The present invention relates to outerwear, a back protector and clothing.
A connection between trousers and a top part to provide a joint article of clothing is often limited by the fact that like US 2005/0114979 A1, DE 10 2004 063 586 A1, WO 00/47071, JP 3-115611 or DE 29619508 U1 they are only suitable for trousers having integrated joining means, such as horizontal zippers. Other joining means which have to be sewed or fixed to the trousers are also known. Velcro connections are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,737,916, U.S. Pat. No. 5,754,982, U.S. Pat. No. 7,398,558 B1 or DE 3228720 A1. J 61-11712 shows a body warmer-like snow protector. A hook-like connection is known from FR 2803177 A3.
JP 2011190547 describes a snow protection or powder skirt which can be attached to trousers with belt loops. In this connection, a joining means is used and fixed externally to the belt. The other part of the connection is fixed to the inner side of the snow protection. The forces which can occur in a fall, in particular during winter sports, can possibly terminate this connection. CH 704437 B1 shows a back protector, the field of use of which is in motorcycling and winter sports and which has a belt-like band.
DE 1217297 describes a device for attaching trousers, skirts or the like to a jacket, blouse or vest, wherein an elastic ribbon has to be threaded through a holding device.
The object of the present invention is to create outerwear which can easily be connected to trousers. In particular, it shall be possible to connect the outerwear to any commercially available trousers without the trousers having been adapted in a special way to the connection to the outerwear. This serves for producing overall clothing which connects the outerwear to the trousers without getting out of place and/or protects the wearer in such a way that foreign particles, such as snow, cannot reach the body of the wearer via the waistband, and/or offers an all-around closed weather guard for the wearer in the waist region.
The above described object is achieved by the outerwear according to claim 1. Advantageous developments and/or embodiments of the invention are specified in the appending claims.
In connection with the present invention, the expression “outerwear” is understood to mean a piece of clothing which with respect to the wearer is worn at least in part above the belt, e.g. a jacket, a vest, a snow protection, a protector, a bib or any combination thereof. In other words, the term “outerwear” as used in connection with the present invention might also be comprehended as “upper clothing”.
According to the invention, the outerwear can be a ski jacket or a windbreaker jacket or an all-weather jacket or a weather-proof jacket.
According to the invention, the outerwear can be provided with a snow protection which can preferably be attached to the outerwear by means of a zipper and/or is firmly attached to the outerwear.
According to the invention, the outerwear can be a snow protection, the lower region of which is provided with straps.
According to the invention, the outerwear can be a bib.
Outerwear comprises a plurality of straps arranged in a lower region of the outerwear and a belt, wherein the belt can be used as a belt for trousers and can simultaneously be connected to straps of the outerwear in holding engagement. Outerwear is clothing for the upper body, in particular in the form of a vest, i.e. without sleeves, or as a jacket with long or short sleeves or as a bib. A strap is in particular a region protruding downwardly from a lower edge of the outerwear. The strap is preferably made as a tongue, and the material of the tongue can have a single layer or a plurality layers can be joined to give a single-layer combination. In particular, the tongue has no openings or passages through which a holding element, such as a hook, a cord or a belt can be pulled.
In connection with the present invention, the expression “lower region” of the outerwear is understood to mean a region of the outerwear which with respect to the wearer is arranged in relatively close proximity to the belt of the trousers, and therefore the straps provided therein can be brought into holding engagement with the belt and/or can be connected to the belt.
According to the invention, the outerwear can extend below the lower region where the straps are arranged for connection to the belt of the trousers, and also further downwards, i.e. in other words that the outerwear can also cover the trousers at least in part.
According to the invention, a connection can be established between the outerwear and trousers via a belt. In contrast to known connections between outerwear and trousers, the establishment of a connection between outerwear and trousers does not require a zipper. However, the latter can be provided as an additional connection between outerwear and trousers, if desired.
As a result of straps used for the connection, the handling becomes rapid, simple and stable when the pieces of clothing are connected or separated. Furthermore, the connection does not reduce the wearing comfort. The joining means are hidden during wearing for esthetic reasons.
At least one strap of the outerwear can preferably be connected to the belt in a separable fashion by being foldable over along the lower belt edge. In this way, the joining elements, i.e. the strap(s), are not visible and a trendy design is rendered possible.
In particular, the at least one strap can be folded over inwardly from outside past the belt and along the lower belt edge, where it can be connected in separable fashion to an inwardly facing surface of the belt. As a result, a Velcro connection can be obtained with the belt. Velcro connections directly with the fabric of the trousers can be avoided in this way, as a result of which the fabric is not damaged. In particular, a Velcro connection to the trousers might accelerate the aging of the textiles by friction.
The outerwear can preferably be a winter jacket, wherein the winter jacket comprises a snow protection and the snow protection comprises at least one strap. A snow protection is a wide and all-around band which is attached to the inner side of a jacket and which as a result of the connection to the belt ensures that no snow can get under the jacket from below.
The snow protection can also be separated from the jacket. For example, it can have a zipper at the upper edge thereof for connection to the jacket and can have the described straps at the lower edge thereof. A jacket can thus be connected to the snow protection via the zipper and the snow protection can, in turn, be attached in separable fashion to an appropriate belt. In this way, the strap device can be attached to any winter jackets which have an all-around zipper on the inner side of the jacket, e.g. at the height of the waist.
Alternatively, the outerwear can be a jacket or vest which can comprise at least a back protector. Especially when a vest having a back protector is used, it is necessary to ensure that the protector does not get out of place in the case of a fall. The described attachment by means of the straps to the belt serves this purpose. Even if the belt straps of the trousers should optionally not be very tear-resistant, the belt which safely embraces the body of the wearer, additionally offers security that the protector does not get out of place in the case of a fall.
The outerwear preferably has at least three, in particular at least four and preferably six straps, wherein this number is adapted to the conventional outfit of five belt straps of the (ski) trousers.
Furthermore, the outerwear can have a maximum of ten, preferably a maximum of eight or fewer straps. When such an outerwear is used with trousers having markedly fewer straps, a strap can, under certain circumstances, directly face a belt loop of the trousers, and therefore this strap cannot be folded over for engagement with the belt. In this case, it can be folded in directly along the outerwear and thus outside the belt without contributing to the connection to the belt.
A back protector comprises at least one strap and one belt, wherein the belt can be used as a belt for trousers and can simultaneously be meshed with the at least one strap of the back protector. The most important advantage is here the better fixation of the back protector to the trousers. The horizontal and/or vertical displacement of the back protector is reduced during a fall.
Appropriate clothing comprises outerwear, a belt and trousers, wherein, in addition to loops for the attachment to the belt, the trousers do not comprise any joining elements for the direct or indirect permanent connection to the outerwear. The advantage here is a better protection from weather, in particular with activities or sport in nature.
According to the invention, very simple and favorable joining possibilities from outerwear and trousers can be created. According to the invention, the connection can be adapted in a simple way to the needs. The more the belt is tightened, the firmer and thus tighter becomes the connection.
According to the invention, the connection between the outerwear and the trousers can be created directly at the lower end of the belt and thus can create a very clean closure which protects from snow, wind and bad weather in general.
According to the invention, the belt can also have slits, through which the straps are passed to establish the connection between the outerwear and the trousers.
According to the invention, the belt can also have a continuous slit or an upper region and a lower region, wherein the straps are passed through the belt to establish the connection between the outerwear and the trousers.
The invention is described in more detail below by means of an exemplary embodiment, wherein:
According to an embodiment (not shown), the bib or trousers bib can also be made with the front closed. Here, the bib can also be made so as to be closable at the front.
Alternatively to a bib, the described straps can be attached to a jacket. Here, they can be provided along the lower edge of the jacket or on a continuous line around the inner side of the jacket, and therefore a lower region of the jacket can reach beyond the belt downwards so as to form a protection for the posterior.
For example, the straps can be attached to the jacket by means of an arrangement of straps, as shown in
According to the invention, the straps 102 can have a width of about 30 to 120 mm. The straps 102 can preferably have a width of about 40 to 100 mm. More preferably, the straps 102 can have a width of about 50 to 80 mm. According to a preferred embodiment, the straps 102 have a width of about 60 mm.
According to the invention, the distances 105 between the straps can be about 30 to 200 mm. The distances 105 between the straps 102 can preferably be about 70 to 180 mm. More preferably, the distances 105 between the straps 102 can be about 100 mm to 160 mm. According to a preferred embodiment, the distances 105 between the straps 102 are about 120 mm to 150 mm. According to the embodiment shown in
These embodiments have the advantage that they are suitable for a plurality of trousers where the arrangement of the belt loops is slightly different.
According to the invention, the straps can also have a greater width, e.g. such that the distance between the straps and the belt loops is as small as possible so as to form the best and tightest possible connection between the trousers and the outerwear by the straps when the straps are wrapped around the belt next to the belt loops.
The snow protection 11 shown in
According to the invention, the number of the straps 2 can be equal to the number of the belt loops plus one or equal to the number of the belt loops minus one. Most trousers have five belt loops. According to the embodiments shown in
A joining means 12 is provided at the upper region of the snow protection 11 according to the invention, which is shown in
The circumference of the snow protection 11 is dimensioned in such a way that the snow protection can embrace the body of the wearer. The length or extent of the snow protection thus corresponds substantially to the length of the belt or the waistband of the trousers which have to be connected to the jacket or the snow protection.
The distance and the length of the straps are determined in the preferred embodiments by the distance of the belt loops. The preferred target is here to make the resulting gaps between the straps and the belt loops as small as possible to obtain the best possible weather protection.
If it is desired that the outerwear can be connected to trousers from different manufacturers, it is also possible to provide for a certain distance between the belt loops and the straps, said distance serving for compensating the size- and manufacturer-related tolerances. In this way, the manufacturer costs can be lowered.
If the outerwear shall only fit certain trousers, the distances between the belt loops and the straps can be so small that good handling is still possible. The width of the straps should here advantageously correspond approximately to the width of a hand to ensure an easy and simple handling for establishing and terminating the connection of the outerwear to the trousers. It is clear that the width of the belt loops might then be enlarged appropriately to keep the distances between the belt loops and the straps as small as possible.
Embodiments with four or six straps are described above. They are in particular suitable for trousers having five belt straps, which are common.
The outerwear is attached as follows. First of all, the belt will be pulled through the belt loops of the trousers. Thereafter, the person puts on the outerwear. The straps are then approximately at the height of the belt. Preferably a second person pushes the straps under the belt, wherein the straps are placed at a 180° angle relative to the outerwear 3. The Velcro connection ensures a flat connection from the belt to the straps, wherein the maximum holding force thereof is in the transverse direction and/or shearing direction. By pressing the belt against the body of the wearer, the holding force is even increased. In addition, the 180° deflection effects wrapping of the belt so as to further increase the holding forces.
Ideally, the number of straps is adapted to the number of the loops of the trousers. However, since there different trousers, the number of straps can also be markedly larger than the number of loops in an alternative embodiment of the outerwear. For example, when the number of loops of the trousers is five, the number of straps can be 10 or 15. In this case, the straps, which are in the loop-free region, were used for the above described attachment. The straps which are disposed in the regions of loops of the trousers are folded over directly, i.e. outside of the loop, under the top part 3. In this case there would be initially a belt loop, then the strap 4, immediately followed by the fabric of the top part 3 on the outside, i.e. on the right-hand side of the belt 1 of
The employed relative statements of place such as “up”, “down” or “vertical” refer in particular to a person who wears the corresponding pieces of clothing as intended and who is in an upright position. The term outerwear refers to the clothing for the upper body and not to a clothing layer worn farther outside. Furthermore, the direction “inside” shall refer to being closer to the body of the person and the position or direction “outside” shall refer to being farther away from the body.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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13170409.0 | Jun 2013 | EP | regional |
10 2014 001 015.5 | Jan 2014 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/061515 | 6/3/2014 | WO | 00 |