US2574029A - Method of making all-textile elastic fabrics - Google Patents

Method of making all-textile elastic fabrics Download PDF

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US2574029A
US2574029A US682580A US68258046A US2574029A US 2574029 A US2574029 A US 2574029A US 682580 A US682580 A US 682580A US 68258046 A US68258046 A US 68258046A US 2574029 A US2574029 A US 2574029A
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fabric
yarns
coiled
stretch
yarn
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US682580A
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Boutwell H Foster
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Uniroyal Inc
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United States Rubber Co
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    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D03WEAVING
    • D03DWOVEN FABRICS; METHODS OF WEAVING; LOOMS
    • D03D15/00Woven fabrics characterised by the material, structure or properties of the fibres, filaments, yarns, threads or other warp or weft elements used
    • D03D15/50Woven fabrics characterised by the material, structure or properties of the fibres, filaments, yarns, threads or other warp or weft elements used characterised by the properties of the yarns or threads
    • D03D15/56Woven fabrics characterised by the material, structure or properties of the fibres, filaments, yarns, threads or other warp or weft elements used characterised by the properties of the yarns or threads elastic

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  • This invention relates to a method of making high stretch, all-textile, woven elastic fabrics.
  • the present invention contemplates a highly stretchable, all-textile woven fabric that contains no rubber, has a range of stretch of from 50 to a 100% or more, is highly compressible and soft to the feel, has a high degree of air permeability, and when worn next to the body is cool and comfortable and has good non-slipping properties.
  • a fabric is ideally suited for use as body or limb bandages, bathing suits, certain types of wearing apparel and for many other purposes.
  • An extremely important feature of' the highly stretchable all-textile fabric of the present invention resides in the fact that it has the soft feel of a terry fabric when in its contracted or relaxed condition. This imparts to the fabric the desired properties of softness, high compressibility, and high air permeability; and causes it to cling to the portion of the body it may engage without slipping.
  • the method contemplated by the present invention may be used to produce one-way stretch woven fabrics or two-way stretch woven fabrics as desired and the percentage of stretch and strength of the contractive action of the fabric may be varied throughout a wide range as desired.
  • the high stretch or elastic properties are imparted to the fabrics herein contemplated, without the use of rubber, by employing in such fabrics as warp or weft or as both warp and weft, a highly stretchable yarn such as shown, described and claimed in my Patent No. 2,387,320 granted October 23, 1945, and which yarn is a helically coiled high twist fibrous yarn having a long stretch and good contracting properties.
  • a fabric constructed in accordance with the present invention may have plain ordinary commercial yarns forming the entire warp or the entire weft of the fabric, but it also has interwoven 2 therewith in the direction in which the fabric is to stretch the helically coiled yarns of said patent, and such helically coiled yarns may be used alone in the direction the fabric is to stretch or may have associated therewith in parallel relation therewith one or more plain yarns for each helically coiled yarn, depending on the amount of contractive force or other properties desired in the finished fabric.
  • the helically coiled yarns when used either as warp or weft are preferably maintained under sufiicient tension while they are being woven into the fabric to hold themjn a fully extended or straight line condition, and when so woven into the fabric the yarns extending at right angles to the direction of stretch should be spaced much further apart than is desired in the fabric when relaxed and ready for the market.
  • the fabric will come off the loom as a loosely woven open weave fabric that has almost no stretch either longitudinally or transversely, but the desired elastic properties are easily imparted to such fabric by soaking it for a short time, while free of tension, in hot water or boiling water.
  • the helically coiled yarns used in the fabric as herein contemplated may be formed of cotton fibres, wool fibres, rayon filaments or other tex-* tile fibres or filaments, since the hot water will cause such helically coiled yarns after they have become straightened out to return to the form of a tightly coiled or contracted helix. Particularly good results have been secured in this respect with helically coiled cotton yarns.
  • bandages are made up in different widths ranging from say 2 to 6 inches wide and about 5 /2 yards long when stretched.
  • the range of stretch of such bandage fabric may vary from about 50 to 100%, and the longitudinal stretch is imparted'to such bandages by employing in the weft plain textile yarns and in the warp both plain yarns and helically coiled yarns, there being one, two or possibly three plain warp yarns for each helically coiled warp yarn.
  • Another important field of use for the fabric of the present invention is that of upholstery material in which a wide fabric is woven with sufficient helically coiled yarns extending either warp-wise or weftwise to impart the desired elastic properties to 55 the fabric. Still a third important field in which When a fabric is woven.
  • the fabric of the present invention may be employed is that of bathing suits or certain garments wherein the fabric is given stretch prop-. cities in one or two directions by embodying the helically coiled yarns in the warp or weft or in both the warp and weft as desired. In all these uses the present fabric presents an exceptionally soft terry feel.
  • Fig. 1 is an enlarged side elevation of an all textile helically coiled yarn employed in the elastic fabric herein contemplated.
  • Fig. 3 is a plan view of a short length of fully extended woven fabric having plain yarns throughout the weft thereof and both plain and helioally coiled yarns in the warp thereof, the latter being shown in a fully extended condition.
  • Fig. 4 is a plan view of the fabric of Fig. 8 after it has been contracted by treating it with hot water while in a relaxed condition;
  • Fig.6 is a sectional view taken on the line H of Fla. 4.
  • the heiically coiled yarn shown on an enlarged scale in Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawing is an all textile yarn, such for example as a cotton yarn having the stretch characteristic or elastic extensibility range of the order of 100% or more, and is preferably constructed in accordance with my patent above cited.
  • This helically coiled yarn may be formed of a single yarn or of a plied yarn which is so coiled, the former is preferable in many cases because single yarn is cheaper to construct than plied yarn.
  • This coiled yarn which is designated by In in the drawing is preferably made similar to the yarn shown in Figs. 2 and 3 of said patent, and it may as above stated.
  • helically coiled yarn maybe used solely in one or both directions of the fabric, or one, two or more plain yarns may be introduced in the fabric along side of and in parallel relation with each helically coiled yarn.
  • the fabric shown in Fig. 3 of the drawing is of a type that is well adapted to produce the above mentioned body or limb bandage, and as shown plain yarns alone are used to form the wefts or picks ll of the fabric, while the warps of this fabric comprise three plain warp ends I! for eachhelically coiled warp end II.
  • the helically coiled yarns ID are woven into this fabric while they are in a fully extended or straight condition and this is why all of the interwoven yarns shown in Fig. 3 of the drawing appear as straight lines.
  • the fabric of the present invention may readily be constructed so that it has a stretch of or more the recovery or contraction of the fabric will be slower than that of an elastic fabric made of rubber threads, but this is desirable in many cases, such for example as in a body or limb bandage where a slow recovery and moderately strong contractive force will suffice to keep the bandage in place upon the body or limb, and will not exert sumcient force on the flesh it engages to interfere with the circulation of the blood, and the softness of feel, high compressibility and high air permeability are all desirable properties when the fabric is used to form bandages, wearing apparel, or upholstery fabric where it will present a pleasing feel to the hand or body.
  • an all textile fabric constructed in accordance with the present invention can be made with good elastic properties and a surprisingly strong contractive action, it may lose some of this contractive force if held stretched for a long period, but an extremely important property of the present fabric resides in the fact that its strong contractive action can be fully restored by simply wetting or washing the fabric in hot water and drying in a relaxed condition.
  • the twist imparted to the ysmll before the same is coiled is considerably higher than an ordinary yarn twist and is what is usually called acrepetwist.
  • Thecoiledyarnusedinthepresent fabric is described in the claims as a coiled high-twist yarn, but the twist of such yarn before it is coiled need not be so high that it is a harsh yarn that tends to kink and snarl badly, be-

Description

- Nov. 6, 1951 B. H. FOSTER 2,574,029 1 METHOD OF MAKING ALL-TEXTILE ELASTIC FABRICS 7 Filed July 10, 1946 fig: 4
f .5 INVENTOR. j awn/[.41 a mrfzk ATTORNEY Patented Nov. 6, T951 UNITED I STATES PATENT OFFICEE METHOD OF MAKING ALL-TEXTILE ELASTIC FABRICS Boutwell 11. Foster, Maplewood, N. J asslgnor to United States Rubber Company, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New J ersey 2 Claims.
This invention relates to a method of making high stretch, all-textile, woven elastic fabrics.
It has been proposed heretofore to make all textile woven fabrics having a substantial range of stretch by embodying in such fabrics in the direction in which the stretch is desired highly twisted yarns such as crepe twisted yarns, these yarns however, are harsh to the feel and tend to impart harshness to the stretchable fabric constructed of such yarns.
In many fabrics having stretchable or elastic properties, such as body or limb bandages, stretchable fabrics for covering upholstery, bathing suits, wearing apparel and the like, a fabric having a high degree of stretchability and softness to the feel is desired.
The present invention contemplates a highly stretchable, all-textile woven fabric that contains no rubber, has a range of stretch of from 50 to a 100% or more, is highly compressible and soft to the feel, has a high degree of air permeability, and when worn next to the body is cool and comfortable and has good non-slipping properties. Such a fabric is ideally suited for use as body or limb bandages, bathing suits, certain types of wearing apparel and for many other purposes.
An extremely important feature of' the highly stretchable all-textile fabric of the present invention resides in the fact that it has the soft feel of a terry fabric when in its contracted or relaxed condition. This imparts to the fabric the desired properties of softness, high compressibility, and high air permeability; and causes it to cling to the portion of the body it may engage without slipping.
The method contemplated by the present invention may be used to produce one-way stretch woven fabrics or two-way stretch woven fabrics as desired and the percentage of stretch and strength of the contractive action of the fabric may be varied throughout a wide range as desired.
The high stretch or elastic properties are imparted to the fabrics herein contemplated, without the use of rubber, by employing in such fabrics as warp or weft or as both warp and weft, a highly stretchable yarn such as shown, described and claimed in my Patent No. 2,387,320 granted October 23, 1945, and which yarn is a helically coiled high twist fibrous yarn having a long stretch and good contracting properties. If desired a fabric constructed in accordance with the present invention may have plain ordinary commercial yarns forming the entire warp or the entire weft of the fabric, but it also has interwoven 2 therewith in the direction in which the fabric is to stretch the helically coiled yarns of said patent, and such helically coiled yarns may be used alone in the direction the fabric is to stretch or may have associated therewith in parallel relation therewith one or more plain yarns for each helically coiled yarn, depending on the amount of contractive force or other properties desired in the finished fabric.
In weaving the fabric herein contemplated the helically coiled yarns when used either as warp or weft are preferably maintained under sufiicient tension while they are being woven into the fabric to hold themjn a fully extended or straight line condition, and when so woven into the fabric the yarns extending at right angles to the direction of stretch should be spaced much further apart than is desired in the fabric when relaxed and ready for the market. with such helically coiled yarn while they are stretched to their fully extended condition, the fabric will come off the loom as a loosely woven open weave fabric that has almost no stretch either longitudinally or transversely, but the desired elastic properties are easily imparted to such fabric by soaking it for a short time, while free of tension, in hot water or boiling water.
The helically coiled yarns used in the fabric as herein contemplated may be formed of cotton fibres, wool fibres, rayon filaments or other tex-* tile fibres or filaments, since the hot water will cause such helically coiled yarns after they have become straightened out to return to the form of a tightly coiled or contracted helix. Particularly good results have been secured in this respect with helically coiled cotton yarns.
One field of use in which the fabric herein contemplated has been used with excellent result is that of longitudinally stretchable body or limb bandages. Such bandages ma be made up in different widths ranging from say 2 to 6 inches wide and about 5 /2 yards long when stretched. The range of stretch of such bandage fabric may vary from about 50 to 100%, and the longitudinal stretch is imparted'to such bandages by employing in the weft plain textile yarns and in the warp both plain yarns and helically coiled yarns, there being one, two or possibly three plain warp yarns for each helically coiled warp yarn. Another important field of use for the fabric of the present invention is that of upholstery material in which a wide fabric is woven with sufficient helically coiled yarns extending either warp-wise or weftwise to impart the desired elastic properties to 55 the fabric. Still a third important field in which When a fabric is woven.
the fabric of the present invention may be employed is that of bathing suits or certain garments wherein the fabric is given stretch prop-. cities in one or two directions by embodying the helically coiled yarns in the warp or weft or in both the warp and weft as desired. In all these uses the present fabric presents an exceptionally soft terry feel.
The above and other features of the present invention will be further understood from the following description when read in connection with the accompanying drawing wherein Fig. 1 is an enlarged side elevation of an all textile helically coiled yarn employed in the elastic fabric herein contemplated.
Fig.2isasectionalview takenontheline 2-2 of Fig. l v
Fig. 3 is a plan view of a short length of fully extended woven fabric having plain yarns throughout the weft thereof and both plain and helioally coiled yarns in the warp thereof, the latter being shown in a fully extended condition.
Fig. 4 is a plan view of the fabric of Fig. 8 after it has been contracted by treating it with hot water while in a relaxed condition; and
Fig.6 is a sectional view taken on the line H of Fla. 4.
The heiically coiled yarn shown on an enlarged scale in Figs. 1 and 2 of the drawing is an all textile yarn, such for example as a cotton yarn having the stretch characteristic or elastic extensibility range of the order of 100% or more, and is preferably constructed in accordance with my patent above cited. This helically coiled yarn may be formed of a single yarn or of a plied yarn which is so coiled, the former is preferable in many cases because single yarn is cheaper to construct than plied yarn. This coiled yarn which is designated by In in the drawing is preferably made similar to the yarn shown in Figs. 2 and 3 of said patent, and it may as above stated. be used either in the warp or the weft of a fabric or in both the warp or weft as desired. Furthermore such helically coiled yarn maybe used solely in one or both directions of the fabric, or one, two or more plain yarns may be introduced in the fabric along side of and in parallel relation with each helically coiled yarn.
The fabric shown in Fig. 3 of the drawing is of a type that is well adapted to produce the above mentioned body or limb bandage, and as shown plain yarns alone are used to form the wefts or picks ll of the fabric, while the warps of this fabric comprise three plain warp ends I! for eachhelically coiled warp end II. The helically coiled yarns ID are woven into this fabric while they are in a fully extended or straight condition and this is why all of the interwoven yarns shown in Fig. 3 of the drawing appear as straight lines.
After the fabric of Fig. 3 has been removed from the loom and soaked in hot water for a few minutes while free from tension, or treated with wet steam, the stretched helically coiled yarns ll of Pig. 3 will contract as shown in Fig. 4 to contract the fabric anywhere from a small amount to as much as one-half its previous length, and it should be noted that as the helically coiled yarns ll contract to form the contracted helices they will cause the plain yarns l2 to assume the wavy line position shown mm. 4. When the coiled yarns I. contract they will contract the adjacent plain yarns l2 sufllciently to cause these yarns I! to form outwardly extending puffs or loops. and it is these loops of the plain yarn that give the fabric the soft feel of a terry fabric which 4 is very different from that of the stretchable, alltextile fabrics known heretofore. The'dispositionoftheyarns i0, II and llinthefabricof Fig.4willbefurthlsrundersfoodfromanexamination of the sectional view of Pig. 5. 1
In order that the constructions contemplated by the present invention may be further understood the following tables are given but it is to be understood that numerous other types of fabric may be produced by employing the method of the present invention:
Table 1 Analysis of the warp-wise stretchable fabric shown in Fig. 4:
Picks per inch. singles moderate twist- Analysis of a filling-wise stretchable fabric constructed in accordance with the present invention:
(Finished Extended for market relaxed) Picks r inch helicail coiled singlesl2sll cotton as as Warp Ends per inch, singles l2's/l com... 30 51 Type ofweave Modified Broken Weave.
Range of Fabric stretch 5095-7573 12s/1 before adding twist and coiling.
While the fabric of the present invention may readily be constructed so that it has a stretch of or more the recovery or contraction of the fabric will be slower than that of an elastic fabric made of rubber threads, but this is desirable in many cases, such for example as in a body or limb bandage where a slow recovery and moderately strong contractive force will suffice to keep the bandage in place upon the body or limb, and will not exert sumcient force on the flesh it engages to interfere with the circulation of the blood, and the softness of feel, high compressibility and high air permeability are all desirable properties when the fabric is used to form bandages, wearing apparel, or upholstery fabric where it will present a pleasing feel to the hand or body.
While an all textile fabric constructed in accordance with the present invention can be made with good elastic properties and a surprisingly strong contractive action, it may lose some of this contractive force if held stretched for a long period, but an extremely important property of the present fabric resides in the fact that its strong contractive action can be fully restored by simply wetting or washing the fabric in hot water and drying in a relaxed condition.
The twist imparted to the ysmll before the same is coiled is considerably higher than an ordinary yarn twist and is what is usually called acrepetwist. Thecoiledyarnusedinthepresent fabric is described in the claims as a coiled high-twist yarn, but the twist of such yarn before it is coiled need not be so high that it is a harsh yarn that tends to kink and snarl badly, be-
cause the desired elastic properties are impartedto the yarn by the combined action of the high twist and high number of helical coils and not by the twist alone.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim and desire to protect by Letters Patent is:
1. The method of making an all-textile elastic fabric having a substantial stretch and the soft feel of a terry fabric when contracted, which consists in interweaving warp and weft yarns so as to space the weft yarns a substantial distance apart and introduce in the fabric in the direction it is to stretch substantially spaced helicallycoiled hightwist fibrous yarns while these yarns are extended to an approximately straight condition, and introducing therebetween in parallel relation therewith about three ordinary yarns for each of said coiled yarns, then wetting the fabric while it is free of tension so that the extended coiled yarns will contract and form closely adjacent helical coils and at the same time compress said ordinary yarns lengthwise sufficiently to cause them to form outwardly extending pufis or loops that gives the fabric its terry feel.
2. The method of making an all-textile elastic fabric having a substantial stretch and the soft feel of a terry fabric when contracted, which consists in interweaving warp and weft yarns so as to space the weft yarns a substantial distance apart and introduce in the fabric in the direction it is to stretch substantially spaced helically-coiled high-twist fibrous yarns while these yarns are extended to an approximately straight condition, and introducing therebetween in parallel relation therewith about twice as many ordinary yarns as there are coiled yarns, then wetting so that the extended coiled yarns will contract and form closely adjacent helical coils and at the same time compress said ordinary yarns lengthwise sufiiciently to cause them to form outwardly extending puffs or loops that gives the fabric its terry feel;
BOUTWELL H. FOSTER.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS-

Claims (1)

1. THE METHOD OF MAKING AN ALL-TEXTILE ELASTIC FABRIC HAVING A SUBSTANTIAL STRETCH AND THE SOFT FEEL OF A TERRY FABRIC WHEN CONTRACTED, WHICH CONSISTS IN INTERWEAVING WARP AND WEFT YARNS SO AS TO SPACE THE WEFT YARNS A SUBSTANTIAL DISTANCE APART AND INTRODUCE IN THE FABRIC IN THE DIRECTION IT IS TO STRETCH SUBSTANTIALLY SPACED HELICALLYCOILED HIGH-TWIST FIBROUS YARNS WHILE THESE YARNS ARE EXTENDED TO AN APPROXIMATELY STRAIGHT CONDITION, AND INTRODUCING THEREBETWEEN IN PARALLEL RELATION THEREWITH ABOUT THREE ORDINARY YARNS FOR EACH OF SAID COILED YARNS, THAN WETTING THE FABRIC WHILE IT IS FREE OF TENSION SO THAT THE EXTENDED COILED YARNS WILL CONTRACT AND FORM CLOSELY ADJACENT HELICAL COILS AND AT THE SAME TIME COMPRESS SAID ORDINARY YARNS LENGTHWISE SUFFICIENTLY TO CAUSE THEM TO FORM OUTWARDLY EXTENDING PUFFS OR LOOPS THAT GIVES THE FABRIC ITS TERRY FEEL.
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Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2696845A (en) * 1951-12-29 1954-12-14 Carl F Libby Apparatus for treating elastic webbing
US2696846A (en) * 1952-03-08 1954-12-14 Carl F Libby Method of treating elastic webbing
US2799151A (en) * 1957-04-11 1957-07-16 Elder Walter Clifton Hosiery
US2803013A (en) * 1954-01-25 1957-08-20 Elwood Res Company Tonsorial robe
US2810184A (en) * 1953-06-17 1957-10-22 Harold F Sherman Method for producing a woven elastic bandage or like fabric
US2995154A (en) * 1959-01-07 1961-08-08 Kendall & Co Elastic diaper
US3032072A (en) * 1960-04-26 1962-05-01 Louis I Weiner Parachute fabric containing stretchand non-stretch-type ripstops
US3045318A (en) * 1959-06-29 1962-07-24 Riegel Textile Corp Process for the production of puffed surfaces on textile fabrics
US3086274A (en) * 1958-05-19 1963-04-23 Btr Industries Ltd Method of making composite products incorporating textile fabrics
US3127658A (en) * 1962-02-15 1964-04-07 Burlington Industries Inc Worsted stretch fabric and process for manufacturing same
US3128528A (en) * 1960-04-28 1964-04-14 Du Pont Preparation of hydroset textile material
US3145132A (en) * 1961-08-02 1964-08-18 Kendall & Co Woven stretchable fabrics
US3153838A (en) * 1963-01-11 1964-10-27 Burlington Industries Inc Worsted/synthetic stretch fabric and process for manufacturing same
US3227511A (en) * 1961-08-02 1966-01-04 Kendall & Co Methods of forming woven stretchable fabrics
US3281205A (en) * 1960-12-12 1966-10-25 Stevens & Co Inc J P Process of producing wool fabrics exhibiting unidirectional stretch
US3355785A (en) * 1965-06-09 1967-12-05 Burlington Industries Inc Stretch fabric and method of making same
US3460536A (en) * 1966-10-21 1969-08-12 Kimberly Clark Co Sanitary napkin with conformable wrapper
US3604474A (en) * 1969-04-22 1971-09-14 Haruo Kamei Scrubbing bath towel
DE1710385B1 (en) * 1967-08-09 1971-10-07 Al Pa Loh Alexander Pachmann, 8044 Lohhof Terrycloth fabric
US5598615A (en) * 1995-07-07 1997-02-04 K. K. Age Silk velvet textile and method of manufacturing the same

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1823034A (en) * 1930-11-01 1931-09-15 Electric Weave Products Inc Rubberless elastic fabric
US1823053A (en) * 1930-10-31 1931-09-15 Elastic Weave Products Inc Rubberless elastic fabric
US1922943A (en) * 1932-04-07 1933-08-15 Columbia Narrow Fabric Company Fabric
US2254339A (en) * 1938-03-15 1941-09-02 Celanese Corp Fabric
US2279206A (en) * 1941-03-06 1942-04-07 Columbia Narrow Fabric Company Fabric for garment edging
US2387320A (en) * 1944-08-05 1945-10-23 Us Rubber Co Highly stretchable yarn
US2387321A (en) * 1944-11-22 1945-10-23 Us Rubber Co Method of making highly stretchable textile yarn
US2418187A (en) * 1945-08-21 1947-04-01 Moore Fab Co Elastic tape

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1823053A (en) * 1930-10-31 1931-09-15 Elastic Weave Products Inc Rubberless elastic fabric
US1823034A (en) * 1930-11-01 1931-09-15 Electric Weave Products Inc Rubberless elastic fabric
US1922943A (en) * 1932-04-07 1933-08-15 Columbia Narrow Fabric Company Fabric
US2254339A (en) * 1938-03-15 1941-09-02 Celanese Corp Fabric
US2279206A (en) * 1941-03-06 1942-04-07 Columbia Narrow Fabric Company Fabric for garment edging
US2387320A (en) * 1944-08-05 1945-10-23 Us Rubber Co Highly stretchable yarn
US2387321A (en) * 1944-11-22 1945-10-23 Us Rubber Co Method of making highly stretchable textile yarn
US2418187A (en) * 1945-08-21 1947-04-01 Moore Fab Co Elastic tape

Cited By (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2696845A (en) * 1951-12-29 1954-12-14 Carl F Libby Apparatus for treating elastic webbing
US2696846A (en) * 1952-03-08 1954-12-14 Carl F Libby Method of treating elastic webbing
US2810184A (en) * 1953-06-17 1957-10-22 Harold F Sherman Method for producing a woven elastic bandage or like fabric
US2803013A (en) * 1954-01-25 1957-08-20 Elwood Res Company Tonsorial robe
US2799151A (en) * 1957-04-11 1957-07-16 Elder Walter Clifton Hosiery
US3086274A (en) * 1958-05-19 1963-04-23 Btr Industries Ltd Method of making composite products incorporating textile fabrics
US2995154A (en) * 1959-01-07 1961-08-08 Kendall & Co Elastic diaper
US3045318A (en) * 1959-06-29 1962-07-24 Riegel Textile Corp Process for the production of puffed surfaces on textile fabrics
US3032072A (en) * 1960-04-26 1962-05-01 Louis I Weiner Parachute fabric containing stretchand non-stretch-type ripstops
US3128528A (en) * 1960-04-28 1964-04-14 Du Pont Preparation of hydroset textile material
US3281205A (en) * 1960-12-12 1966-10-25 Stevens & Co Inc J P Process of producing wool fabrics exhibiting unidirectional stretch
US3145132A (en) * 1961-08-02 1964-08-18 Kendall & Co Woven stretchable fabrics
US3227511A (en) * 1961-08-02 1966-01-04 Kendall & Co Methods of forming woven stretchable fabrics
US3127658A (en) * 1962-02-15 1964-04-07 Burlington Industries Inc Worsted stretch fabric and process for manufacturing same
US3153838A (en) * 1963-01-11 1964-10-27 Burlington Industries Inc Worsted/synthetic stretch fabric and process for manufacturing same
US3355785A (en) * 1965-06-09 1967-12-05 Burlington Industries Inc Stretch fabric and method of making same
US3460536A (en) * 1966-10-21 1969-08-12 Kimberly Clark Co Sanitary napkin with conformable wrapper
DE1710385B1 (en) * 1967-08-09 1971-10-07 Al Pa Loh Alexander Pachmann, 8044 Lohhof Terrycloth fabric
US3604474A (en) * 1969-04-22 1971-09-14 Haruo Kamei Scrubbing bath towel
US5598615A (en) * 1995-07-07 1997-02-04 K. K. Age Silk velvet textile and method of manufacturing the same

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