Not applicable.
Boots and other footwear have opposed flaps which cover the tongue at the front of the boot. The ends of a lace, which is placed through eyes or around hooks in a zigzag pattern, are pulled to draw the flaps together and tighten the boot on the user's foot. However, peoples' feet are unique, and even for a given shoe size any particular pattern of the eyes or hooks on the flaps does not provide a comfortable fit for everyone.
The subject invention provides a lacing system having lace-receiving elements, which are attachable to their respective flaps at multiple locations, thereby allowing the lacing pattern to be varied to better fit the foot of a user.
The foregoing and other objectives, features, and advantages of the invention will be more readily understood upon consideration of the following detailed description of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to FIGS. 1,7 and 10 of the drawings, a boot 20, or other footwear, has a pair of opposed flaps 22, which are drawn together by a lacing system 24 to tighten the boot on a user's foot. The flaps have inwardly facing elongate margins 26. Attached to the margins 26 are a plurality of lace-receiving elements 30. A lace 32 extends between lace-receiving elements 30 on opposed flaps in a zigzag pattern such that when the extremities 34 of the lace are pulled, the lace acts through the lace-receiving elements 30 to draw the opposed flaps toward one another to tighten the boot on the user's foot. The lace-receiving elements 30 are attachable to the flaps 22 at multiple locations on the flaps. This allows the manner in which the flaps are drawn toward one another to be adjusted in order that the lacing system is tightened in a comfortable manner for a given user.
The lace-receiving elements 30 are attached to the flaps 22 by an attachment system 36. In a first embodiment, shown in
The rails 38 are made from a material that is flexible enough to bend with the flaps to which they are attached but stiff enough to remain generally linear. In this embodiment, the lace-receiving elements 30 are attached to sliders 42, which are slidably attached to the rails. The sliders wrap around the rails 38 and have openings 43 through which the tabs 40 fit. In the embodiment shown in the drawings, the openings 43 located on the sliders are opposite the lace-receiving elements 30, but they could be slightly offset from one another. The lace-receiving elements 30 can be eyes 44 or hooks 46. When the lace is loose, the sliders 42 can be moved to any desired position along the rails 38. However, due to the zigzag pattern of the lace, when the lace is tightened the sliders are twisted slightly on the rails and become fixed at their current position.
Referring now to
In another embodiment, shown in
In use, clips 56 are placed in the desired seats 52 and moved toward the center of the boot to place the anchors in the position below the top surface of the bases. The laces are then fed through the lace-receiving elements in the normal manner. When the lace is tightened, it urges the anchors into the portion of the receptacles that is below the top surface of the bases and locks them in place.
The terms and expressions that have been employed in the foregoing specification are used therein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.