A METHOD FOR PROVIDING VISUAL EFFECTS TO A DECORATIVE PATTERN, A CONTROL UNIT AND A SYSTEM FOR IN-LINE TREATMENT OF THREAD
20220034008 · 2022-02-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
D05B67/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
D05C11/24
TEXTILES; PAPER
International classification
D06B11/00
TEXTILES; PAPER
Abstract
A method for providing visual effects to a decorative thread pattern, is provided. The method includes determining an object to be produced as such decorative thread pattern, determining a thread arrangement comprising a plurality of consecutive thread portions, each thread portion having a thread portion direction, wherein the entire thread arrangement corresponds to said object to be produced, determining at least one visual effect of said object to be produced, said visual effect being associated with a set of thread portions of said thread arrangement and having a direction being different from at least one thread portion direction of the set of thread portions, and determining a colouring scheme for a specific thread such that the visual effect is obtained when production of the decorative thread pattern, using said thread according to said thread arrangement, is performed. A control unit is also provided.
Claims
1-15. (canceled)
16. A method for providing visual effects to a decorative thread pattern, comprising: determining an object to be produced as such decorative thread pattern, determining a thread arrangement comprising a plurality of consecutive thread portions, each thread portion having a thread portion direction, wherein the entire thread arrangement corresponds to said object to be produced, determining at least one visual effect of said object to be produced, said visual effect being associated with a set of thread portions of said thread arrangement and having a direction being different from at least one thread portion direction of the set of thread portions, and determining a colouring scheme for a specific thread such that the visual effect is obtained when production of the decorative thread pattern, using said thread according to said thread arrangement, is performed.
17. The method according to claim 16, further comprising providing in-line colouring of said thread in accordance with said colouring scheme during production of the decorative thread pattern.
18. The method according to claim 16, wherein said visual effect is a gradient, stripes, mottling, colour change in respect to absolute thread length, colour change in respect to relative thread length, solid colour, noise, manipulation, mix, or a combination thereof.
19. The method according to claim 16, wherein said visual effect is a continuous change in colour, brightness, hue, and/or saturation.
20. The method according to claim 16, wherein the colouring scheme is determined by associating a first set of thread portions with a first colour, and a second set of thread portions with a second colour.
21. The method according to claim 16, wherein the colouring scheme is determined by associating an initial thread portion with a first colour, a final thread portion with a second colour, and determining a colour shift from the first colour to the second colour along the thread portions in between the initial thread portion and the final thread portion.
22. The method according to claim 21, wherein the colour shift is continuous such that the visual effect appears to be linear.
23. The method according to claim 21, wherein the continuous colour shift is non-linear.
24. The method according to claim 16, wherein the decorative thread pattern is an embroidery, the thread arrangement is a stitch pattern, and the plurality of consecutive thread portions is a plurality of consecutive stitches.
25. The method according to claim 16, wherein the decorative thread pattern is a knitted fabric, the thread arrangement is a stitch pattern, and the plurality of consecutive thread portions is a plurality of consecutive stitches.
26. The method according to claim 16, wherein the decorative thread pattern is a woven fabric, the thread arrangement is a weave pattern, and the plurality of consecutive thread portions is a plurality of consecutive interlacing between a warp and a weft.
27. The method according to claim 16, wherein the decorative thread pattern is a sewn fabric, the thread arrangement is a stitch pattern, and the plurality of consecutive thread portions is a plurality of consecutive stitches.
28. The method according to claim 16, wherein the decorative thread pattern is a tufted fabric, the thread arrangement is a tuft pattern, and the plurality of consecutive thread portions is a plurality of consecutive tuft piles.
29. A control unit configured to: receive information of at least one visual effect of an object to be produced as a decorative thread pattern, said decorative thread pattern comprising a thread arrangement comprising a plurality of consecutive thread portions, each thread portion having a thread portion direction, wherein said visual effect is associated with a set of thread portions of said thread arrangement and having a direction being different from at least one thread portion direction of the set of thread portions, receive a colouring scheme for a thread, and control a treatment unit to perform in-line colouring of the thread such that the visual effect is obtained when production of the decorative thread pattern, using said thread according to said thread arrangement, is performed.
30. A system for in-line treatment of thread for use with a thread consuming device, comprising: a treatment unit being configured to dispense one or more colouring substances onto the at least one thread when activated; and a control unit according to claim 29, being configured to transmit a control signal to said treatment unit based on the determined colouring scheme.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] Embodiments of the invention will be described in the following description of the present invention; reference being made to the appended drawings which illustrate non-limiting examples of how the inventive concept can be reduced into practice.
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0032] Starting in
[0033] Now turning to
[0034] The treatment unit 100 allows the embroidery machine 15 to operate without the provision of uniquely pre-coloured threads, as is required for conventional embroidery machines. Instead, the treatment unit 100 provides in-line colouring of a thread 20 in accordance with predetermined colouring patterns, such that a coloured embroidery can be produced. The treatment unit 100 thus replaces individual thread reels as is present in prior art systems.
[0035] The thread consuming device 15 is preferably arranged to provide a thread arrangement 22 into a substrate 30. This is schematically shown in
[0036] A plurality of thread portions 24 forms an object 26 as a decorative thread pattern onto the substrate 30. The object 26 may be a specific pattern, figure, shape, text, emblem, symbol, or the like. The object 26 may e.g. be an embroidered logotype or a company name.
[0037] As mentioned earlier, a control unit 110 is in connection with the thread consuming device 15 as well as to the treatment unit 100. In order to allow for visual effects of the decorative thread pattern to be produced, the control unit 110 is configured to initially determine an object to be produced as a decorative thread pattern. Visual effects may e.g. include a gradient, stripes, mottling, etc. More specifically, typical effects which are used with the present invention include i) colour change in respect to absolute thread length (such as 3 cm red, 23 cm green), ii) colour change in respect to relative thread length (such as 30% red, 70% green), iii) solid colour, iv) gradient, v) noise, vi) manipulation (such as change in hue, tone, brightness, contrast, etc.), vii) mix (i.e. merging of different swatches). Each one of these effects can be repeated for a number of times within the area of the certain effect.
[0038] Within this context, the term “noise” relates to one or more colours to which some kind of manipulation is added, e.g. saturation or brightness, where the manipulation is a fractal, Gaussian, or other. The term “swatch” relates to a setting that will generate a specific dispensing pattern, of the coating substance, for a certain design segment. The design segment may be a part of a pattern, figure, shape, text, emblem, symbol, colour gradient, or the like. A swatch may e.g. be a solid, a gradient, or a transformation from a solid which after a certain length transforms to a gradient between two colours.
[0039] From this object, which e.g. may be a graphical representation of an item, an image, a logotype, etc., the control unit 110 is further configured to determine a thread arrangement comprising a plurality of consecutive thread portions, each thread portion having a thread portion direction, wherein the entire thread arrangement corresponds to said object to be produced. Importantly, the control unit 110 may not be capable of determining such thread arrangement by its own structure and configuration, but the control unit 110 may in some embodiments receive thread arrangement data from another control unit. For example, the thread consuming device 15 may be provided by a first supplier, while the treatment unit 100 is provided by a second supplier. In such case the control unit 110 may be provided with the treatment unit 100, while being configured to receive thread arrangement data from a control unit of the thread consuming device 15.
[0040] The purpose of the control unit 110 is to control in-line colouring of the thread such that the visual effect appears on the object to be produced. During normal operation, the control unit receives information, or data, representing at least one visual effect of said object to be produced. The visual effect may in one example be a colour gradient, or any other colour effect as mentioned above. The visual effect is preferably associated with a set of thread portions of the thread arrangement. In a preferred embodiment, the visual effect has a direction being different from at least one thread portion direction of the set of thread portions. The control unit 110 is further configured to determine a colouring scheme for a thread such that the visual effect is obtained when production of the decorative thread pattern, using said thread according to said thread arrangement, is performed. Determining of the colouring scheme may be performed remote from the control unit 110, such that the control unit 110 receives the desired colouring scheme. In such case, the control unit 110 is configured to convert the received colouring scheme to a control signal for the treatment unit 100. However, since there are usually several different control units involved with in-line colouring during thread consumption (i.e. one control unit 110 to control the treatment unit 100, one control unit to control the thread consuming device, one control unit to convert image data to stitch pattern, etc.), the exact distribution of tasks between these control units is not important.
[0041] Further details of the technical concept will now be described with reference to
[0042] Instead of splitting the thread arrangement 22 into separate rows of a unique colour, and thereby achieve a resulting colour change from black to white via discrete grey intermediates, a set of thread portions 24, or stitches, is determined which will cover the visual effect part 25c of the thread arrangement 22. In the shown example, the set of stitches is covering the stitches from 24c to 24d.
[0043] The control unit 110 is capable of transmitting a control signal to the treatment unit 100, such that the desired colouring of the thread is performed. Typically, such control signal may be configured in either one of two ways. In a first option, the control unit 110 receives or determines a specific colour for each stitch between the start and end stitches 24c-d, such that the transition from black to white occurs in the desired manner. Using such control strategy, it is required to know details of the amount of thread used for each stitch.
[0044] Instead, as a second option, the control unit 110 determines only the start colour at the start stitch 24c and the final colour at the end stitch 24d, and controls the thread colouring such that the transition from black to white occurs in the desired manner. Using such control strategy, it is not required to know details of the amount of thread used for each stitch but instead the colour change is “floating”. For such embodiment the total length of the thread is determined, i.e. the length of the thread required to perform the thread portions of the visual effect. In one preferred embodiment, the colouring is performed for a thread portion exceeding the determined total length; the last stitches are then performed such that they will not be visible.
[0045] The second alternative can be modified to further improve the visual effects of a decorative thread pattern to be produced. In the example shown in
[0046] The control unit 110 may in this embodiment be configured to determine the amount of thread that will be used for each row of the thread arrangement 22; as the required thread amount is decreasing as the thread arrangement grows upwards, a linear colour change of the thread will not likely provide a desired result. Instead, the control unit 110 may be capable of compensating the colour change rate based on the required thread amount of each row, such that the colour change is initially slower over the length of the thread. Thereby a linear colour change of the thread arrangement 22 is obtained in the direction D4.
[0047] Now turning to
[0048] Starting with an initial step 202, an object to be produced as such decorative thread pattern is determined. In practice, such step 202 may be performed by loading an image or other graphical representation into a memory of a control unit, such as the control unit 110 as described herein or another control unit of a remote device, such as a computer having a program for loading images and to produce a stitch file from such images. In a following step 204 a thread arrangement is determined, comprising a plurality of consecutive thread portions. This step 204 may e.g. correspond to creating a stitch file, corresponding to the embroidery to be produced. In the thread arrangement, each thread portion has a thread portion direction, and typically the entire thread arrangement corresponds to the decorative thread pattern to be produced.
[0049] The method 200 proceeds by performing a step 206 of determining one or more visual effects of the object to be produced and associating the visual effect with a set of thread portions, or stitches. Preferably, the direction of the visual effect is different, such as perpendicular, to the direction of the associated stitches.
[0050] Within this step 206, the method 200 preferably performs a step 208 of setting a start position for the visual effect, i.e. a start stitch, as well as a step 210 of setting an end position for the visual effect, i.e. an end stitch. Once the visual effect has been determined in terms of its start and end position, the method 200 performs a step 212 of determining a colouring scheme for a thread such that the visual effect is obtained when production of the decorative thread pattern, using the thread according to the thread arrangement, is performed.
[0051] This step 212 is performed by determining a suitable colouring of the thread as the thread passes the treatment unit 100 on its way to forming part of the thread arrangement. In a final step 214, the method 200 performs actual production of the visual effect by performing in-line colouring of the thread during operation of the thread consuming device 15 such that the coloured thread is handled in the desired manner, i.e. such that the decorative thread pattern, with its visual effect, is obtained.
[0052] Although the present invention has been described above with reference to specific embodiments, it is not intended to be limited to the specific form set forth herein. Rather, the invention is limited only by the accompanying claims.
[0053] In the claims, the term “comprises/comprising” does not exclude the presence of other elements or steps. Additionally, although individual features may be included in different claims, these may possibly advantageously be combined, and the inclusion in different claims does not imply that a combination of features is not feasible and/or advantageous. In addition, singular references do not exclude a plurality. The terms “a”, “an”, “first”, “second” etc do not preclude a plurality. Reference signs in the claims are provided merely as a clarifying example and shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims in any way.