1. Field
The present disclosure relates to a garment having improved contact areas and, more specifically, to a garment which includes one or more relatively high-friction areas to resist sliding of, for example, protective pads worn over the garment.
2. Description of the Related Art
Many different athletics and activities require that a participant wear protective pads. For example, football, lacrosse and hockey players and participants in other contact sports, as well as baseball umpires, wear elaborate padding systems under their uniforms. Similarly, soldiers and other security personnel often wear body armor. Protective pads of all types are generally at least partially made of plastic for strength and lightness, but may be uncomfortable when worn next to a user's bare skin because of the plastic's stiffness and lack of breatheability. Also, ambient conditions may cause a user to desire an extra layer of clothing, which commonly must not alter the outside appearance of the user's uniform. For at least these reasons, it is common for users to wear clothing underneath protective pads.
Recently, many manufacturers have marketed specialty underclothing for use underneath protective pads. This underclothing is often made of a synthetic material designed to reduce chafing from the plastic of the protective pads and to quickly wick away perspiration from the user's skin to keep the user dry. However, such synthetic material often has a smooth or even somewhat slippery texture and hence a very low coefficient of friction when contacting protective pads. Consequently, the protective pads may shift or slide from a desired position during rigorous use (such as during a football game) and therefore might fail to protect the user's body.
An example of a system for securing apparel to protective equipment is disclosed in U.S. Application Publication No. 2003/0115663, to Turner et al. (hereafter referenced as '663). Unlike the present disclosure, the '663 system is intended to prevent relative movement between outer apparel and underlying protective pads. However, even if the '663 apparel were located between the user's body and outer protective pads, several undesirable effects would occur.
First, the '633 system uses patches of hooked material (e.g., hook-side VELCRO®) to secure the protective pads, with the hook-side patch attached to the protective pad. The '633 hook-side patch of the protective pads mates with loops formed on the apparel. Therefore, protective pads must be adapted to work with the '633 system, and a user accordingly must take the time and effort to prepare equipment for use with the '633 system before achieving the non-slip benefits of the system. Also, if the '633 system were adapted as suggested above, the hooks of the hook-side patch might protrude through the material of the user's undergarment and scratch the user or opponent.
Second, while apparel, such as a football jersey, is generally relatively inexpensive and personal to one user, protective pads are much more expensive and might be shared by different users or borrowed for a game or for a season from a common pool, such as from a sports rental office. Therefore, the user is inconvenienced by having to remove the '633 hook-side patch from the protective pads to return the borrowed pads to their original condition if such is a requirement of the loan. Moreover, the '633 hook-side patches may be attached with single-use adhesive, which would require the user to purchase additional '633 hook-side patches or use inconvenient and messy replacement glues when using the hook-side patches of the '633 system with multiple sets of protective pads.
Finally, the '633 hook-side patches are made of a continuous piece of high-density material. Even if the protective pads themselves allowed for ventilation of the user's skin, such a continuous covering would instead promote and even trap perspiration next to the user's skin, thus causing user discomfort contrary to the intent of the perspiration-wicking undergarment.
The present disclosure is directed to a garment including a fabric and numerous bulge shaped gripping members located on at least a portion of the fabric. The gripping members are a material that exerts a greater frictional force on an object in contact with the gripping members than the frictional force exerted by the fabric on the object. Preferably, the gripping members are oval-shaped discrete elements of material having the greater frictional force, and the discrete elements are each attached to the fabric which may itself be a shirt. The gripping members are preferably grouped into two areas on the chest area of the shirt, and may also be located on the sleeve and back areas of the shirt.
The present disclosure is also preferably directed to an athletic garment for use in combination with protective padding. The athletic garment includes a fabric and numerous bulge shaped gripping members on the fabric at a location in contact with at least some of the protective padding. The gripping members comprise discrete elements of a material that exerts a frictional force on the padding that is greater than the frictional force exerted by the fabric on the padding. Preferably, the athletic garment is a shirt and the protective padding is football shoulder pads. Preferably, the gripping members are located on the chest, arm and/or back areas of the shirt, and are oval shaped.
Features of the arrangement disclosed herein include an aesthetically pleasing and functional garment to be used by athletes or a user that desires to reduce sliding between the garment and a piece of equipment or clothing. The arrangement also provides breathability which adds a new level of comfort and utility not found in the prior art. These and other features may best be understood with reference to the accompanying drawings and the detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the invention.
The present disclosure is directed to a garment which resists sliding of, for example, protective pads worn over the garment during use. The following description refers to the use of football pads in combination with the garment as an example of one application of the garment having improved contact areas. However, it will be understood that the disclosed embodiments may be applied to any other desirable application such as, but not limited to, hockey, lacrosse, body armor, and the like.
It will be appreciated that other materials may also be used such as, but not limited to, microfibers, including elastane, nylon, polyester, blends thereof and the like. As shown in
In the embodiment shown in
High-friction areas 104, 108 are each defined by a plurality of gripping members or islands 110 providing channels therebetween. Each of high-friction areas 104, 108 is defined by multiple gripping members 110, arranged in a suitable fashion. Gripping members 110 are each made of a flexible second material, such as, but not limited to, a tackifying ink or the like. The tackifying ink may be applied to garment 100 using a screen-printing process. In any event, the tackiness of gripping members 110 is high enough such that the padding worn over garment 100 does not slide off of the desired areas of contact with garment 100 and thus create an uncomfortable situation for the user.
The tackifying ink may be a PVC (polyvinyl chloride) based printing ink, known as plastisol. An example of a plastisol ink is Ultra Gel, which is a press-ready plastisol for screen printing on fabrics available from Rutland, Inc. of Pineville, N.C. Plastisol inks usually also contain plasticizers to aid in the screen printing process. Plasticizers are present because PVC alone is a very rigid plastic and has to be softened or plasticized to give it the necessary degree of flexibility.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,517,893 (Wile et al.), the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, discloses the use of plastisols in silk screen printing to form a tough, rubber-like film that can stretch with the fabric without losing its adhesion and has the further desirable quality of being able to withstand repeated washing cycles. The use of plastisols for screen printing is also disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,780,460, the disclosure of which is also incorporated herein by reference.
The garment 100 is well suited to be worn with compression type clothing where an additional garment or shirt is disposed over the padding or where the padding is secured to the user with straps, to contain the underlying elements in a snug, compressed manner on a user's body.
Gripping members 110 may be of any suitable size and have a bulged shape. For example, as shown in
In the exemplary embodiment of
Gripping members 110 are positioned on an outside of the garment and are intended to exert a frictional force on an underside of protective pads, for example, worn over the garment, so as to reduce slippage between the garment and the protective pads. Gripping members 110 may also be positioned on an inside of the garment to exert a frictional force to protective pads worn under the garment, so as to reduce slippage between the garment and the protective pads. It will also be appreciated that gripping members 110 can be positioned on an inside of garment 100 to exert a frictional force directly to a user or directly to another layer of clothing, instead of having gripping members 110 contact the pads. The use of a plurality of gripping members 110 in a localized area produces multiple points where stress between gripping members 110 and the protective pads is increased.
Garment 100 may be donned by the user as an undergarment, and then the protective pads 314 may be attached to the user's body atop garment 100 in a known manner, such as via a harness, or other strapping/positioning means. The user may optimally wear a jersey or other uniform component atop protective pads 314. As the user participates in athletic activities, protective pads 314 will tend to shift position on the user's body because of the user's own movements or outside forces acting on the user. Without use of the high friction areas, such sliding or shifting of protective pads 314 could result in discomfort to the user if the movement of protective pads 314 chafes the user's skin and could result in a failure to provide cushioning to the desired portions of the user's body.
In order to reduce or prevent sliding of protective pads 314, high-friction areas 104, 108 exert a frictional force on protective pads 314 relative to garment 100 and thereby also tend to keep protective pads 314 substantially in their original position on the user's body. Such forces counteract against outside forces that would otherwise cause protective pads 314 to slide across the skin or non-gripping undergarment of the user. Depending upon the outside force and/or the relative materials of high-friction areas 104, 108 and protective pads 314, some sliding or shifting of the protective pads 314 may still occur, but the frictional force produced by gripping members 110 is intended to mitigate such a sliding effect.
Various garments, non-limiting examples of which are shown in
In an exemplary embodiment, high friction area 502 has a length 510 of about 15 cm to about 25 cm, more preferably, about 17 cm to about 23 cm. High friction area 504 has a length 512 of about 11 cm to about 20 cm, more preferably, about 14 cm to about 17 cm. High friction area 504 may start about 7 cm to about 15 cm from a bottom hem 514 of the sleeve, more preferably, about 9 cm to about 12 cm from the bottom hem. High friction area 502 may start about 1 cm to about 5 cm from a raglan under arm seam of the sleeve, more preferably, about 2 cm to about 4 cm from the under arm seam. It is also noted that the sleeves can have a seam in the lengthwise direction, and the high friction areas 502 and 504 may be parted around the lengthwise seam so that individual gripping members 110 are spaced about 1 cm to about 4 cm from the lengthwise seam, more preferably, about 2 cm to about 3 cm from the seam. As will be appreciated, high friction areas 502 and 504 include gripping members 110 having any of the above-noted shapes and dimensions. These dimensions and positions can be varied to correspond with other types of protective wear, such as pads worn during lacrosse and the like. The garment 500 is accordingly well suited for use with padding that is strapped on a user's body to assist in maintaining the padding in a desired position.
While exemplary aspects of the present invention have been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary, non-limiting embodiments above, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various additional embodiments may be contemplated without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. For example, the garment might be only one of several layers of underclothing worn by the user; the garment could be worn at times without overlying protective pads; the high-friction areas could cover substantially the entire garment; or the size, shape, and/or positioning of the gripping members could be assigned and/or marketed for use in a specific activity. However, a device or method incorporating such an embodiment should be understood to fall within the scope of the present invention as determined based upon the claims below and any equivalents thereof.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/144,750, filed Jun. 6, 2006, now issued as U.S. Pat. No. [insert issue date], the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11144750 | Jun 2005 | US |
Child | 12691260 | US |