Shima Seiki

Free membership

Receive our weekly Newsletter
and set tailored daily news alerts.

Warp Knitting/​Crochet

Karl Mayer offers new tulle constructions produced on its three-bar tricot knitting machine

The new embroidery grounds are produced in a gauge of E 32 instead of the normal E 28, on the HKS 3-M knitting machine.

1st March 2016

Knitting Industry
 |  Obertshausen

Knitted Accessories, Colours/​Trends

Delicate embroidery grounds continue to be in vogue. Fabric producers are selling transparent, extremely fine, tulle fabrics for clothing and lingerie sectors and are constantly looking for innovative ideas. Companies that want to operate successfully on the market can no longer rely on conventional three-stitch hexagonal tulle, Karl Mayer reports.

The leading manufacturer of warp knitting machinery has produced new stylish tulle constructions on its HKS 3-M three-bar tricot knitting machine. The results of this development work to produce patterned embroidery grounds were on display in the trends section of the Interfilière show, which was held from 4-6 July in Paris.

The fabrics featured dense, filet-like constructions made from extremely fine yarns, as well as loose, irregular meshes with an organic look. Alongside these were various honeycomb designs, as well as austere, geometrical tulle constructions, Spotnet fabrics and embroidery grounds featuring Multibar designs.

New embroidery grounds

The wide variety of grounds may have a simplistic look with no additional decoration, or else they may be used to create additional design elements, or may appear as shadow effects of the embroidered motifs.

The new embroidery grounds are produced in a gauge of E 32 instead of the normal E 28, and an HKS 3-M machine is used to produce them.

This high-speed warp knitting machine with three guide bars can reach speeds of 2,000 to 2,500 min-1 and, therefore, is said to offer a much greater level of productivity than the raschel machines normally used to produce embroidery grounds. A working width of 210" enables manufacturers to achieve an even greater level of productivity, the manufacturer reports.

Stretch, embroidered honeycomb tulle

The development work carried out at Karl Mayer has resulted in the development of embroidery grounds whose completely new, open tulle constructions are particularly striking, thanks to a clever feature of the lapping, the company reports.

The key element of this patterning technology is the close linking of adjacent pillar stitch wales by two counter-notation weft links. This firm coupling is said to make the paired yarn pieces look identical and solve one of the patterning limitations of high-speed tricot machines when producing tulle: the length of the holes in the pore structure is restricted by the technology.

With the two-in-one, pillar-stitch wale construction, stretch honeycomb patterns can be worked, as can patterns having asymmetrical waffle constructions, holes of different size and intermittent connecting pieces, as well as a combination of all of these.

Design

The new and varied tulle constructions developed by Karl Mayer were then embroidered. A ground made from polyamide monofilaments of 20 den was used to create attractive decorative patterns using pattern yarns.

The stable yarn enables delicate textiles to be embroidered without any problems, despite their filigree construction, and even dense motifs can be embroidered. This was confirmed by Karl Mayer’s partners, Surbhi Industries Limited and Bischoff Textil GmbH, who were responsible for embroidering the tulle.

www.karlmayer.com

Latest Reports

Business intelligence for the fibre, textiles and apparel industries: technologies, innovations, markets, investments, trade policy, sourcing, strategy...

Find out more