The inventive subject matter is generally directed to system for securing an upper on a sole structure for an article of footwear, and particularly a type of sandal known as thongs or flip-flops. More particularly, it is directed to a thong sandal having at least one strap attached to a sole structure of the sandal, and the strap has a retention element that helps prevents the strap from being pulled out of the sole structure when an upward tension is applied to the strap.
Thong sandals are a very popular type of footwear, and they may be preferred over other types of sandals for their simple design, ease of use, and comfort. A thong sandal typically includes an upper and a sole structure, wherein the sole structure is typically made of one or more layers of a foamed rubber material, unfoamed rubber, natural or synthetic leather, or a combination of such materials. The upper can include one or more straps attached to the sole structure. The sandal is held on a wearer's foot by the straps passing over the top or around the sides of the foot. The straps, which can be formed from a variety of materials (e.g., textiles, plastic, leather, synthetic leather, etc.) typically include a toe post or thong that fits between the first and second toes of a wearer. A generally “Y” shaped upper can be formed by joining the toe post with a pair of flexible straps, which respectively connect to the lateral and medial sides of the sole structure near the middle or rear region of sandal.
However, one disadvantage of the thong sandal is that under force the straps may become dislodged from the sole structure, particularly as the sole structure wears thin. This problem is particularly common for the toe post, which is frequently under upward lifting tension during activities (e.g., walking, running, etc.). As a result, the straps may be pulled out of the sole structure.
Previous attempts at solving one or more of the aforementioned problems have been made. For example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 9,259,048, 7,540,098, U.S. Publication No. 2009/0044423, and AU Patent No. 2013100142 disclose various mechanisms to help secure a toe post to a sandal's sole. The foregoing patent documents are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties for all purposes. However, these methods have a number of shortcomings, including but are not limited to, inadequate protection, design complexity, and so on.
Therefore, there is a need for an improved system for retaining uppers on sole structures. There is particularly a need for an improved thong sandal that can be easily constructed, and effectively resist external tension so as to help prevent the straps from being pulled out of the sole structure.
The innovations disclosed herein overcome problems in the prior art and address one or more of the aforementioned or other needs.
In some respects, the innovations disclosed here are generally directed to improved systems for retaining uppers on sole structures.
In some respects, the innovations disclosed herein are generally directed to an improved strap system for a sandal. According to some embodiments, the strap system includes a strap and a retention element. The strap can pass through a channel across a sole of the sandal, and the strap can have a plug end. The retention element can be disposed between the plug end and a bottom portion of the sole. The retention element can also include a base and one or more flanges disposed at an outer edge of the base projecting angularly upward and away from the base.
In some embodiments, the channel can terminate to a recess at the bottom portion of the sole. The retention element can be configured to engage with the sole by an interface between the flanges and an area surrounding a bottom opening of the channel in the recess when an upward tension is applied to the strap.
In some embodiments, the base has a generally planar surface. In certain embodiments, the base can have an aperture configured to allow the strap to pass through. The base can have a gap extending from the outer edge to the aperture, and the retention element can be configured to allow the strap to pass through the gap into the aperture.
In certain embodiments, the strap can be a toe post positioned at a front region of the sole. In certain embodiments, the strap can be positioned at a medial side or a lateral side of the sole. In the foregoing and other embodiments, the base and any of the flanges can form an angle between 20 degrees and 70 degrees. In certain embodiments, the angle is about 45 degrees.
According to some embodiments, the flanges can be made of a resiliently deformable material. Accordingly, the flanges can expand outwardly toward a plane that is tangent to the base when the flanges are urged against the area surrounding the bottom opening of the channel. In some other embodiments, the flanges can be made of a rigid material. According to certain embodiments, the retention element can be integrated with the strap in a unitary structure.
According to some embodiments, a widest width of the bottom opening of the channel is smaller than a distance between two opposing points on a peripheral edge of flanges. In some embodiments, any of the flanges can include one or more barbs on a peripheral edge of the flanges.
The inventive subject matter is also directed to an improved article of footwear. According to some embodiments, the article of footwear includes a sole which has a top portion and a bottom portion, as well as one or more straps. At least one of the straps can extend from the top portion to the bottom portion through a channel in the sole. The strap can have a plug end and a retention element. The retention element can be disposed between the plug end and the bottom portion of the sole. As well, the retention element can include a base and one or more flanges disposed at an outer edge of the base projecting angularly upward and away from the base.
In some embodiments, the channel can terminate to a recess at the bottom portion of the sole. The retention element can be configured to engage with the sole by an interference between the flanges and an area surrounding a bottom opening of the channel in the recess when an upward tension is applied to the strap.
In some embodiments, the base can have a generally planar surface. In certain embodiments, the base can have an aperture configured to allow the strap to pass through. The base can have a gap extending from the outer edge to the aperture, and the retention element can be configured to allow the strap to pass through the gap into the aperture.
In certain embodiments, the strap can be a toe post positioned at a front region of the sole. In certain embodiments, the strap can be positioned at a medial side or a lateral side of the sole. In the foregoing and other embodiments, the base and any of the flanges can form an angle between 20 degrees and 70 degrees. In certain embodiments, the angle is about 45 degrees.
According to some embodiments, the flanges can be made of a resiliently deformable material. Accordingly, the flanges can expand outwardly toward a plane that is tangent to the base when the flanges are urged against the area surrounding the bottom opening of the channel. In some other embodiments, the flanges can be made of a rigid material. According to certain embodiments, the retention element can be integrated with the strap in a unitary structure.
According to some embodiments, a widest width of the bottom opening of the channel is smaller than a distance between two opposing points on a peripheral edge of flanges. In certain embodiments, any of the flanges can include one or more barbs on a peripheral edge of the flange.
Related methods for constructing an article of footwear are also disclosed. For example, the methods include the acts of preparing a sole and attaching one or more straps to the sole. The sole can have a top portion and a bottom portion. At least one of the straps can extend from the top portion to the bottom portion through a channel in the sole. The strap can have a plug end and a retention element. The retention element can be disposed between the plug end and the bottom portion of the sole. As well, the retention element can include a base and one or more flanges disposed at an outer edge of the base projecting angularly upward and away from the base.
These and other embodiments are described in more detail in the following Detailed Description and the Figures. Other embodiments are contemplated in the Detailed Description below and in the appended Figures, and in the claims, as originally written or amended, the claims as such being incorporated by reference into this Summary.
The foregoing is not intended to be an exhaustive list of embodiments and features of the inventive subject matter. Persons skilled in the art are capable of appreciating other embodiments and features from the following detailed description in conjunction with the drawings.
The appended figures show embodiments according to the inventive subject matter, unless noted as showing prior art.
Representative embodiments according to the inventive subject matter are shown in
In some respects, the inventive subject matter is directed to an improved system for retaining an upper on a sole structure for an article of footwear. In a representative, non-limiting embodiment, the article of footwear is a thong sandal, which is a type of open-toed sandal. A thong sandal may or may not have a heel and/or heel strap. In some respects, the inventive subject matter is also directed to a toe post system for a thong sandal. Yet in other respects, the inventive subject matter is directed to a method of constructing an improved retention system for retaining an upper structure on an article of footwear. It is particularly suitable for retaining straps on a sole structure, especially a toe post on the sole structure for a thong sandal.
According to some embodiments, the thong sandal includes a sole and one or more straps. The sole structure can be made from any known or to be discovered material or materials, including one or more layers of a foamed rubber material, unfoamed rubber, natural or synthetic leather, or a combination of such materials. A popular material for thong sandals is ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA). EVA is a polymer that approaches elastomeric materials in softness and flexibility, yet can be processed like other thermoplastics, thus providing for use of well-known injection and other molding and production techniques. The straps, which form part of an upper for the sandal, can be made with a variety of materials, such as molded rubber, plastic, leather, foam, fabric, etc. In certain embodiments, at least one of the straps is a toe post positioned at a front region of the sole. In certain embodiments, at least one of the straps is positioned at a medial side or a lateral side of the sole.
For example,
In a representative, non-limiting embodiment, a strap extending from a top portion to a bottom portion through a channel in the sole can be securely attached to the sole by a plug end and a retention element. By way of illustration and without any limitation, a toe post will be used hereafter to illustrate principals of the inventive subject matter. It should be understood that similar retention mechanism can also be applied to securely attach other straps (e.g., the medial strap and/or lateral strap) to a sandal's sole. Further, although the channels 13, 13A, 13B are shown running completely through the top to bottom of the sole, persons skilled in the art will appreciate that a strap plug end can be captured between layers of material in a sole so as not be exposed on the bottom side of the sole.
As an example of a typical toe post system, as improved by the inventive subject matter,
Attachment of the toe post 35 to the sole 31 can be accomplished by inserting the toe post's plug end 37 through the channel 33 in the sole 31 in a downward direction. Due to the deformable nature of the sole 31 and the plug end 37, the widest width of the channel 33 can be smaller than the cross-sectional width of the plug end 37. After the plug end 37 is passed through the channel 33 in the sole 31, the retention element 30 can be inserted between the plug end 37 and the bottom portion of the sole 31. The toe post 35 can also be attached to the sole 31 by inserting the thong strap 36 through the channel 33 in the sole 31 in an upward direction, thus leaving the plug end 37 at the bottom portion of the sole 31. Then the retention element 30 can be inserted between the plug end 37 and the bottom portion of the sole 31.
The width of channel 33 can be generally configured to match the width of the thong strap 36, but the channel 33 can flare to a wider bottom opening to form a recess near the bottom portion of the sole. As described more fully below, the recess can be configured to receive the plug end 37 and the retention element 30. Thus, when the toe post 35 is pulled upwards, the plug end 37 and the retention elements 30 are urged against (i.e., interference fit) the area surrounding the bottom opening of the channel 33 in the recess. The plug end 37 and the retention element 30 are retained because of the interference fit, thus helping prevent the toe post 35 from being pulled out of the sole 31.
In a representative, non-limiting embodiment, the base 49 can have a generally planar surface. In some embodiments, the base 49 can have an aperture 46 configured to allow a corresponding strap (not shown) to pass through. In an exemplary embodiment, the base 49 can have a gap 48 extending from the outer edge 42 to the aperture 46 in the base 49, and the retention element 40 can be configured to allow a corresponding strap (not shown) to pass through the gap 48 into the aperture 46 in the base 49.
The cross section of the thong strap 55a can have a circular, eclipse, rectangular, hexagonal, or any other shape. The widest width measured in the cross section of the thong strap 55a can be labeled as Ds (i.e., Ds is the diameter of the cross section if the thong strap 55a has a generally cylinder shape). The plug end 55b is disposed at the distal end of the thong strap 55a, and its top and bottom surfaces can have a circular, eclipse, rectangular, hexagonal, or any other shape. The widest width measured across the top and bottom surfaces of the plug end 55b can be labelled as Dp (i.e., Dp is the diameter of the surface if the plug end 55b has a generally circular shape). Dp is greater than Ds to allow the plug end 55b in combination with the retention element 50 to engage the sole structure 57 in an interference fit.
Similar to the example shown in
Channel 54 starts at the top surface 57a of the sole 47 and terminates to a widened recess 53 at the bottom surface 57b of the sole 57, for receiving the plug end 55b and the retention element 50. The region of the recess 53 can be confined by an outer boundary 53a. One or both of the plug end 55b and the retention element 50 can match the geometric shape of the recess 53. For example, the widest width of the recess Dr (e.g., Dr is the diameter of the recess 53 if the recess 53 has a circular shape) can be similar to, or slightly larger than Dp (i.e. the widest width measured across the top and bottom surfaces of the plug end 55b). The depth of the recess 53 can be similar to, or slightly greater than the height of the plug end 55b plus the height of the base 59 of the retention element 50. Thus, when the toe post 55 is drawn upwards, the plug end 55b, as well as the retention element 50, can be pulled into the recess 53, and the plug end 55b can form a flush fit or generally smooth bottom surface of the thong sandal.
The toe post 55 passes through the sole 57 via the channel 54, whose bottom opening 53b is disposed in the recess 53. The cross section of the channel 54 may vary in size along its path. At least the widest width Da of the channel's bottom opening 53b (e.g., Da is the diameter of the bottom opening 53b if the channel 54 has a generally cylinder shape) is smaller than a distance De between two opposing points on a peripheral edge of the flanges. In some embodiments, when the retention element 50 is placed into the recess 53, the base 59 of the retention element 50 generally covers the bottom opening 53b of the channel 54. According to a representative, non-limiting embodiment, the size of the plug end 55b is generally bigger than the aperture 56 in the retention element 50, so that the plug end 55b has an interference fit against the retention element 50. In addition, the size of the retention element 50 is generally bigger than the bottom opening 53b of the channel 54. Thus, at least the retention element 50 can be configured to engage with the sole 57 by an interference fit between the flanges (51a, 51b, 51c, and 51d) and an area 53c surrounding the bottom opening 53b in the recess 53 (i.e., the area between the outer boundary 53a and the bottom opening 53b) when an upward tension is applied to a toe post having the retention element 50. Accordingly, it will be difficult to pull the retention element 50 and the strap's plug end 55b away from the sole 57 through the channel 54.
The retention element can have a variety of designs. For example, the number of flanges, the space between two adjacent flanges, the size and shape of the flanges, the size and shape of the base, the size and shape of the aperture in the base, the size and shape of the gap in the base (or no gap in the base), and/or other structural features of the retention element can be varied to achieve specific functional properties and/or ornamental characteristics.
As an example,
In another example,
In an alternative example,
Yet in a further example,
According to some embodiments, the flanges 101 are made of a resiliently deformable material.
It should be understood that the examples shown in
While each of the retention elements described above has a gap in the base so that the retention element can be assembled over the strap (e.g., by sliding the strap through the gap into the aperture of the retention element), in other embodiments the retention element does not need to have a gap. For example,
According to certain embodiments, the retention element 140 can be integrated with the corresponding strap in a unitary structure. For example,
To assemble the sandal, the integrated toe post 160 can be inserted from the bottom portion 167b to the top portion 167a of the sole 167 via a channel 164. As shown, the top opening 164a can be wider than the bottom opening 164b of the channel 164. Channel 164 terminates to a recess 163, which can receive the portion of integrated plug end 165 and the plurality of flanges 161. The flanges 161 can form an interference fit against an area surrounding the bottom opening 164b of the channel 164 in the recess 163, so that the toe post 156 can be securely attached to the sole 167. The thong strap 162 can exit the top portion 167a of the sole 167 and be coupled to the medial and/or lateral straps to form a part of the sandal's upper.
Any of the retention elements described herein, or a unitary retention element/plug end, such as plug end 165, can have a variety of shapes, for example, a plate; disc; rectilinear; block, sphere, or other volumetric shape; ellipsoid; cylinder, etc.
Persons skilled in the art will recognize that many modifications and variations are possible in the details, materials, and arrangements of the parts and actions which have been described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of the inventive subject matter, and that such modifications and variations do not depart from the spirit and scope of the teachings and claims contained therein.
All patent and non-patent literature cited herein is hereby incorporated by references in its entirety for all purposes.
As used herein, “and/or” means “and” or “or”, as well as “and” and “or.” Moreover, any and all patent and non-patent literature cited herein is hereby incorporated by references in its entirety for all purposes.
The principles described above in connection with any particular example can be combined with the principles described in connection with any one or more of the other examples. Accordingly, this detailed description shall not be construed in a limiting sense, and following a review of this disclosure, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate the wide variety of systems that can be devised using the various concepts described herein. Moreover, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the exemplary embodiments disclosed herein can be adapted to various configurations without departing from the disclosed principles.
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the disclosed innovations. Various modifications to those embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of this disclosure. Thus, the claimed inventions are not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein, but are to be accorded the full scope consistent with the language of the claims, wherein reference to an element in the singular, such as by use of the article “a” or “an” is not intended to mean “one and only one” unless specifically so stated, but rather “one or more”.
All structural and functional equivalents to the elements of the various embodiments described throughout the disclosure that are known or later come to be known to those of ordinary skill in the art are intended to be encompassed by the features described and claimed herein. Moreover, nothing disclosed herein is intended to be dedicated to the public regardless of whether such disclosure is explicitly recited in the claims. No claim element is to be construed as “a means plus function” claim under US patent law, unless the element is expressly recited using the phrase “means for” or “step for”.
The inventors reserve all rights to the subject matter disclosed herein, including the right to claim all that comes within the scope and spirit of the following claims:
The inventor(s) reserves the right to claim, without limitation, at least the following subject matter.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US17/37504 | 6/14/2017 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62363621 | Jul 2016 | US |