not necessary for the house person to attach the tags to the garments before each washing and to remove the same after each washing. Preferably, the tags would then be placed in a position of the garment where they are not visible in normal use condition of the garment (for example a foot portion of a sock) and/or be made of a translucent material. It is also possible that the identifying tag will be integrated into the garment during manufacture of the garment.
Another possible example of use of the described system is the sorting of garments belonging to a given person of the household. As shown in
As shown schematically in
In another embodiment, the tags of a given set (exhibiting all the same fluorescent colour) may be provided with different shapes in order to provide additional information to the house person. In this embodiment, each tag would provide two kinds of information: one indicated by its fluorescent colour, and the other one indicated by its shape.
Although only two examples of suitable organic pigments were given in the above description, any suitable colour or set of colours could be obtained by blending suitable pigments. As shown schematically in
There are numerous ways of implementing the invention. In this respect, the drawings are very diagrammatic, each representing only one possible embodiment of said invention. Thus, the remarks made herein before demonstrate that the detailed description, with reference to the drawings, illustrates rather than limits the invention. There are numerous alternatives, which fall within the scope of the appended claims. The word “comprising” does not exclude the presence of other elements or steps than those listed in a claim. The word “a” or “an” preceding an element or step does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements or steps.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05300134.3 | Feb 2005 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2006/050491 | 2/15/2006 | WO | 00 | 8/15/2007 |