This application claims benefit of Pakistani Patent Application No. 651/2013 filed on Sep. 20, 2013 entitled “SPECIAL TOE CONSTRUCTION” and of Pakistani Design Application No. 16881-D/2013 filed on Sep. 20, 2013 entitled “SPECIAL SOCKS TOE.” Priority of the foregoing Pakistani applications is hereby claimed under 35 U.S.C. 119, and the contents of such applications are hereby incorporated by reference herein, for all purposes.
The innovation covers the field of legwear, more particularly the technical sock category used by athletes and people living active lifestyles.
Circular knitting sock machines are commercial available and use a system of needles and yarn feeders to knit a sock in a tubular shape. Needles are arranged in a circle and may be sequentially actuated, whereby stitches may be sequentially added in a circle to add rows of stiches to the tube of a sock. If every needle in the circle adds a stitch, then a full circle of stiches is formed and adds a full circular row to the tube.
It is known to provide additional shapes to a sock, such as angles and pockets, including in the heel and toe areas, by actuating only certain groups of needles in the circle of a circular knitting machine. The needles that are actuated add a stitch, while those needles that are not actuated do not add stitches, thereby adding partial rows only on the side of the sock that is actuated. For example, if a heel is being added, then only the part of the circle that makes up the heel is actuated (so that rows of stitches are added only on that side, while the remainder of the sock remains the same length. Since the machine knots only on one side of the sock, extra material is added on that side to create a bend. This process adds extra material in a portion of the sock to increase is length, thereby forming a heel.
An anomaly in the stitching pattern occurs every time a partial row is added. These odd-stitches create a line in the sock, known as a “gore.” A standard gore occurs in a straight line, with one gore typically located in the heel of a sock, and another gore typically located in the toe of the sock.
A typical toe gore occurs in a straight line along corners of a toe region of a sock. Use of such as gore is the means by which a knotting machine joins corner material of the sock and closes its edge. The gore closure allows a sock toe to have a curved shaped instead of a squared-off appearance, and also prevents excess material in edges of the sock, thereby enhancing comfort of the wearer.
A more complicated pattern occurs when a Y-shaped gore is formed—whether at a heel or toe of a sock. A Y-shaped gore line provides additional room by giving an added dimension of depth. When provided at a toe of a sock, a Y-shaped gore allows a knitter to decrease a horizontal dimension of the toe while permitting increased expansion to accommodate expansion along toes of a wearer. Use of Y-shaped gores along heel and toe portions of socks are disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 8,418,507.
Whether straight or Y-shaped gores are used along toe portions of socks, the resulting socks embody substantially envelope-shaped toe portions to fit a wearer's forefoot. The front curve of the wearer's toe digits is therefore accommodated only by stretching of knitted fabric, which exerts consistent pressure on the wearer's toes. It would be desirable to provide socks that confer greater comfort to a wearer with reduction of pressure along the wearer's toes while avoiding excess material along sock edges.
Various aspects of the invention relate to a sock with a knitted toe portion including multiple gores and knitting of extra fabric length arranged to cover portions of a wearer's toe digits, permitting the sock to assume a relaxed form with reduction of pressure on or along a wearer's toe digits.
In one aspect, the invention relates to a sock arranged to receive a foot and toes of a user, the sock comprising a knitted toe portion including a left side boundary, a right side boundary, a first left side gore proximate to the left side boundary, a second left side gore distanced from and non-intersecting with the first left side gore, a first right side gore proximate to the right side boundary, and a second right side gore distanced from and non-intersecting with the first right side gore.
In another aspect, the invention relates to a sock arranged to receive a foot and toes of a user, the sock comprising: a knitted toe portion including an upper toe region arranged to contact top surfaces of the user's toes; first left side gore; a second left side gore inset from, and non-intersecting with, the first left side gore; a first right side gore; and a second right side gore inset from, and non-intersecting with, the first right side gore; wherein the upper toe region is laterally bounded along portions thereof between the second left side gore and the second right side gore.
In a further aspect, any of the foregoing aspects, and/or features and elements as disclosed herein, may be combined for additional advantage.
Other aspects, features, and embodiments of the invention will be more fully apparent from the ensuing disclosure and appended claims.
The invention relates to a novel sock with a specially fabricated and shaped toe portion as well as a process of making such a special shaped toe via knitting. The specially shaped toe portion can be made in plain or pile fabrics. The novel sock toe is knitted in such a way that an extra fabric length is knitted and vertically covers the tips of a user's toes, with the sock thereby taking a natural toe shape in a relaxed form. The additional fabric along a sock toe portion in the case of a terry construction also provides better cushioning on frontal impact in situations such as running or kicking.
In certain embodiments, a sock is arranged to receive a foot and toes of a user, the sock comprising a knitted toe portion including a left side boundary, a right side boundary, a first left side gore proximate to the left side boundary, a second left side gore distanced from and non-intersecting with the first left side gore, a first right side gore proximate to the right side boundary, and a second right side gore distanced from and non-intersecting with the first right side gore.
In certain embodiments, a sock is arranged to receive a foot and toes of a user, the sock comprising: a knitted toe portion including an upper toe region arranged to contact top surfaces of the user's toes; first left side gore; a second left side gore inset from, and non-intersecting with, the first left side gore; a first right side gore; and a second right side gore inset from, and non-intersecting with, the first right side gore; wherein the upper toe region is laterally bounded along portions thereof between the second left side gore and the second right side gore.
In certain embodiments, the upper toe region is knitted.
In certain embodiments, at least a portion of the first left side gore is substantially parallel to at least a portion of the second left side gore, and wherein at least a portion of the first right side gore is substantially parallel to at least a portion of the second right side gore.
In certain embodiments, a knitted toe portion comprises an upper toe region arranged to contact top surfaces of the user's toes, wherein the upper toe region is laterally bounded along portions thereof by the second left side gore and the second right side gore.
In certain embodiments, a lateral edge, gore, or seam may extend from the second left side gore to the second right side gore and further define a rear boundary of the upper toe region.
The upper toe region may comprise any of various desirable shapes. In certain embodiments, an upper toe region comprises a substantially crescent-shaped form. In certain embodiments, an upper toe region comprises a substantially annular crescent-shaped form.
In certain embodiments, a knitted toe portion comprises a knitted upper panel portion and a knitted lower toe portion that separated along at least a partial boundary thereof by the first left side gore and the second left side gore, wherein the upper toe region is circumscribed within the upper panel portion.
In certain embodiments, an upper half of the knitted toe portion accommodates greater volume than a lower half of the knitted toe portion.
In certain embodiments, substantially the knitted toe portion comprises pile fabric. In certain embodiments, substantially the knitted toe portion comprises terry fabric.
In certain embodiments, a knitted toe portion of a sock is devoid of any Y-shaped gore.
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By providing multiple non-intersecting gores along each side of a toe portion of a sock, with an upper toe region having increased fabric, an upper half of the knitted toe portion accommodates greater volume than a lower half of the knitted toe portion—thereby permitting the sock to assume a relaxed form with reduction of pressure on or along a wearer's toe digits.
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As noted previously, the special toe of a sock according to various embodiments disclosed herein has extra fabric that may be arranged (e.g., vertically) to cover the tips of toe digits to accommodate entire toe digit height (or volume) for a more comfortable fit. In certain embodiments, the special toe shape can be made in plain/jersey as well as terry fabric construction. When provided in terry material, the special toe construction provides improved cushioning as terry pile is perpendicularly located to finger toe tips. In certain embodiments, the special toe may be supplemented with a plurality of motifs knitted in toe tips (e.g., in an upper toe region). In various embodiments, each lateral toe boundary of a sock including the special toe has two separate gore lines, distanced but parallel to each other. In certain embodiments, socks including the special toe can be made with any desirable needle counts available in circular sock knitting machines.
While the invention has been has been described herein in reference to specific aspects, features and illustrative embodiments of the invention, it will be appreciated that the utility of the invention is not thus limited, but rather extends to and encompasses numerous other variations, modifications and alternative embodiments, as will suggest themselves to those of ordinary skill in the field of the present invention, based on the disclosure herein. Various combinations and sub-combinations of the structures described herein are contemplated and will be apparent to a skilled person having knowledge of this disclosure. Any of the various features and elements as disclosed herein may be combined with one or more other disclosed features and elements unless indicated to the contrary herein. Correspondingly, the invention as hereinafter claimed is intended to be broadly construed and interpreted, as including all such variations, modifications and alternative embodiments, within its scope and including equivalents of the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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651/2013 | Sep 2013 | PK | national |
16881-D/2013 | Sep 2013 | PK | national |