The present invention relates to the field of functional apparel, particularly pants, and particularly pants or skirts with an embedded holster.
For concealed-carry of a gun, many individuals with concealed-carry licenses choose not to place their handgun within the loop of their pants or skirt due to the presence of the gun causing the waistband to be dislocated, with more material forced to one side of the pants than the other. This results in the center and seam of the pants becoming off-center and causing discomfort to the wearer.
Alternative traditional means of securing a handgun include belt and shoulder, back and ankle holsters. Belt holsters may be worn high and close to the body, slightly behind the hip bone, and may be concealed under a long, untucked shirt or jacket. In order to maximize concealment, many clothing systems require the bearer to conceal their weapon underneath standard clothing or on the inside of the article of clothing, such as placement of a holster inside the waist of pants. This results in the pants becoming lopsided and again causing discomfort for the wearer of the pants or skirt.
Accordingly, there is a need for pants or skirts that allow for the concealment of a holster without resulting in the lopsidedness of the pants and discomfort for the wearer.
U.S. Pat. No. 11,259,583 [name] discloses an article of clothing comprising a waistband configured to secure and carry at least one object on a wearer's waist. The waistband includes a first portion configured to form a circumferential waist part of the article of clothing and include at least a first channel and a second channel, the first channel having an elastic band therethrough, and the second channel having drawstrings therethrough. The waistband also includes a second portion configured to include a plurality of belt loops evenly spaced and positioned along the first portion of the waistband, wherein the plurality of belt loops are configured to receive a belt assembly therethrough.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,557,139 (Miner) discloses an article of apparel including a concealed weapon pocket positioned at a location on the article of apparel which allow for easy access by a user, such as a lower side portion of a coat or jacket, for example. The front panel includes an upper portion that is releasably secured about its top edge and upper side edges to the main panel, and a lower portion that is fixably secured about its bottom and lower side edges to the main panel. A flap associated with a front cargo pocket may be grasped by hand and moved in a generally forward and downward direction to expose the upper portion of the concealed weapon pocket. The user may then grasp and deploy a weapon disposed in the pocket with minimized structural interference from any portion of the pocket or surrounding apparel structure.
U.S. Pat. No. 8,839,464 (French) discloses a garment pocket configured to carry, in a concealed and readily-accessible state, a handgun or other object. The garment pocket has a receiving zone where the handgun or other object can be carried. The relative position of the receiving zone can be adjusted for the comfort of the wearer or to increase the concealment of the handgun or object in the receiving zone. In addition, a guard can be positioned on the outer surface of the pocket to prevent objects outside of the pocket from protruding into the receiving zone.
A fabric garment to be worn by a human having a waist structure in the garment, the fabric garment having a holster in linear orientation to the fabric or covered by the fabric of the fabric garment adjacent at least one hip side of the fabric garment:
A fabric garment to be worn by a human having a waist structure in the garment, the fabric garment having a holster in linear orientation with or beneath the fabric of the fabric garment adjacent at least one hip side of the fabric garment:
By use of the term linear orientation it is mean that the top of the holster is approximately linearly flush or aligned with the waist fabric material, with no continuous fabric covering or fabric overlain on the holster material.
A holster is constructed from a compressible material, preferably a compressible elastomeric composition (e.g., with an elastic memory so that when compressed, the material can repeatedly return to its original dimensions) 104 such as natural or synthetic elastomers including but not limited to solid and foam and reticulated elastomeric materials, such as rubber, artificial rubber, synthetic elastomers (e.g., Neoprene® rubber, silicones elastomers, polyurethane elastomers, acrylonitrile, butadiene and styrene elastomers) and contains a holster slot 106 capable of concealing an object within it, particularly a hand gun. The holster is preferably located inside the interior of the garment, such as the pants or skirt (the material may also extend equal to or beyond the structural material of the garment), preferably on a hip side of the waistline of the pants. In other embodiments the center of the holster or the center of the holster slot may be located in different positions within the interior of the pants, slightly forward to, slightly rearward of or centrally positioned with respect to the most outward extension of the wearer's hip.
In one embodiment, asymmetric holster pants 100 contain a zipper 108 that is off-center from (asymmetric to) the middle of the front of the pants. Other embodiments may not contain a zipper 108 (buttons or Velcro® fasteners or draw strings or elastic), however, the design or feature that traditionally marks the middle of the front of a pair of pants may be or should be similarly off-center in asymmetric holster pants. In embodiments that contain a seam, the seam should be offset similarly to the offset of the zipper 108. The pants are constructed such that the waistline of the pants have a longer side distance 110a and a shorter side distance, where the longer side distance 110a is the distance from the zipper to the outermost point on the hip of the waistline of the pants on the side of the pants containing the holster, and where the shorter side distance 110b is the distance from the zipper to the outermost point on the hip of the waistline of the pants on the side of the pants not containing the holster. The waistline of the side of the pants having a shorter side distance 110b would be similar to that of the construction of traditional pants, skirts, culottes, shorts, jeans, sweatpants, ski pants, or any other lower torso covering clothing garment as described herein. The waistline of the side of the pants having a longer side distance 110a would be unlike the construction of traditional pants in that it is longer than the waistline of traditional pants. The extra length of the waistline is to allow room for the holster and an object within the holster to exist within the interior of the pants while the pants are being worn. There may be at least one belt loop 101 in the pants (
The pants have a volume 112 that is large enough for the wearer to insert legs, hips, and anything else that would be covered by traditional pants into the interior of the pants or skirt in addition to the holster and object concealed in the holster inside the pants.
Additional features on the apparel of the present invention may include standard pants features such s pockets 422, belt loops (not shown), cuffs (not shown, coin pockets and the like. Belt loops will preferably be located under the gun holster so as to not restrict access to or hamper removal of the gun from the holster. Non-standard additional elements may include gun clip or bullet pockets 422 for storage of unused or used clips or bullets. These pockets may also be on the sides of the pants and may be used as inserts for knives and knifes in sheaths.
The asymmetric holster pants 400 has an outer fabric 412 that makes at least a majority of the outside materials of the asymmetric holster pants 400. The outer fabric 412 made be made of natural or synthetic fabric materials such as denim, rayon, cotton, polyester, wool, acrylic, linen, silk, hair fibers, derivatives or subspecies of such materials, or combinations of any such items. The inner fabric 414 of the asymmetric holster pants 400 can be made of similar materials denim, rayon, cotton, polyester, wool, acrylic, linen, silk, hair fibers, derivatives or subspecies of such materials, or combinations of any such items. Both the outer fabric 412 and the inner fabric 414 may include various stitching, glue, or other cohesive or binding materials as well as extra materials like leather, cork, leaf fibers, rubber, pleather, Vinylon™ fabric, or similar such items either for designs or as further makeup of the inner fabric 414 and or the outer fabric 412.
A connector for the garment 416 in a front, center of the asymmetric pants waistline 418 will be used. The connector 416 can either be stitching or other cohesive or binding materials to make the connector 416 permanently closed, or the connector 416 could be a zipper, a button, Velcro, or such connectors made of metal, ceramic, or plastic. Also, the waistline 418 may also be a flexible elastic composition that is uneven in its waistline, as outlined in 404a and 404b, such that holster 408 is better positioned. The waistline may also be off uneven height, as outlined in 402a and 402b. On waistline 418 or near on outer fabric 412 may contain real or fake pockets 420, designs, belt loops, or logos or trademark designs.
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