Claims
- 1. Footwear for reducing the binding and unnatural pressures placed on a foot by conventional footwear comprising;
- a compliant and generally hollow body for receiving a human foot including an upper and a sole attached to the upper, the sole having a contoured bottom surface with a toe region and a heel region and comprising:
- an inner longitudinal arch formed on the sole surface and extending from the heel region to the toe region on an inner side of the sole surface;
- an outer longitudinal arch formed on the sole surface and extending from the heel region to the toe region on an outer side of the sole surface;
- a first transverse arch formed on the sole surface proximate the toe region of the sole surface;
- a second transverse arch formed on the sole surface forward of the heel region;
- the upper transitioning to the smooth sole surface in a continuous curve free from a sharply angled bottom featheredge;
- said longitudinal and transverse arches collectively defining a horizontal cross-sectional area of the footwear body projected downwardly onto a horizontal ground plane, the inner longitudinal arch having a maximum vertical height above the ground plane;
- a parting line defining a maximum cumulative horizontal cross-sectional area of the footwear body projected to the ground plane;
- the footwear further characterized wherein:
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 2.5% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 10% to 20% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area; and
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 5% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 20% to 35% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said foot body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 10% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 50% to 60% of said maximum comulative cross-sectional area;
- whereby the footwear generally cooperates with the human foot and reduces binding and unnatural pressures to the foot when worn.
- 2. The footwear of claim 1 wherein the sole has a thickness dimension which is approximately equal over the surface of the sole such that a foot placed in the footwear during use is maintained, by the sole, spaced above a ground plane equal distances from the ground plane over generally the entire sole and the foot is supported as a bare foot with reduced distortion of the pressures experienced by the foot during weight bearing and propulsion.
- 3. The footwear of claim 2 wherein the sole comprises a plurality of layers, each sole layer having a thickness dimension which is approximately equal over the surface of the sole such that the cumulative sole layers maintain the foot spaced equal distances above the ground plane.
- 4. The footwear of claim 1 wherein the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear from a height above the ground plane of approximately 7.5% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 35% to 50% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area.
- 5. The footwear of claim 1 wherein the sole surface further comprises:
- a group of three separate and discrete contact areas, the contact areas being discontinuous with respect to each other and intersecting a defined horizontal ground plane when the footwear is worn and the sole surface contacts the ground, the contact area group including:
- a first contact area located in the toe region and proximate a forward end of the inner longitudinal arch on the inner side of the sole surface;
- a second contact area located in the toe region and proximate a forward end of the outer longitudinal arch on the outer side of the sole surface; and
- a third contact area located proximate the heel region of the sole surface;
- whereby the sole surface contacts the ground when the footwear is in use for proper expansion of the sole surface in cooperation with the expansion of the foot.
- 6. The footwear of claim 5 wherein the separate contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the first contact area to the second contact area and a line extending from the first contact area to the third contact area form an angle approximately in the range of approximately 20.degree. up to 120.degree..
- 7. The footwear last of claim 5 wherein the separate contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the second contact area to the first contact area and a line extending from the second contact area to the third contact area form an angle in the range of approximately 160.degree. down to 50.degree..
- 8. The footwear last of claim 5 wherein the contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the third contact area to the first contact area and a line extending from the third contact area to the second contact area form an angle in the range of approximately 1.degree. up to 45.degree..
- 9. The footwear of claim 5 wherein the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said three discrete contact areas at said ground plane is approximately in a range of 1% to 10% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area.
- 10. Footwear for reducing the binding and unnatural pressures placed on a foot by conventional footwear comprising:
- a compliant and generally hollow body for receiving a human foot including an upper and a sole attached to the upper, the sole having a contoured bottom surface with a toe region and a heel region and comprising:
- an inner longitudinal arch formed on the sole surface and extending from the heel region to the toe region on an inner side of the sole surface;
- an outer longitudinal arch formed on the sole surface and extending from the heel region to the toe region on an outer side of the sole surface;
- a first transverse arch formed on the sole surface proximate the toe region of the sole;
- the upper transitioning to the sole surface in a continuous curve free from a sharply angled bottom featheredge;
- a parting line extending around the footwear body and separating the upper and sole, the parting line including some outermost side points of the body in the upright position where planes tangential to said outermost points are generally perpendicular to a horizontal ground plane;
- the parting line defining a maximum cumulative horizontal cross-sectional area of the footwear body projected downwardly onto said ground plane, and said inner longitudinal arch having a maximum vertical height above the ground plane defined by a point on said parting line;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 2.5% of the maximum arch height being approximately in the range of 10% to 20% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 5% of the maximum arch height being approximately in the range of 20% to 35% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear body from a height above the ground plane of approximately 7.5% of the maximum arch height being approximately in the range of 35% to 50% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear from a height above the ground plane of approximately 10% of the maximum arch height being approximately in the range of 50% to 60% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said footwear from a height above the base plane of approximately 20% of the maximum arch height being approximately in the range of 70% to 85% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area;
- whereby the footwear generally cooperates with the human foot and reduces binding and unnatural pressures to the foot when worn.
- 11. The footwear of claim 10 further comprising a group of three discrete contact areas on the sole surface which intersect a defined horizontal ground plane when the footwear body is in a primary position on the ground plane, the contact areas including a first contact area located proximate a forward end of said inner longitudinal arch, a second contact area located proximate a forward end of said outer longitudinal arch and a third contact area proximate a rearward end of both said inner longitudinal arch and said outer longitudinal arch in the heel region of the sole.
- 12. The footwear of claim 11 where the contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the first contact area to the second contact area and a line extending from the first contact area to the third contact area form an angle approximately in the range of 20.degree. up to 120.degree..
- 13. The footwear of claim 11 where the contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the second contact area to the first contact area and a line extending from the second contact area to the third contact area form an angle approximately in the range of 160.degree. down to 50.degree..
- 14. The footwear of claim 11 where the contact areas are oriented on the sole surface such that a line extending from the third contact area to the first contact area and a line extending from the third contact area to the second contact area form an angle approximately in the range of 1.degree. up to 45.degree..
- 15. The footwear of claim 11 wherein the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said three discrete contact areas at said ground plane is in a range of approximately 1% to 10% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area.
- 16. The footwear of claim 10 wherein the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane from a height above the ground plane of approximately 30% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 85% to 90% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area.
- 17. The footwear of claim 10 wherein the cumulative cross-sectional area projected downwardly onto said ground plane by said last from a height above the ground plane of approximately 40% of the maximum arch height is approximately in the range of 90% to 93% of said maximum cumulative cross-sectional area.
- 18. The footwear of claim 10 further comprising a second transverse arch formed on the sole forward of the heel region.
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
"This application is a divisional of pending application Ser. No. 08/979,421, entitled SHOE LAST AND FOOTWARE MANUFACTURED THEREWITH, filed Nov. 24, 1997, still pending which is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/518,114, entitled SHOE LAST AND FOOTWARE MANUFACTURED THEREWITH, filed on Aug. 28, 1995 (now issued as U.S. Pat. No. 5,718,013), which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 08/327,212 entitled SHOE LAST, filed Oct. 21, 1994, now abandoned, which is a continuation application of application Ser. No. 08/032,135, entitled SHOE LAST, filed Mar. 17, 1993, now abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part application of application Ser. No. 07/861,460, entitled SHOE LAST, filed Apr. 1, 1992, now abandoned, which applications and issued patent are completely incorporated herein by reference in their entireties."
US Referenced Citations (34)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
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1176458 |
Oct 1984 |
CAX |
0323099 |
Apr 1989 |
EPX |
9117677 |
Jan 1991 |
WOX |
Divisions (2)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
979421 |
Nov 1997 |
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Parent |
518114 |
Aug 1995 |
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Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
032135 |
Mar 1993 |
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Continuation in Parts (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
327212 |
Oct 1994 |
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Parent |
861460 |
Apr 1992 |
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