序号 专利名 申请号 申请日 公开(公告)号 公开(公告)日 发明人
181 Breathable Fire Resistant Fabrics US15641696 2017-07-05 US20180127903A1 2018-05-10 Tyler M. Thatcher
Lightweight, flexible protective fabrics for protecting a person, animal or other object from hot burning materials, hot high heat capacity and/or hot corrosive materials, such as hot molten metal, hot oily liquids (e.g., heating oil), hot gels, hot solids, hot sparks, and hot acids. The lightweight protective fabrics can be used to protect a person, animal or other object from hot molten metals, such as liquid metal zinc heated to a temperature of about 950° F. (510° C.) or greater, hot molten aluminum heated to a temperature of about 1150° F. (620° C.) or greater, burning phosphorus at temperature of about 1550° F. (843° C.) or greater, hot solid iron having a temperature of about 500° F. (260° C.) or greater, hot heating oil having a temperature of about 500° F. (260° C.) or greater, and hot hydrochloric acid having a temperature of about 300° F. (150° C.) or greater.
182 NON-SEAMED SHEETING FABRIC HAVING A COOL PORTION AND A WARM PORTION US15782207 2017-10-12 US20180103783A1 2018-04-19 Thomas Danaher
A non-seamed sheeting fabric, such as a bed sheet, including a cool portion and a warm portion that is integral with the cool portion. The warm portion is configured to provide greater thermal insulation than the cool portion.
183 PERFORMANCE FABRICS AND RELATED ARTICLES US15424586 2017-02-03 US20180080151A1 2018-03-22 Dipali Goenka; Subrata Palit
An embodiment of the present disclosure is a performance fabric. The performance fabric includes a plurality of warp yarns extending along a warp direction. The warp yarn includes a first warp yarn and a second warp yarn that is directly adjacent to the first warp yarn. The plurality of warp yarns are blended staple warp yarns each of which has cotton fibers and regenerated cellulosic fibers. The performance fabric includes a plurality of weft yarns interwoven with the plurality of warp yarns to define a woven fabric structure. The plurality of weft yarns includes at least one yarn comprising thermoplastic fibers or a blend yarn comprising regenerated cellulosic fibers.
184 TICKING US15545754 2016-03-17 US20180016714A1 2018-01-18 Norihisa FUJIWARA; Ryo YASUMITSU
Ticking having excellent flexibility is described. A woven fabric is obtained by using a multifilament having a monofilament fineness of not more than 0.5 dtex, the number of filaments of 100 or more and a total fineness of not more than 50 dtex and used as ticking. The woven fabric can be made of a polyester.
185 Terry article with synthetic filament yarns and method of making same US14866916 2015-09-26 US09828704B2 2017-11-28 Dipali Goenka
A terry article includes a ground component including a plurality of ground warp yarns and a plurality of weft yarns, and a pile component disposed on at least one of a lower side and an upper side of the ground component. The pile component includes a first plurality of piles that extend away from the ground component along a vertical direction. The first plurality of piles are formed from a first set of pile yarns comprised of natural fibers and further define a first pile height. The pile component also includes a second plurality of piles that extend away from the ground component in the vertical direction. The second plurality of piles are formed from a set of continuous filament thermoplastic yarns and define a second pile height that is less than the first pile height.
186 HYGRO MATERIALS FOR USE IN MAKING YARNS AND FABRICS US15619002 2017-06-09 US20170275791A1 2017-09-28 Rajesh R. Mandawewala
A process is described wherein pile yarn is woven with cotton weft and warp yarns to produce terry fabrics, such as towels. The fabric is then washed in warm water to dissolve the PVA fibers. The amount of fibers dissolved, depends upon the count of the yarn or yarns used. By dissolving the PVA fibers, a hollow air space is produced throughout the pile yarn, corresponding to an increase in the air space in the pile yarn. By increasing the air space in the pile yarn, the resulting towels are softer and bulkier than standard cotton towels. The present invention further relates to pile yarn in terry woven fabric (warp yarn), or weft yarn, in the case of flat fabrics.
187 Insulating sheer fabric US15484596 2017-04-11 US09719195B1 2017-08-01 Gary Goldberg
Fabrics which allow for light transmission and provide thermal insulation are described. A fabric is formed from at least one yarn to form a continuous web of fabric. The continuous web is configured to allow some incident light to be transmitted through the fabric, and to reduce heat transfer through the fabric. The continuous web of fabric may be a woven fabric where the at least one yarn is woven to form the woven fabric.
188 CHAMBRAY FABRIC, BEDDING ARTICLES, AND RELATED MANUFACTURING METHODS US15274915 2016-09-23 US20170088985A1 2017-03-30 Dipali Goenka; Subrata Palit
A woven chambray fabric, including a method and system for forming same includes a plurality of warp yarns, each warp yarn including natural fibers. The woven fabric includes a plurality of weft yarns interwoven with the plurality of warp yarns. Each weft yarn defines a weft yarn assembly that has a first weft yarn, a second weft yarn that extends alongside the first weft yarn, and a plurality of consolidation regions where the first weft yarn and the second weft yarn are coupled to each other. The first weft yarn is a spun staple yarn that includes natural fibers and the second weft yarn is a dyed continuous filament yarn. The second weft yarn is dyed a color that is different from a color of the first weft yarn and each warp yarn so as to define the woven chambray fabric.
189 PILLOW ARTICLE, TEXTILE MATERIAL, AND RELATED METHODS US15274811 2016-09-23 US20170088983A1 2017-03-30 Dipali Goenka; Radhika Goenka; Subrata Palit
A textile article that includes a pillow case forming for a textile material includes a composition impregnated into the textile material.
190 FABRIC FOR A TABLE LINEN TEXTILE US15126884 2015-03-18 US20170086615A1 2017-03-30 Onni ALANEN
Disclosed is a fabric for a table linen textile. The fabric including warp yarns configured to form a warp, the warp yarns including polyester, and filling yarns configured to form a filling. The warp and filling being woven according to a twill or satin weave, where each filling yarn repeats a sequence by passing under at least one warp yarn and passing over at least one warp yarn sequentially. The warp yarns including twisted filament polyester yarns in the twill weave, or twisted polyester staple fiber yarns or twisted polyester low pilling staple fiber yarns in the satin weave for increasing a durability of the fabric.
191 PERCALE BEDDING SYSTEM US15288263 2016-10-07 US20170020310A1 2017-01-26 Kamal Garg; Gagan Rai
Percale weave sheeting has warp yarn and weft yarn. The percale weave sheeting has two surfaces. Both surfaces exhibit color consistency. The warp yarn and the weft yarn are a cross weave of cotton and polyester.
192 Down-proof double-layer fabric US14803680 2015-07-20 US09551093B2 2017-01-24 Tung-Jung Hsu
A first fabric layer of a down-proof double-layer fabric has a plurality of first warps and a plurality of first wefts. A second fabric layer has a plurality of second warps and a plurality of second wefts. The first fabric layer and the second fabric layer have a plurality of coupling portions. In the coupling portions, the first fabric layer and the second fabric layer pass through each other repeatedly, and the first warps and the second warps are interlaced. The first warps, the first wefts, the second warps, and the second wefts are between 20 denier and 75 denier. The warp densities of the first fabric layer and the second fabric layer are between 336 pieces/in and 456 pieces/in, and the weft densities of the first fabric layer and the second fabric layer are between 220 pieces/inch2 and 300 pieces/in.
193 Proliferated thread count of a woven textile by simultaneous insertion within a single pick insertion event of a loom apparatus multiple adjacent parallel yarns drawn from a multi-pick yarn package US15060595 2016-03-03 US09493892B1 2016-11-15 Arun Agarwal
In one or more embodiments, multiple texturized polyester weft yarns of denier between 15 and 65 are wound on a single bobbin in a parallel adjacent fashion such that they may be fed into an air jet pick insertion apparatus and/or a rapier pick insertion apparatus of an air jet loom to weave a textile that has between 90 to 235 ends per inch cotton warp yarns and between 100 and 965 polyester weft yarns.
194 Percale bedding system US14828868 2015-08-18 US09474395B2 2016-10-25 Kamal Garg; Gagan Rai
Percale weave sheeting having warp yarn and weft yarn, the warp yarn and the weft yarn being a cross weave of cotton and polyester.
195 PERCALE BEDDING SYSTEM US14668124 2015-03-25 US20160278550A1 2016-09-29 GAGAN RAI
Bedding fabricated of percale weave sheeting includes two pillow cases, a top sheet, and a fitted sheet. The percale weave sheeting has cotton warp yarn with a denier of 15 D to 240 D. The percale weave sheeting has polyester weft yarn with a denier 15 D to 240 D. The polyester weft yarn is polyester filament, low intermingle. The cotton warp yarn and the polyester weft yarn are in a cross weave, 1/1, 1 over 1 and under.
196 SEMI-ABSORBENT, SEMI-RESISTANT, BREATHABLE FABRIC US15004959 2016-01-24 US20160138216A1 2016-05-19 Dipali GOENKA
A semi-absorbent, semi-resistant, breathable fabric includes a single-layer having a first, hydrophilic side that absorbs water, and a second, hydrophobic side; wherein the first, hydrophilic side of the single-layer fabric quickly spreads out a liquid that is absorbed laterally to a wider area such that the absorbed liquid does not seep or pass through to the second, hydrophobic side of the single-layer fabric under gravitational force. A method of making a semi-absorbent, semi-resistant, breathable fabric includes: subjecting a first side of a single-layer fabric to a hydrophilic amino functional polysiloxane softener; treating a second opposite side of the fabric with a fluorocarbon compound under low pressure such that the fluorocarbon compound penetrates no more than half of the fabric thickness; and drying and curing the fabric, preferably at a temperature of about 145° C. to 155° C. for about three minutes to about five minutes.
197 DECORATIVE MATTRESS BORDER FABRIC WITH INHERENT FLAME BARRIER US14663014 2015-03-19 US20150267323A1 2015-09-24 Scott FRISCH; George BOOTH; James FLEMING
A flame barrier substrate consisting principally of non-fire-retardant (non-FR) fiber with fire-resistant properties and affinity for sublistatic dyes. The flame barrier substrate includes a balanced fine core-spun yarn whose face may include fibers with an affinity for dyes, e.g., sublistatic dyes. The balanced fine core-spun yarn may also include a heat-stable core enveloped in a sheath of low-temperature-resistant fibers such as, for example, non-fire-retardant (non-FR) fibers. The balanced fine core-spun yarns may be further combined with other balanced fine core-spun yarns made with a sheath of fire-retardant fibers for added flame barrier performance. This flame barrier substrate may be constructed to concentrate the dye-receptive yarns on the technical face of the fabric for optimal aesthetics.
198 Easy roll stiff screen US13853512 2013-03-29 US09140062B2 2015-09-22 Rubén Cuatepotzo; Victor Manuel Castro
A woven screen can include at least one first fiber oriented in a main direction of the woven screen and having a polymer coating and a first stiffness value, and at least one second fiber oriented in a direction of the woven screen different from the main direction, configured to intersect with the at least one first fiber, and having a modified polymer coating and a second stiffness value about 20% to about 70% greater than the first stiffness value. The modified polymer coating can include a polymer, a crosslinking agent, a catalyst, and a free radical initiator. The at least one first fiber can include the warp and the at least one second fiber can include the weft, respectively, of the woven screen. The second stiffness value can be about 40% greater than the first stiffness value over a temperature range of about −40° Celsius to about +40° Celsius.
199 HYGRO MATERIALS FOR USE IN MAKING YARNS AND FABRICS US14529172 2014-10-31 US20150110992A1 2015-04-23 Rajesh R. MANDAWEWALA
A process is described wherein pile yarn is woven with cotton weft and warp yarns to produce ferry fabrics, such as towels. The fabric is then washed in warm water to dissolve the PVA fibers. The amount of fibers dissolved, depends upon the count of the yarn or yarns used. By dissolving the PVA fibers, a hollow air space is produced throughout the pile yarn, corresponding to an increase in the air space in the pile yarn. By increasing the air space in the pile yarn, the resulting towels are softer and bulkier than standard cotton towels. The present invention further relates to pile yarn in terry woven fabric (warp yarn), or weft yarn, in the case of flat fabrics.
200 HYGRO MATERIALS FOR USE IN MAKING YARNS AND FABRICS US14529171 2014-10-31 US20150104990A1 2015-04-16 Rajesh R. MANDAWEWALA
A process is described wherein pile yarn is woven with cotton weft and warp yarns to produce terry fabrics, such as towels. The fabric is then washed in warm water to dissolve the PVA fibers. The amount of fibers dissolved, depends upon the count of the yarn or yarns used. By dissolving the PVA fibers, a hollow air space is produced throughout the pile yarn, corresponding to an increase in the air space in the pile yarn. By increasing the air space in the pile yarn, the resulting towels are softer and bulkier than standard cotton towels. The present invention further relates to pile yarn in terry woven fabric (warp yarn), or weft yarn, in the case of flat fabrics.
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