This application is related to U.S. application Ser. No. 12/565,383 entitled “Shoe With Support System”, filed Sep. 23, 2009, the contents of which are incorporated herein in their entirety; and is also related to U.S. application Ser. No. 12/703,994 entitled “Shoe Construction Having a Rocker Shaped Bottom and Integral Stabilizer”, filed Feb. 11, 2020, the contents of which are also incorporated herein by reference.
A shoe construction with a torsion support system. The shoe has an air heel cushion with an overlying support secured in the shoe in at least the heel portion and midfoot portion of the shoe to resist torsional twisting and longitudinal flexure of the shoe.
Shoes with improved comfort are sought after by consumers, and thus comfort is a goal of shoe suppliers. Comfort is provided in three basic ways, materials of manufacture, shoe shape and cushioning. In addition to comfort, shoes worn at work sites are constructed to provide an extra margin of safety. Some safety features include hard safety toes and slip resistance. Slip resistance is an important feature in shoes worn at certain work sites such as restaurants where liquids such as oil and water are frequently on the floors in areas where workers walk and stand. In addition to these functional features, style can also be important, particularly in areas where the public visits. Shoe choice by an individual takes both comfort and function into consideration as well as style. One popular style is the so-called clog which has a large toe box and is of a slip on style. In contrast to athletic shoes, the clog type shoe is devoid of laces, straps, zippers or the like which secure the shoe more tightly to the user's foot. Clog shoes are also devoid of ankle support. Both the laces and the ankle support provide stability to the shoe with the sacrifice of comfort. Athletic shoes are often worn for short periods of time and are generally impractical for use in a job setting where they would need to be worn for as long as twelve hours at a time. Clogs, in contrast, are not cinched to the user's feet and thus provide more comfort to persons wearing the shoes for long periods. However, as stated earlier, clogs do not provide the stability provided by athletic shoes. Another shortcoming to a clog type shoe relates to the heel. Heels cause the heel of the shoe and thus the heel of the foot to strike the ground prior to the forefoot. Heel strikes often result in a potentially injurious impact force at the beginning of a stride cycle that is not seen when the forefoot strikes the ground first. This means that heel cushioning must be of particular concern when designing a shoe for heel strikes.
Cushioning can be provided by the insole, midsole and outsole with suitable materials of construction. Although soft soles provide comfort, they tend to be very flexible. Many of these components are made of a cellular or foam material. In addition, air cushions have been used in the heel area of the shoe particularly to reduce impact forces. The cushioning is used to reduce impact on the shoe user during use of the shoe, particularly during fast walking and running where the heel of the user first impacts the underlying surface. One problem with air cushions is that movement of entrapped air inside the cushion in one area causes other areas of the cushion to accommodate that movement, e.g., if one area is compressed, another area expands in a flexible fluid filled cushion. This cushion deformation is commonly referred to as transfer of motion. This movement of fluid is particularly present in large single chamber cushions. One means of reducing this reactive cushion deformation is to provide columns extending between and connected to the upper and lower surfaces of the cushion to restrict movement of the top surface of the air cushion with respect to the bottom surface. Transfer of motion can result in a feeling of instability if the deformation of the cushion is along the side edges of the cushion.
Another solution to the cushion deformation is the use of a plurality of cushions in the heel area that will limit fluid movement and hence transmission of deformation, keeping deformation more localized. This however is reputed to limit the cushion effect and increases the cost and complexity of a shoe. There is thus a tradeoff between cushion stability and the cushioning effect.
Another problem with shoes of comfort is their flexibility both laterally and longitudinally. Longitudinal flexure (bending in an area transverse to the longitudinal axis of the shoe) can be somewhat controlled by use of a shank in the heel area and midfoot area of the shoe. Flexure can also be limited by the use of thick, heavy and rigid soles instead of soft flexible soles, but at the cost of comfort to the wearer.
There is thus a need for an improved shoe construction to overcome the problems attendant with the use of fluid cushioned shoes using lightweight flexible materials of construction. The shoe construction should provide stability to clog type shoes having particularly thick heel areas with air cushions therein.
The present invention involves the provision of a clog type shoe having an upper with a forefoot portion, midfoot portion and an elevated heel portion. The shoe also includes a bottom member also having a forefoot portion, midfoot portion and heel portion positionally corresponding to the mentioned upper shoe portions. The bottom member can include an outsole portion and a midsole portion. A midsole is provided in overlying relation to at least a portion of the outsole heel portion. The midsole can be used to provide elevation of a user's heel in the shoe as would a separate heel. An air cushion member is located in the heel portion of the midsole portion that extends over at least about one-half of the interior width of the heel portion of the upper. A relatively rigid support member is provided and has a heel portion and a forward portion. The support member heel portion is secured in overlying relation to at least a portion of the air cushion member and covers a substantial portion of the width of the cushion member. The support member forward portion has a maximum width greater than the maximum width of the support member heel portion and extends forwardly therefrom along a substantial portion of the midfoot portion of the shoe bottom member to provide a rigid foot support platform for the shoe.
Like numbers used throughout this application represent like or similar parts and/or construction.
While the present invention is susceptible of embodiment in various forms, there is shown in the drawings and will hereinafter be described presently preferred embodiments with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered an exemplification of the invention and is not intended to limit the invention to the specific embodiments illustrated.
Referring to
The upper 3 can be made of any suitable material or combination of materials such as leather, fabric, polymers or the like as is known in the art. The shoe 1 and the upper 3 have a forefoot portion 15, a midfoot portion 17 and a heel or hindfoot portion 19. These parts of the shoe and upper correspond and generally contain the similarly named parts of the foot. The forefoot of the foot is composed of the five toes (called phalanges) and their connecting long bones (metatarsals). The midfoot is composed of the irregularly shaped tarsal bones, forms the foot's arch, and serves as a shock absorber. The hindfoot is composed of three joints and links the midfoot to the ankle (talus). In a preferred embodiment, the upper 3 is of a slip on type, such as a clog. Such a construction typically provides a loose fit of the shoe to a foot and provides for ease of foot entry and exit. A loose fit may also improve ventilation of the shoe during use. However, as described earlier, the loose fit reduces stability between the user's foot and the shoe. The upper 3 has a foot receiving opening 21; and as shown, the upper 3 has an enclosed toe box 16 in the forefoot portion 15 and midfoot portion 17. The upper 3 may be lined or unlined as desired. A suitable lining can be fabric, fabric plus foam or leather as are known in the art.
In a preferred embodiment, the shoe 1 is provided with an insole 11 that can extend the full length or a portion of the length and preferably the full width of the interior of the shoe. The insole 11 can be made of any suitable material or combination of materials such as leather, fabric, polymeric or elastomeric foam and can be permanently secured in place as by cementing or can be removable as is known in the art.
The shoe 1 includes a bottom 5, which can be of any suitable form. The bottom 5 may be of single or multiple piece construction and is suitably secured to the upper 3 as by stitching and/or cementing. The bottom 5 can be molded construction and could be molded onto the upper 3 forming a molded integral structure. The bottom 5, like the upper 3, has a forefoot portion 15, a midfoot portion 17 and a hindfoot portion 19. The hindfoot portion 19 contains the midsole portion 7 and the gas cushion 9. The gas cushion 9 is preferably positioned in hindfoot portion 19 having a thickness that is greater than the forefoot 15 or midfoot 17 portions. The bottom 5 can be made of leather, elastomer, polymer or combinations thereof depending on the method used to assemble a shoe. The bottom 5 can be of a cellular material if desired for softness and lightness, and particularly preferred for work shoes is an outsole portion 6 that is oil resistant and slip resistant. An example of such an outsole is disclosed in U.S. Design Pat. No. 433,792 assigned to the assignee of the instant invention.
The bottom 5 is provided with a midsole portion 7 particularly in the areas of the hindfoot portion 19. The midsole portion 7 is shown as integral with the outsole portion 6 and is positioned between the outsole portion 6 and the bed liner layer 13. If an insole 11 is provided it is placed above the containment layer 13. The midsole portion 7 overlies the hindfoot portion 19 of the outsole portion 6 and underlies the hindfoot portion 19 of the bed liner layer 13. The bed liner layer 13 is positioned and secured in the shoe 1 in overlying relation to the support member 12 and the interior portion of the bottom 5. In a most preferred embodiment, the bed liner layer 13 is riveted to the support member 12 via rivets 14, and the bed liner is adhered, via over-molding, adhesive or the like to the midsole 7 to create a sandwich construction that secures the support member to the midsole. The midsole 7 also functions as a heel portion 18 to elevate the hindfoot portion 19 of the insole 11. The heel portion 18 of the present invention provides a mounting area for the gas cushion member 9 as described below. The heel portion 18 of the midsole portion 7 includes a pocket 31, therein for housing the gas cushion member 9. The outsole portion 6 can form a bottom wall 32 for the pocket 31 and the midsole portion 7 can form the sidewalls 33 of the pocket 31. A port 34 can be provided in heel area of the sidewall 33 so the gas cushion member 9 is exposed for viewing. The midsole portion 7 can be made of any suitable material or combination of materials that preferably provide resilient cushioning such as an elastomeric or polymeric foam. The midsole portion 7 can be secured in place as by stitching, cementing or encapsulation in other shoe components if it is made separate from the outsole portion 6.
The gas cushion member 9 is positioned in the pocket 31 and is positioned to underlie a portion of the heel portion 18 of the upper 3 and overlie a heel portion of the outsole 6 to provide cushioning support for the heel area of a shoe wearer. The gas cushion 9 can be molded in place in the bottom 5 if desired. The gas cushion member 9 extends laterally across the heel portion 18 of the upper 3 and preferably at least about one-half the interior width of the heel portions 18 for a substantial portion of the length of the heel portion 19. In one particularly preferred embodiment, the shoe 1 is provided with a heel height 80 of one and one quarter inches, and the gas cushion height 82 is about three quarters of an inch. The gas cushion member 9 is resiliently deformable and is soft to provide cushioning for a user's foot in the shoe 1. In a preferred embodiment, the gas cushion member 9 contains a fluid, preferably one or more gases such as air. The gas cushion member 9 has at least one sealed chamber 39 formed by a bottom wall 41, sidewall 42 and top wall 43 to contain the gaseous fluid therein. Preferably, the walls 41-43 of the gas cushion member 9 are made of a polymeric material such as polyethylene, polypropylene or polyurethane that will contain the fluid for an extended period of time of use. The cushion member 9 can have more than one chamber 39, and at least one chamber preferably extends across a substantial portion of the cushion and the heel portion 18. More preferably, a chamber 39 extends laterally across at least one-half of the width of the heel portion 18 where the chamber 39 is located at least at the widest part of the chamber 39. The gas cushion member 9 also extends lengthwise of the heel portion 19 a substantial portion of the length thereof and preferably at least about one-half the length of the heel portion 19. In a particularly preferred embodiment, there is a single gas cushion member 9 with a single main chamber 39 in a shoe 1. The cushion 9 can be provided with a plurality of upright columns 44 extending between and secured to the bottom and top walls 41, 43. The columns 44 can be formed hollow and when the cushion 9 is molded in place in the bottom 5, can receive bottom material therein. The cushion 9 is suitably mounted in a pocket 31 and occupies a substantial portion of the volume thereof and preferably, substantially all of the volume of the pocket 31. The chamber 39 may be pressurized or at about ambient pressure when not loaded by a shoe user. If the cushion 9 is sealed, it would thereby be pressurized when a user places load on it during use.
A support member 12 (
The support member 12 provides resistance to the cushion deformation from side to side during loading of the cushion 9 centrally during use allowing the use of a cushion with a low number of chambers 39, e.g., one or two. The forward portion 52 provides a relatively rigid platform for engagement with the forefoot portion of a foot to resist bending of the sole across the shoe 1 and is curved to provide for a substantially normal walking gait. The forward portion 52 and the heel portion 51 also limit torsional twisting or deformation of the bottom 5 about a longitudinal axis of the bottom 5. This resistance to deformation is further increased by bonding the support member 12 to the bottom 5. It is also preferred that the bottom surface 78 of the outsole 6 in the forward portion of the midfoot region 17 and at least the rear portion of the forefoot region 15 be relatively straight extending laterally across the outsole 6, but as noted above, can be convexly curved front to rear.
It is to be understood that while certain forms of the invention are illustrated, it is not to be limited to the specific forms or arrangements herein described and shown. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes may be made without departing from the scope of the invention and the invention is not to be considered limited to what is shown and described in the specification and any drawings/figures included herein.
One skilled in the art will readily appreciate that the present invention is well adapted to carry out the objectives and obtain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as those inherent therein. The embodiments, methods, procedures and techniques described herein are presently representative of the preferred embodiments, are intended to be exemplary and are not intended as limitations on the scope. Changes therein and other uses will occur to those skilled in the art which are encompassed within the spirit of the invention and are defined by the scope of the appended claims. Although the invention has been described in connection with specific preferred embodiments, it should be understood that the invention as claimed should not be unduly limited to such specific embodiments. Indeed, various modifications of the described modes for carrying out the invention which are obvious to those skilled in the art are intended to be within the scope of the following claims.
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