The following description relates generally to footwear, and more particularly to novelty footwear with lights and novelty footwear with removable and interchangeable faces.
Footwear, in particular footwear for children, can be a costly but necessary clothing item. Due to the fact that children are constantly outgrowing shoes, it becomes expensive to provide a child with a wide variety of shoes that will quickly be outgrown. Accordingly, there is a need for a footwear system that provides a wide variety of shoe appearances without the need for buying multiple pairs of shoes. Ideally, the footwear system would also incorporate lights to provide a more unique appearance.
Additionally, people of all ages enjoy novelty footwear such as slippers, sandals and other shoes. For example, many people wear novelty slippers with animal or characters faces. However, it is costly to purchase multiple different novelty shoes, in particular if the novelty shoes incorporate lights. Accordingly, there is a need for a footwear system that provides multiple different lighted shoe exteriors without the need for buying multiple pairs of shoes.
The embodiments disclosed below satisfy these needs.
The following simplified summary is provided in order to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the claimed subject matter. This summary is not an extensive overview, and is not intended to identify key/critical elements or to delineate the scope of the claimed subject matter. Its purpose is to present some concepts in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented later.
In one aspect of the disclosed embodiments, a foot covering includes a foot receiving enclosure having a sole, side panels and a front panel, and at least two lights attached to the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure. A battery may be mounted to the foot receiving enclosure and connected to an activatable switch which is also connected to the at least two lights for making and breaking an electrical connection between the battery and the at least two lights. Additionally, a face may be formed on the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure, the face having two eyes formed by the at least two lights attached to the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure.
The activatable switch may include an accelerometer so that the switch is activated when the accelerometer detects an acceleration of the foot covering greater than a threshold acceleration, for example when the user clicks their heels together or collides the foot covering with an object. The lights may be any luminescent device including light emitting diodes and/or fluorescent/phosphorescent material.
In another embodiment, a foot covering includes interchangeable faces. A foot receiving enclosure has a sole, side panels and a front panel with a face mounting device. At least two light mounts attached to the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure. A battery may be mounted to the foot receiving enclosure and electrically connected to the at least two light mounts. An interchangeable face having two eyes is removably attached to the face mounting device of the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure. One or more lights may be mounted to each of the at least two light mounts on the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure. In particular, the lights may represent eyes or other facial features on the interchangeable face. In other embodiments, the interchangeable face may have two eyes formed by two apertures so that when the interchangeable face is attached to the face mounting device of the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure, the lights mounted to the light mounts on the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure are visible through the apertures of the interchangeable face.
In other embodiments, the lights mounted to the at least two light mounts on the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure are integral with the interchangeable face. When the interchangeable face is removed from the face mounting device of the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure, the lights are disconnected from the at least two light mounts. The lights may be light bulbs, light emitting diodes, or fluorescent/phosphorescent material. The face mounting device may include a hook and loop fastener, a snap-fit connector, or other suitable fastening or attachment device.
Another embodiment of a foot covering system with interchangeable faces includes a foot receiving enclosure having a sole, side panels and a front panel with a face mounting device. An interchangeable face is removably attached to the face mounting device of the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure. The interchangeable face includes two eyes formed from two lights attached to the interchangeable face, a battery attached to the interchangeable face and connected to the two lights, and a switch connected to the two lights and the battery for making and breaking an electrical connection between the two lights and the battery. The two lights are light emitting diodes or other luminescent devices. The face mounting device may include a hook and loop fastener and/or a snap-fit connector.
In another embodiment a footwear covering system includes a piece of footwear having a sole with a perimeter boundary material and a footwear cover attached to the piece of footwear. The footwear cover includes an attachment device, a sheath attached to the resilient clamp and forming an elongate arcuate cover and indicia on the sheath portraying the face of a character. The attachment device may include a snap-fit connector and/or a resilient clamp with an inner surface with grippers, the resilient clamp being shaped to conform with the perimeter boundary material of the sole of the piece of footwear. The footwear cover may include a battery compartment housing a battery, and in some embodiments the snap-fit connector comprises conductors that establish an electrical connection when the snap-fit connector is mated with a complementary connector on the piece of footwear.
To the accomplishment of the foregoing and related ends, certain illustrative aspects are described herein in connection with the following description and the annexed drawings. These aspects are indicative, however, of but a few of the various ways in which the principles of the claimed subject matter may be employed and the claimed subject matter is intended to include all such aspects and their equivalents. Other advantages and novel features may become apparent from the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the drawings.
In one aspect of the disclosed embodiments, a foot covering includes a foot receiving enclosure that has a front panel. The front panel includes a depiction of a face, for example the face of a cartoon character, animal, or the like. The eyes of the face are formed from lights, in particular light emitting diodes. The foot receiving enclosure also includes a battery for supplying electricity to the lights. Additionally, a switch is disposed between the battery and the lights in order to provide a mechanism for making and breaking an electrical connection between the battery and the lights. A wearer of the foot covering activates the lights forming the eyes of the face on the front of the foot covering by activating the switch. The switch may be, for example, a toggle switch, a button, or the like. Additionally, the switch may include an accelerometer that automatically activates the lights when the foot covering is subjected to sufficient acceleration, for example when a wearer of the foot coverings taps his or her feet together.
In another aspect of the disclosed embodiments, a foot covering includes a foot receiving enclosure that has a front panel. The front panel of the foot receiving enclosure includes a face mounting device, for example a hook and loop fastener, a snap-fit connector, or the like. The front panel also includes at least two light mounts that are connected to a battery mounted in the foot receiving enclosure. A removable and interchangeable face may be mounted to the face mounting device. The eyes of the interchangeable face may be formed by apertures or by two lights with electrical connectors. If the eyes are formed by apertures in the interchangeable face, then two lights are mounted to the light mounts on the front of the foot receiving enclosure and the two lights are visible through the apertures in the interchangeable face. Alternatively, if the eyes of the interchangeable face are lights with electrical connectors, the electrical connectors of the lights are connected to the light mounts on the front panel of the foot receiving enclosure when the interchangeable face is attached to the front panel. Once the lights on the interchangeable face are so connected, the battery in the foot receiving enclosure provides electricity to the lights.
In yet another aspect of the disclosed embodiments, a foot covering includes a foot receiving enclosure that has a front pane with a face mounting device to which a removable and interchangeable face may be attached. The interchangeable face includes eyes formed at least in part by two lights. The interchangeable face includes a battery for supplying electricity to the lights, and may also include a switch for making and breaking the electrical connection between the lights and the battery.
As shown in
As shown in
Additionally, footwear 10 may include switch 122. Switch 122 is connected to both a battery in battery compartment 120 and to one or more of lights 106, light strip 108 or light band 110 so that when switch 122 is activated, electricity flows to the various luminescent devices. As a pair of footwear 10 (e.g. right foot and left foot) each include switch 122, a user may activate and deactivate lights 106, light strip 108 or light band 110 by bringing each shoe/footwear into lateral contact with one another. Switch 122 may be, without limitation, a toggle switch that is activated by physically pressing the inside edges of each shoe/footwear together, or may be a magnetic switch that is triggered by bringing each shoe/footwear into close proximity with each other. Further, switch 122 may include an accelerometer that completes a circuit between a battery in battery compartment 120 and the various luminescent devices when sufficient acceleration is detected, for example when a user “taps” the shoes/footwear together or against another object.
As shown in
If light band 224 is fluorescent/phosphorescent material, and if lights 206 are fluorescent/phosphorescent material or apertures, interchangeable cover 203 does not require a power supply. However, if either light band 224 or lights 206 are luminescent devices, a power supply must be provided, for example in cover battery compartment 220 which houses a battery connected to lights 206 and/or light band 224.
Interchangeable cover 203 also includes attachment devices 226 for attaching interchangeable cover 203 to footwear 20. Attachment devices 226 may be any type of fastener or gripper including hook and loop fasteners or a male-female snap-fit connector that mates with a complementary connector on sole 202 of footwear 20. Further, one or more of attachment devices 226 may include a conductive connector so that when interchangeable cover 203 is attached to footwear 20 there is an electrical connection between interchangeable cover 203 and footwear 20. One application of such an electrically conductive connection between interchangeable cover 203 and footwear 20 is to provide a battery in footwear 20 (as disclosed above with reference to footwear 10) instead of inside interchangeable cover 203. In this example, once interchangeable cover 203 is attached to footwear 20, any luminescent devices on interchangeable cover 203 such as lights 206 or cover light band 224 may be activated. The switch used to activate the luminescent devices may be of the type disclosed above with reference to footwear 10 and include toggle switches, magnetic switches and acceleration switches. In any embodiment, the lower edge of cover 203 may be flush with the lower edge of sole 202 once cover 203 is installed on foot enclosure 201.
As shown in
In some embodiments, interchangeable cover 203 includes lights 206 and battery compartment 220 which contains a battery that provides electricity for lights 206 via one or more wires. Battery compartment 220 may be located anywhere on or inside interchangeable cover 203. For example, battery compartment 220 may be housed in a slit or pocket in cover 203 so that battery compartment 220 is concealed during normal use of footwear 20, for example in a slit, pocket or other enclosure behind the lights/eyes 206 on cover 203. Additionally, battery compartment 220 may incorporate one or more child-resistant fasteners to prevent a child user from opening battery compartment 220. Any type of battery may be used, including disk batteries of the type commonly found in small electrical devices such as cameras or watches. Lights 206 may be activated and deactivated by any means, including an on/off switch or an accelerometer switch that can detect movement and activate lights 206 when footwear 20 is moving, and deactivate lights 206 when footwear 20 has not moved for a predetermined amount of time such as one minute. The same switch may also be used to activate and deactivate other devices connected to the battery in battery compartment 220, for example a noise emitting device such as a small speaker or audio devices commonly used in greeting cards. In some embodiments, lights and speakers may be activated simultaneously to provide synchronized or programmed lights and sounds.
The materials used to make the footwear and interchangeable covers disclosed above are not critical. However, in some embodiments, the footwear may have a rubber sole and fabric side and front panels with fabric, felt, rubber or polymeric padding on top of the sole inside the foot receiving enclosure. The interchangeable cover may likewise be made from any suitable material including fabric, plastic, rubber, other polymeric materials such as polyethylene or materials commonly used for costume masks, and may also at least partially comprise fuzz, flocking, metallic or reflective materials. Eyes or lights 206 may be formed from plastic separately from cover 203 and then attached to cover 203 by welding such as sonic or thermal welding, adhesives, or any other suitable means of attachment.
One of the advantages of the disclosed embodiments is that users may greatly increase the possible appearances of shoes. For example, a user may own one pair of footwear and attach several different interchangeable covers each day. Rather than owning many different pairs of footwear, the user can simply interchange covers for the footwear. This is particularly true for children's footwear because children quickly outgrow footwear and it quickly becomes expensive to provide a child with many different footwear options that the child will outgrow. Instead of buying new footwear, the child can simply use different interchangeable covers. Further, even as the child grows into larger pairs of footwear, the same interchangeable covers may be used because the interchangeable covers are somewhat universal in size and do not require specific shoe sizes in order to function. However, it is to be understood that the exact size of the interchangeable covers are not critical, and interchangeable covers of any size are within the scope of the present disclosure.
What has been described above includes examples of one or more embodiments. It is, of course, not possible to describe every conceivable combination of components or methodologies for purposes of describing the aforementioned embodiments, but one of ordinary skill in the art may recognize that many further combinations and permutations of various embodiments are possible. Accordingly, the described embodiments are intended to embrace all such alterations, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. Furthermore, to the extent that the term “includes” is used in either the detailed description or the claims, such term is intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising” as “comprising” is interpreted when employed as a transitional word in a claim.
This international patent application claims priority to U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/532,052 filed Sep. 7, 2011 and entitled “Footwear with Lights and Interchangeable Faces.” The contents of this prior application are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety as if set forth verbatim.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/US12/53994 | 9/6/2012 | WO | 00 | 2/21/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
61532052 | Sep 2011 | US |