The invention generally relates to an article of footwear and a knitted component thereof. Particularly, the invention relates to an article of footwear which is naturally conformable to the foot and a knitted component thereof.
Generally, shoes are composed of an upper and a sole. The upper is normally in direct contact with the foot of the wearer to provide covering and protection. The sole is fixed to the bottom of the upper to serve as a cushion for the wearer's foot on the ground, thereby reducing the stress on the foot caused by the reaction force. The upper can usually be made of different materials, such as natural leather, synthetic leather, polymer, fabric, etc.; and a knitted upper, because of its excellent permeability and performance in comfort, as well as the advantage of lower manufacturing cost, makes the development of knitted shoes advance very fast.
However, a knitted upper is generally very soft and not easy to maintain in shape. Additional support or additional shaping technology is employed to maintain the shape of the upper. The use of additional support to the knitted upper makes the manufacturing process more complicated, the material cost higher, and the design much limited. The shaping technology usually uses thermoplastic yarn during the knitting of the upper, and due to the hot melt and cold curing characteristics of the thermoplastic yarn; the entire upper is solidified to maintain its shape, making the upper less soft and less comfortable.
In view of the prior arts, it is an object of the present disclosure to provide an article of footwear and a knitted component thereof, which is formed by knitting regions of two-dimensional structures to form a three-dimensional shoe upper, in which each two-dimensional region uses a different number of stitches according to the stretch ratio desired for such region, so when the two-dimensional knitted component forms the three-dimensional shoe upper, the shoe upper will have a natural three-dimensional configuration, and when the wearer's foot is inserted into the article of footwear made by the knitted component, courses and wales in each region of the shoe upper are substantially orthogonal to each other, promoting the comfort and the manufacturability of the shoes.
In an embodiment, the present disclosure provides an article of footwear including a shoe upper and a sole structure fixed to the shoe upper. The shoe upper defines a shoe cavity for a foot to be inserted thereinto. The shoe upper is formed by a knitted component and includes a plurality of upper regions. The knitted component is a two-dimensional structure knitted from at least one yarn and includes a plurality of knitted regions respectively corresponding to the plurality of upper regions. Each of the plurality of upper regions has a stretch ratio to its corresponding knitted region of the plurality of knitted regions. The number of stitches in each of the plurality of knitted regions is proportional to its corresponding stretch ratio, so when the foot is inserted into the shoe cavity, courses and wales formed by the at least one yarn in the plurality of upper regions are substantially orthogonal to each other.
In an embodiment, the stretch ratio is a length ratio of the upper region when the foot is inserted into the shoe cavity to its corresponding knitted region.
Moreover, in addition to forming the knitted regions of the knitted component according to the corresponding stretch ratio to promote the comfort of the shoes, the present disclosure can also form the knitted regions according to the yarn characteristics such as elastic modulus, structural strength, wear resistance, etc, to give a natural three-dimensional effect to the knitted shoe upper.
In an embodiment, the present disclosure provides an article of footwear which includes a shoe upper and a sole structure fixed to the shoe upper. The shoe upper defines a shoe cavity for a foot to be inserted thereinto. The sole structure is fixed to the shoe upper, wherein the shoe upper is formed by a knitted component. The knitted component is knitted from at least one yarn and includes a plurality of knitted regions respectively corresponding to different portions of the foot. The knitted regions include a heel region and an instep region respectively corresponding to a heel portion and an instep portion of the foot. The at least one yarn forming the heel region and the instep region comprises an elastic yarn, so the heel region and the instep region have an elastic modulus substantially larger than other knitted regions.
In an embodiment, the plurality of knitted regions further includes a lateral region corresponding to a lateral portion of the foot; the elastic yarn extends from the instep region to the lateral region.
In an embodiment, the at least one yarn forming the heel region further includes a wear-resistant yarn and a structural yarn; the structural yarn is relatively thicker or harder than the elastic yarn.
In an embodiment, the plurality of knitted regions includes a shoe opening region and a toe region. The shoe opening region defines a shoe opening for allowing the foot to enter the shoe cavity. The toe region corresponds to toes of the foot. The at least one yarn forming the shoe opening region includes a wear-resistant yarn and an elastic yarn. The at least one yarn forming the toe region includes a wear-resistant yarn and a structural yarn.
The article of footwear of the present disclosure achieves a natural three-dimensional effect by modifying the number of stitches and/or the yarn characteristics in different knitted regions, so that the shoe upper is naturally conformable to the foot to promote the comfort and the manufacturability of the shoes.
As shown in
As shown in
In other words, critical shaping lines and dimension control lines of the article of footwear 1 serve as feature lines, wherein the feature lines are the lines having a larger stretch ratio, such as lines L1, L2, L3 in the upper regions 10a, 10b, 10c. The feature lines are projected to a two-dimensional knitted component 100 to obtain the corresponding knitted regions 100a, 10b, 100c and its corresponding lines L1, L2′, L3′. Measuring the actual length of the three-dimensional feature lines L1, L2, L3 and comparing the measured lengths with the designed length of the corresponding lines L1′, L2′, L3′ of the two-dimensional knitted component 100, the stretch ratio for each region can be obtained. The knitted regions 100a, 100b, 100c are knitted according to its corresponding stretch ratio to form the knitted component 100. Take a knitted region generally having 14 stitches per 1 centimeter (i.e. 14 stitches/cm) as an example, the number of stitches in each of the knitted regions 100a, 100b, 100c is proportional to its corresponding stretch ratio. That is, the number of stitches in each knitted region 100a, 100b, 100c is the stretch ratio multiplied by 14. For example, the number of stitches in the knitted regions 100a, 100b, 100c is 14*L1/L1′, 14*L2/L2′, 14*L3/L3′, respectively.
Moreover, as shown in
Moreover, after the number of stitches of the four corners of each grid 101 are calculated as described above, stress-strain calculations for the difference in the number of stitches can be performed to determine which grid has the larger difference in the number of stitches and results in a greater variance in transformation from the two-dimensional configuration to the three-dimensional configuration. Specifically, the difference in the number of stitches in the four corners of each grid can be calculated by the finite element method (i.e. stress-strain calculations) to determine which grid will have a greater variance in transformation from the two-dimensional configuration to the three-dimensional configuration due to the difference in the number of stitches. For example, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, in the vertical direction where the stitch density and the elastic modulus are higher, it is preferred to select thicker or harder yarns or even a rigid yarn without elasticity to provide structural support(such yarns are referred to as structural yarns). In the region of high stitch density and in the vertical direction where elastic modulus is higher, it is preferred to use structural yarns, so these regions will have a better support and can bulge toward a predetermined direction to prevent wrinkles. That is, by allowing different yarn characteristics for different knitted regions, a natural three-dimensional configuration can be achieved.
In other words, in the present disclosure, a natural three-dimensional configuration can be achieved not only by means of using different number of stitches for the corresponding stretch ratios of the knitted regions of the knitted component, but also by means of modifying the yarn characteristics, such as elastic modulus, structural strength, wear resistance, etc. in different knitted regions. As shown in
As shown in
In this embodiment, the at least one yarn forming the heel region 104 preferably further includes a wear-resistant yarn and a structural yarn. The structural yarn is relatively thicker or harder than the elastic yarn, so the heel portion 104 not only has elasticity, but also has a higher wear-resistance and a stronger structural strength. The at least one yarn forming the shoe opening region 105 preferably includes a wear-resistant yarn and an elastic yarn, so the shoe opening region 105 has a higher wear-resistance and a greater elasticity. The at least one yarn forming the toe region 106 preferably includes a wear-resistant yarn and a structural yarn, so the toe region 105 has a higher wear-resistance and a stronger structural strength.
Moreover, in the regions of the knitted component 100 that require stronger structural support, such as the heel region 104 and the toe region 106, a thermoplastic yarn can be locally employed as the structural yarn, so the shoe upper 10′ can locally enhance the support effect while the whole shoe upper 10′ still maintains a considerable flexibility.
Compared to the prior art, the article of footwear and the knitted component thereof of the present disclosure can achieve a natural three-dimensional configuration, promote the comfort and the manufacturability of shoes by modifying the number of stitches in different knitted regions of the knitted component and/or by adopting different yarn characteristics according to the required elasticity for different knitted regions.
Although the preferred embodiments of the present disclosure have been described herein, the above description is merely illustrative. The preferred embodiments disclosed will not limit the scope of the present disclosure. Further modification of the embodiments herein disclosed will occur to those skilled in the respective arts and all such modifications are deemed to be within the scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
201610854806.6 | Sep 2016 | CN | national |