Bottom garment having a comfort fit liner
11730213 · 2023-08-22
Assignee
Inventors
- Whitney Neary (Mission, KS, US)
- Amber Burke (Lee's Summit, MO, US)
- Angela Kathleen Primavera (Lenexa, KS, US)
- Hannah Alice Palmer (Kansas City, MO, US)
- Shawn Tilson Mueller (Prairie Village, KS, US)
- Robert Owen (Pleasant Hill, MO, US)
- Ye Ren De (ShuDe FoShan, CN)
- Surendar Sihag (Rajasthan, IN)
- Yu Hui Bin (ShuDe FoShan, CN)
- John D. Lindquist (Liberty, NC, US)
- Steven Charles Miller (Olathe, KS, US)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A bottom garment including a front panel, a back panel, and a garment lining. The front panel formed of a first fabric and the garment lining formed of a second fabric. The garment lining attached to an inside surface of the front panel and an inside surface of the back panel. The garment lining attached above a crotch point of the garment such that the garment lining is less restrictive than the front panel.
Claims
1. A bottom garment comprising: a front panel formed of a first fabric; a back panel; and a garment lining formed of a second fabric, the garment lining attached to an inside surface of the front panel and an inside surface of the back panel, the garment lining having a top edge, the garment lining attached to the garment along the top edge thereof, the garment lining being less restrictive than the front panel.
2. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the back panel is formed of the first fabric.
3. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the second fabric has a stretch in a weft direction that is greater than a stretch of the first fabric in the weft direction.
4. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the second fabric has a stretch in a warp direction greater than a stretch of the second fabric in a weft direction.
5. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the first fabric has a stretch in a weft direction greater than 25% when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
6. The bottom garment according to claim 5, wherein the stretch in the weft direction of the first fabric is between 25% and 60% when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
7. The bottom garment according to claim 6, wherein the stretch in the weft direction of the first fabric is 50% when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
8. The bottom garment according to claim 5, wherein a stretch of the second fabric in a weft direction is greater than 80% when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
9. The bottom garment according to claim 8, wherein the stretch the second fabric in the weft direction is between 80% and 200% when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
10. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein a stretch of the second fabric in a weft direction is 150% or greater when tested according to ASTM D2594-04 (2012).
11. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the second fabric comprises a knitted fabric.
12. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the second fabric comprises a circular knit fabric.
13. The bottom garment according to claim 12, wherein the circular knit fabric is an interlock circular knit fabric having 43 wales per inch and 38 courses per inch and 16 gauge.
14. The bottom garment according to claim 1, wherein the second fabric comprises a synthetic yarn.
15. The bottom garment according to claim 14, wherein the second fabric comprises polyester yarn.
16. The bottom garment according to claim 11, wherein the knitted fabric is between 2 oz/sq yd and 6 oz/sq yd.
17. A bottom garment comprising: a front panel formed of a first fabric; a back panel; and a garment lining formed of a second fabric attached on an inside of the front panel and the back panel such that the garment lining is less restrictive than the front panel and the back panel.
18. The bottom garment according to claim 17, further comprising an elastic support band for maintaining a position of the bottom garment when the garment is worn.
19. The bottom garment according to claim 18, wherein the elastic support band is disposed between the inside of the front panel and the garment lining.
20. A bottom garment comprising: a waistband; a first fabric forming a first garment panel, the first fabric panel having a top edge attached to the waistband; and a second fabric forming a garment lining, the garment lining having a top edge, the garment lining attached along the top edge to an inside of the waistband or an inside of the first garment panel, the garment lining attached such that the garment lining is less restrictive than the first garment panel.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(11) In the following description, like reference characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the several views. Also in the following description, it is to be understood that such terms as “forward,” “rearward,” “left,” “right,” “upwardly,” “downwardly,” and the like are words of convenience and are not to be construed as limiting terms.
(12) Referring now to the drawings in general and
(13) As seen in
(14) Turning next to
(15) Front and back panels 12, 14 may be formed of a high weft-stretch fabric. The front and back panels 12, 14 may, for example, be a stretch denim fabric for jeans and/or suitable fabrics used for pants, capris, skirts and/or shorts. In one example, (see
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(17) The lining 16 may be a one piece lining attached to the inside of bottom garment 10′. The lining 16 may be more than one piece covering one or more of the sub-assemblies, for example, front panel 12, back panel 14, waistband 20, pocket assembly 24, hip pocket assembly 30 and/or fly assembly 26. The lining, for example, may be attached, such as stitched, into the garment inside at the edges of the respective assemblies. Lining 16 as seen in
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(19) In some embodiments, as seen in
(20) Garment lining 16, in one embodiment, is attached on the inside of panels 12, 14 above a crotch point 22 on the bottom garment. In one example, the lining 16 is formed of a high weft-stretch, low weight fabric. As seen in
(21) The garment lining 16 may be formed of a knitted fabric. The knitted fabric, in some examples, is a circular knit fabric. In other examples, the knitted fabric is an interlock circular knit fabric having about 43 wales per inch and about 38 courses per inch and 16 gauge. The knitted fabric may also be a synthetic yarn fabric. The knitted fabric may be a 100% polyester yarn fabric. In other embodiments, the knitted fabric is formed of 75 denier, 72 filament multi-filament yarn. The knitted fabric may be between about 2 oz/sq yd and about 6 oz/sq yd. The knitted fabric may be about 4 oz/sq yd.
(22) In one embodiment, a suitable garment lining may, by way of example, be Fabric Reference Number FNVF0123-16 available from Fountain Set.
(23) As shown in
(24) In some embodiments, the stretch in the warp direction (vertical) of the garment lining 16 is less than the stretch in the weft direction of the garment lining 16.
(25) In other embodiments, the garment 10 also includes a support band. The support band may be an elastic support band for maintaining the position of the garment when the garment is worn. The elastic support band may include at least one elastic strip around the waist 20 of the bottom garment 10. At least one elastic strip around the waist of the bottom garment 10 may be located between the inside of the garment 10′ and the garment lining 16. In some examples, more than one elastic support band may be included in or with the waistband 20. Elastic strips may be placed at variable positions of the waistband 20 between the liner 16 and the garment 10.
(26) Certain modifications and improvements will occur to those skilled in the art upon a reading of the foregoing description. By way of example, while one embodiment shown in the above disclosure illustrates a bottom garment 10 that may include jeans, pants, culottes and shorts, it should be clear that the inventions of the present disclosure may be modified, as disclosed, to further include a garment liner in garments include skirts and top garments, such as, shirts, vests and jackets. Still other improvements might include partially covering the inside of a garment assembly with the garment lining and/or completely covering the inside of a garment with the garment lining; attaching a garment liner using various stitching methods; and providing a seam masking garment liner when the liner covers the seams of the garment that may be high friction and highly restrictive garment areas since the garment may stretch less at some of the garment seams. It should be understood that all such modifications and improvements have been deleted herein for the sake of conciseness and readability but are properly within the scope of the following claims.