US2491299A - Brassiere - Google Patents
Brassiere Download PDFInfo
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- US2491299A US2491299A US745364A US74536447A US2491299A US 2491299 A US2491299 A US 2491299A US 745364 A US745364 A US 745364A US 74536447 A US74536447 A US 74536447A US 2491299 A US2491299 A US 2491299A
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- sections
- edge section
- section
- wall portion
- edge
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A41—WEARING APPAREL
- A41C—CORSETS; BRASSIERES
- A41C3/00—Brassieres
Definitions
- This invention relates to apparel and more particularly to brassieres.
- An important object of the invention is to provide a brassire, including portions extending over the wearers back but which portions, owing to the novel construction and arrangement of parts of the brassiere, will not tend to ride upwardly.
- Another important object is to provide such a brassire which may be worn with garments cut low in the back, and the back portion of the brassire will not extend nor tend to extend above the horizontal plane nor outwardly of the vertical planes and inclined planes of the upper edges of the back portion of the garment.
- Still another important object is to provide a brassiere, so constructed and with the parts thereof so arranged, that there will be no puckering, wrinkling nor unsightly folding of the brassiere walls.
- a major object is to provide a brassiere, as described, which will obviate the unsightly outwardly convex swell of the flesh above the upper edges of the brassiere, where the wearers breasts merge into the adjacent portions of the thorax.
- FIG. 1 is a front elevation of the new brassire, including stretchable portions with the latter under no tension.
- Fig. 2 is a similar view, but with the stretchable portions under tension.
- Fig. 3 is a front elevation of an end fragment of the novel brassiere, with parts removed, to better illustrate portions of the construction.
- Fig. 4 is a rear elevation of the end fragment of Fig. 3 and with parts not under tension.
- Fig. 5 is like view, but with parts under tension.
- Fig. 6 is a view, somewhat similar to Fig. 3 but with portions of the inner and outer walls of the garment partly seperated in order to better illustrate the arrangement of parts.
- the brassiere also includes novel end sections l5 and 16, each provided with a first wall portion I1 which, in the example shown, is the front portion, a second wall portion 18 which, in the example shown, is the rear portion, a length or first portion [9 of stretchable material, and a length or second portion 20 of stretchable material.
- the brassiere may include suitable shoulder straps 2
- the end sections I I5 and I6 are, preferably, substantially alike, with the first wall portion I! having an edge section 25 secured to the edge section I 2, as by stitchings 26, an edge section 21 secured to the edge section 13 of the intermediate portion 10, as by stitchings 28, an upper edge section 29 defining an upper edge 30, a lower edge section 3
- the edge 34 forms, with the lower edge 32, an
- edges 38 and 40 substantially a right angle
- the edges 36 and 40 form an obtuse angle
- the two wall portions l1 and I8,- are secured together along at least a part of their lower edge sections 31 and 31 respectively as by stitchings 43 but the upper edge sections 29 and are not secured together.
- the edge 42 of the wall portion 18 is spaced from the end edges I2 and I3 of the intermediate portion II]. An average spacing of one-and-onequarter inches is given by way of example although, of course, thisspacing may vary.
- the end edge of the wall portion 18 is spaced from the outer or end edge 34 of the wall portion II, so that the outer edge section 39, as well as parts of the upper and lower edge sections 35 and 31 of thewall portion l8, extend outwardly (or endwardly) of the end edge 34.
- Each wall portion I! and I8 is of suitable flexible material, as cloth.
- the length or first section I9 of stretchable material may be secured at one of its ends 45 to the intermediate portion III at adjacent the juncture of the portion In and wall portion I1, and is secured, at its other end 46 to the wall portion I 8 at the section thereof where this sections joins the section .35, hut ,it is not secured, at this end 48, to the wall portion ill.
- the wall portion I8 is indirectly secured to the intermediate portion Ill by the length or first section I9, bridging the portions H1 and I8, and the portion I8 is not attached to the portion I! along their edge sections 29 and 35. This permits wide relative play of the wall portion I8 with respect thothe portion I7.
- each length 20 is looped, asin Fig. 6, and itsends 50 and secured to its associated wall portion '-I'I, one end 50 at adjacent the iuncture of the sections 29 and33, and the cther end 51 atad jacent the juncture of the sections 3
- the section '20 "reaches the edge section "39 of the portion -I-'8 it is secured thereto, as by stitc'hi-ngs 53.
- the lengths I9 and 20 of stretchable material are elastic, as rubber. It is not necessary that these lengths be wide. for example, they may he only one-half inch wide and will function properly.
- f'l he :two zstraps 2-1 are secured, as by stitchings 55, at an'end of each, to the wall portions 18, and not t-o the wall portions I-I at the upper edge sections 35 of the former, and may be conventionally secured, as by stitchings, to the intermediate portion IU of the brassiere.
- Theimeans 22 to sde'tachabl-y secure together-the two iiree extremities of the end sect-ions I 5 and 1-6 may be a conventional hook $0, secured to the loop at :the free end of one of sections 20 and having a :slot $1 adapted to receive the "loop at the free end of the other section 20.
- the outermost parts of the end sections 45 and IE are illus'tra'ted as in substantially the same plane and notnnder tension, and the ontermostpartsof the sections "I i-of Figs. 3 and 4' are shown as substantially flat, and not under tension.
- the lower edges of the intermediate portion ll] and end sections i5 and 1-6 do not converge toward the vertical medial line of the intermediate portion Ill nearly as abruptly as they :do in Fig. 2, where the end sections I5 and H are under tension.
- the two portions 1 l and J8 mayrtake various positions with respect to each other, limited only by the stitchings 43 along their overlapping loweredge sections. Obviously, the movement of :the two associated wall portions will be such that their edges 34 and 1:2 move toward and away from each other as there is tension applied and then removed.
- the novelbrass'iere'hugs the thorax of the wearer accommodates the flesh where the wearers breasts merge into the adjacent portions of the thorax and, consequently, the flesh does not, as is the case some persons, swell out above the upper edges of the end sections and I6.
- the function of the novel-shaped wall portions I1 and t8 and "their associated length I9 and 20 of stretchable (elastic) material, with the portions I l and I8 secured together along only one edge of each and the lengths l9 and 20 arranged as described, is not confined solely to this.
- the construction and arrangement disclosed tends to cause the portions I1 and 18, where they extend over the wearers back, to remain in a fixed position, no matter if the wearer bonds .the bodyiiorwardly .or .backwardly or from side'to side.
- the portions I! and I8, where they cross the wearers back tend to move downwardly, rather than upwardly and, in all cases, they do .not tend to move upwardly of a fixed position.
- an intermediate breast-supporting portion having-opposite end edge sections and an upper ed'ge section; a pair of end sections, one extending outwardly from one end edge sec-- tionIand theother extending outwardly from the other end edge section-each end section comprising :a :first wall portion and an associated second wall both being elongated and of flexible material, with the associated wall portions overlapping "for a part of the length of each, each Wall portion having an inner edge section, with the inner edge sections of the second wall portions overlying their associated :first walllportions and spaced from said end edge sections of said intermediate portion, and each wall portion having an outer end edge section; a lower edge section and an upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the edge section of one second wall portion with said intermediate portion at one end edge-section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent'said upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the end edge section of the other second wall portion withsaid intermediate portion at the other end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section
- an intermediate breast-supporting portion having opposite and edge sections and an upper edge section; a pair of end sections, one extending outwardly from one ende'dge section and the other extending outwardly from the other end edge section, each end section comprising a first wall portion and an associated second wall portion, both being elongated and of flexible material, with the associated wall portions overlapping for a part of the length of each, each wall portion having an inner edge section, with the inner edge sections of the second wall portions overlying their associated first wall portions and spaced from said end edge sections of said intermediate portion, and each wall portion having an outer end edge section; a lower edge section and an upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the edge section of one second wall portion with said intermediate portion at one end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the end edge section of the other second wall portion with said intermediate portion at the other end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section; bridging means connecting said end sections and extending over the back of a wear
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- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Textile Engineering (AREA)
- Corsets Or Brassieres (AREA)
Description
Dec. 13, 1949 D. A. CERRATO BRAssIfiRE 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed May 2, 1947 INVENTOR. DOM/N/G "/4. 6 A 1? 0 ATTORNEYS.
Patented Dec. 13, 1949 UNITED STATES YPATENT OFFICE Dominic A. Cerrato, NewarlaN. .1. Application May 2, 1947, Serial No. 745,364
This invention relates to apparel and more particularly to brassieres.
An important object of the invention is to provide a brassire, including portions extending over the wearers back but which portions, owing to the novel construction and arrangement of parts of the brassiere, will not tend to ride upwardly.
Another important object is to provide such a brassire which may be worn with garments cut low in the back, and the back portion of the brassire will not extend nor tend to extend above the horizontal plane nor outwardly of the vertical planes and inclined planes of the upper edges of the back portion of the garment.
Still another important object is to provide a brassiere, so constructed and with the parts thereof so arranged, that there will be no puckering, wrinkling nor unsightly folding of the brassiere walls.
In addition, a major object is to provide a brassiere, as described, which will obviate the unsightly outwardly convex swell of the flesh above the upper edges of the brassiere, where the wearers breasts merge into the adjacent portions of the thorax.
Other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent during the course of the following detailed description of the invention taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, and in which drawings- Fig. 1 is a front elevation of the new brassire, including stretchable portions with the latter under no tension.
Fig. 2 is a similar view, but with the stretchable portions under tension.
Fig. 3 is a front elevation of an end fragment of the novel brassiere, with parts removed, to better illustrate portions of the construction.
Fig. 4 is a rear elevation of the end fragment of Fig. 3 and with parts not under tension.
Fig. 5 is like view, but with parts under tension.
Fig. 6 is a view, somewhat similar to Fig. 3 but with portions of the inner and outer walls of the garment partly seperated in order to better illustrate the arrangement of parts.
In the drawings, wherein for the purposeofi 3 Claims. (Cl. 2-42) 2 having an upper edge H, and edge sections 12 and I3 and a bottom edge I l.
The brassiere also includes novel end sections l5 and 16, each provided with a first wall portion I1 which, in the example shown, is the front portion, a second wall portion 18 which, in the example shown, is the rear portion, a length or first portion [9 of stretchable material, and a length or second portion 20 of stretchable material.
In addition, the brassiere may include suitable shoulder straps 2| and means 22 to detachably secure together the two free extremities of the end sections I5 and 16.
The end sections I I5 and I6 are, preferably, substantially alike, with the first wall portion I! having an edge section 25 secured to the edge section I 2, as by stitchings 26, an edge section 21 secured to the edge section 13 of the intermediate portion 10, as by stitchings 28, an upper edge section 29 defining an upper edge 30, a lower edge section 3| defining a lower edge 32 and an outer edge section 33 defining an outer or end edge 34. The edge 34 forms, with the lower edge 32, an
obtuse angle and forms, with the edge 30, an'
.stantially a right angle, the edges 38 and 42,
form an acute angle, the edges 38 and 40 substantially a right angle, and the edges 36 and 40, form an obtuse angle.
Where they overlap, the two wall portions l1 and I8,- are secured together along at least a part of their lower edge sections 31 and 31 respectively as by stitchings 43 but the upper edge sections 29 and are not secured together.
The edge 42 of the wall portion 18 is spaced from the end edges I2 and I3 of the intermediate portion II]. An average spacing of one-and-onequarter inches is given by way of example although, of course, thisspacing may vary. The end edge of the wall portion 18 is spaced from the outer or end edge 34 of the wall portion II, so that the outer edge section 39, as well as parts of the upper and lower edge sections 35 and 31 of thewall portion l8, extend outwardly (or endwardly) of the end edge 34.
Each wall portion I! and I8 is of suitable flexible material, as cloth.
The length or first section I9 of stretchable material may be secured at one of its ends 45 to the intermediate portion III at adjacent the juncture of the portion In and wall portion I1, and is secured, at its other end 46 to the wall portion I 8 at the section thereof where this sections joins the section .35, hut ,it is not secured, at this end 48, to the wall portion ill. Thus, as maybe-seen, particularly in Fig. 6, the wall portion I8 is indirectly secured to the intermediate portion Ill by the length or first section I9, bridging the portions H1 and I8, and the portion I8 is not attached to the portion I! along their edge sections 29 and 35. This permits wide relative play of the wall portion I8 with respect thothe portion I7.
The lengths or second sections 20 of stretchable material are secured to the wall portions IT at the latters endsections 33. Preierably, each length 20 is looped, asin Fig. 6, and itsends 50 and secured to its associated wall portion '-I'I, one end 50 at adjacent the iuncture of the sections 29 and33, and the cther end 51 atad jacent the juncture of the sections 3| and 33. Where the section '20 "reaches the edge section "39 of the portion -I-'8 it is secured thereto, as by stitc'hi-ngs 53.
Preferably, the lengths I9 and 20 of stretchable material are elastic, as rubber. It is not necessary that these lengths be wide. for example, they may he only one-half inch wide and will function properly.
f'l he :two zstraps 2-1 are secured, as by stitchings 55, at an'end of each, to the wall portions 18, and not t-o the wall portions I-I at the upper edge sections 35 of the former, and may be conventionally secured, as by stitchings, to the intermediate portion IU of the brassiere.
'Theimeans 22 to sde'tachabl-y secure together-the two iiree extremities of the end sect-ions I 5 and 1-6 may be a conventional hook $0, secured to the loop at :the free end of one of sections 20 and having a :slot $1 adapted to receive the "loop at the free end of the other section 20.
In 1 the outermost parts of the end sections 45 and IE are illus'tra'ted as in substantially the same plane and notnnder tension, and the ontermostpartsof the sections "I i-of Figs. 3 and 4' are shown as substantially flat, and not under tension. As may be seen i-n Fig. -1 the lower edges of the intermediate portion ll] and end sections i5 and 1-6 do not converge toward the vertical medial line of the intermediate portion Ill nearly as abruptly as they :do in Fig. 2, where the end sections I5 and H are under tension.
Since the wall portions I1 and 48-.orao1 flexible but not, appreciably, stretchable material, the two portions 1 l and J8 :mayrtake various positions with respect to each other, limited only by the stitchings 43 along their overlapping loweredge sections. Obviously, the movement of :the two associated wall portions will be such that their edges 34 and 1:2 move toward and away from each other as there is tension applied and then removed.
When-worn, the novelbrass'iere'hugs the thorax of the wearer, accommodates the flesh where the wearers breasts merge into the adjacent portions of the thorax and, consequently, the flesh does not, as is the case some persons, swell out above the upper edges of the end sections and I6. However, the function of the novel-shaped wall portions I1 and t8 and "their associated length I9 and 20 of stretchable (elastic) material, with the portions I l and I8 secured together along only one edge of each and the lengths l9 and 20 arranged as described, is not confined solely to this. The construction and arrangement disclosed tends to cause the portions I1 and 18, where they extend over the wearers back, to remain in a fixed position, no matter if the wearer bonds .the bodyiiorwardly .or .backwardly or from side'to side. In fact, with'the arrangement described, the portions I! and I8, where they cross the wearers back tend to move downwardly, rather than upwardly and, in all cases, they do .not tend to move upwardly of a fixed position.
Consequently, when worn, the portions I1 and I8, where they cross the wearers back do not ride -up above the upper back edge of the wearer's own.
Various changes maybe made to the form of the invention herein shown and described without departing from the spirit of the invention or scope of the claims.
What is claimed is:
ii. in a brass'iere, aniintermediate breast-supporting portion having opposite end edge sections and an :upperfiedge :section; .a pair of end sections, one extending outwardly .from one end edge section and the other extending outwardly from the other end edge section, each end section ccomprising a first wall portion and an associated second wall portion, both :being elongated and pi =fiexible materia'Lwith the associated wall portions overlapping for a part of the length-of each, each "wall portion hearing an inner edge section, with the inner :edge sections of the secend wall portions oyerlying their associated first wallzportions and spaced drom said end edge sections iUf said :izitemnediate portion, and each wall portion having an outer end edge section; stretchable means connecting the edge section of one :second wall portion with said intermediate portionat one end edge section of said intermediate portion; --stretchable means connecting the end edge section of the other second wall portion with said i-nterm'ediatepor'tion at the other end edge section of said intermediate portion; bridging means connecting said end sections and extending over the back of a wearer of said bras s'i'ere; and means securing said bridging means "to the outer end edge -'sections of said wall portions.
2. In a brassiere, an intermediate breast-supporting portion having-opposite end edge sections and an upper ed'ge section; a pair of end sections, one extending outwardly from one end edge sec-- tionIand theother extending outwardly from the other end edge section-each end section comprising :a :first wall portion and an associated second wall both being elongated and of flexible material, with the associated wall portions overlapping "for a part of the length of each, each Wall portion having an inner edge section, with the inner edge sections of the second wall portions overlying their associated :first walllportions and spaced from said end edge sections of said intermediate portion, and each wall portion having an outer end edge section; a lower edge section and an upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the edge section of one second wall portion with said intermediate portion at one end edge-section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent'said upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the end edge section of the other second wall portion withsaid intermediate portion at the other end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section; bridging means connecting said end sections and extending over the back of a wearer of said brassiere; means securing said bridging means to the outer end edge sections .of said wall portions; and means connecting each associated wall portion at its lower edge section, the upper edge section of each associated wall portion being free of direct attachment to the like upper edge section of its associated wall portion.
3. In a brassire, an intermediate breast-supporting portion having opposite and edge sections and an upper edge section; a pair of end sections, one extending outwardly from one ende'dge section and the other extending outwardly from the other end edge section, each end section comprising a first wall portion and an associated second wall portion, both being elongated and of flexible material, with the associated wall portions overlapping for a part of the length of each, each wall portion having an inner edge section, with the inner edge sections of the second wall portions overlying their associated first wall portions and spaced from said end edge sections of said intermediate portion, and each wall portion having an outer end edge section; a lower edge section and an upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the edge section of one second wall portion with said intermediate portion at one end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section; stretchable means connecting the end edge section of the other second wall portion with said intermediate portion at the other end edge section of said intermediate portion and closely adjacent said upper edge section; bridging means connecting said end sections and extending over the back of a wearer of said brassire; means securing said bridging means to the outer edge sections of said wall portions, and means connecting each associated wall portion at its lower edge section, the upper edge section and outer end edge section of each associated wall portion being free of direct attachment to the like upper edge section and outer end edge section of its associated Wall portion.
DOMINIC A. CERRATO.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the file of this patent:
UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date 2,061,739 Rasch Nov. 24, 1936 2,115,397 Rosenthal et al. Apr. 26, 1938 2,115,398 Rosenthal Apr. 26, 1938 2,324,669 Berdach July 20, 1943 2,454,152 Glick Nov. 16, 1948
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US745364A US2491299A (en) | 1947-05-02 | 1947-05-02 | Brassiere |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US745364A US2491299A (en) | 1947-05-02 | 1947-05-02 | Brassiere |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
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US2491299A true US2491299A (en) | 1949-12-13 |
Family
ID=24996384
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US745364A Expired - Lifetime US2491299A (en) | 1947-05-02 | 1947-05-02 | Brassiere |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
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US (1) | US2491299A (en) |
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2520772A (en) * | 1949-03-05 | 1950-08-29 | Vanity Corset Company Inc | Brassiere |
US2776432A (en) * | 1955-02-14 | 1957-01-08 | Panes Isidore | Brassiere |
DE1081843B (en) * | 1953-09-29 | 1960-05-19 | Int Latex Corp | Brassiere |
Citations (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2061739A (en) * | 1935-03-20 | 1936-11-24 | Chaincraft Inc | Brassiere |
US2115398A (en) * | 1936-05-08 | 1938-04-26 | Maiden Form Brassiere Company | Brassiere |
US2115397A (en) * | 1936-05-08 | 1938-04-26 | Maiden Form Brassiere Company | Brassiere |
US2324669A (en) * | 1942-01-06 | 1943-07-20 | Lily Of France Corset Company | Brassiere |
US2454152A (en) * | 1945-02-14 | 1948-11-16 | Gluckin Corp | Brassiere and similar garments |
-
1947
- 1947-05-02 US US745364A patent/US2491299A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2061739A (en) * | 1935-03-20 | 1936-11-24 | Chaincraft Inc | Brassiere |
US2115398A (en) * | 1936-05-08 | 1938-04-26 | Maiden Form Brassiere Company | Brassiere |
US2115397A (en) * | 1936-05-08 | 1938-04-26 | Maiden Form Brassiere Company | Brassiere |
US2324669A (en) * | 1942-01-06 | 1943-07-20 | Lily Of France Corset Company | Brassiere |
US2454152A (en) * | 1945-02-14 | 1948-11-16 | Gluckin Corp | Brassiere and similar garments |
Cited By (3)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2520772A (en) * | 1949-03-05 | 1950-08-29 | Vanity Corset Company Inc | Brassiere |
DE1081843B (en) * | 1953-09-29 | 1960-05-19 | Int Latex Corp | Brassiere |
US2776432A (en) * | 1955-02-14 | 1957-01-08 | Panes Isidore | Brassiere |
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