US1795276A - Shoe - Google Patents

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Publication number
US1795276A
US1795276A US476823A US47682320A US1795276A US 1795276 A US1795276 A US 1795276A US 476823 A US476823 A US 476823A US 47682320 A US47682320 A US 47682320A US 1795276 A US1795276 A US 1795276A
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United States
Prior art keywords
face
sole
inner sole
edge
shoe
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Expired - Lifetime
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US476823A
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Davis Robert
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Individual
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Individual
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Priority to US476823A priority Critical patent/US1795276A/en
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Publication of US1795276A publication Critical patent/US1795276A/en
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Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B13/00Soles; Sole-and-heel integral units
    • A43B13/14Soles; Sole-and-heel integral units characterised by the constructive form
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B13/00Soles; Sole-and-heel integral units
    • A43B13/28Soles; Sole-and-heel integral units characterised by their attachment, also attachment of combined soles and heels

Definitions

  • the4 outsole may be stripped oif and an entire new outer sole be cemented on in place of an i11- jured or worn outsole.
  • the uppers may be attached to the insoles vat one place by labor ⁇ familiar with such work and theoutersoles be alixed at an entirely diiferentlplace. Thus labor and factory costs may be kept at a minimum.
  • the full thickness atthe edge of ythe outsole protects theupp1e1, where., it ,turns in under the edge of ⁇ the insole, nieetingthis inturned portion ofthe upper, substantially as indicated in Fig. 2.1
  • Thestructure is particularly light, the more fso, ⁇ be ⁇ ,cla ⁇ use no nails or y other metallic fasteningsfarenecessary, eX- cept possiblyfor a screw or the like, such as may be employed for fastening ⁇ the heel in place.
  • a shoe comprisingan inner sole having a continuous, smooth, upper face and having a channeled lower face, an upper extending down about the edge of said inner sole, channel stitching securingthe edges o-saidupper to said channeled lower portion 'of the inner sole, and a separate outer solecemented in flat face-to-face engagement with said inner sole and having a gutter inthe upper face of the same .set inward from the edge of said outer sole and receiving the extra thickness formed by the channel stitching on the underface of the inner sole.
  • the ⁇ method of manufacturing shoes which comprises splitting a layer of leather to provide a thin layer having a grain side for the outer sole and a thin layer having a fiesh'side4 for the inner sole, channelling the underside of the flesh layer, providing a gutter in the cut face ofthe grain layer, channel stitching the edge of anupper to the channeled face portion of the inner sole layer, and cementing the outer sole in face-toface engagement over the lower face of the innersole and with theguttered portion of the outer solel receiving the channel stitched portlons .on the' underface of the inner sole.
  • aninner sole having a continuous, smooth, upper face and channeled in the underface of the same, an upper extendinfir down aboutthe edge of the inner sole to the channeled under portion of the same, channel stitching securing the edge of the upper to the channeled ortion of the inner sole, and said inner so e and outer sole ⁇ being secured byvcement in fiat face-to-face engagement with the channel stitched portion of the inner sole and upper received within the gutter and definitely positioned by the outwardly beveled and normal cut Walls of said gutter.

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  • Footwear And Its Accessory, Manufacturing Method And Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

March 3, 1931. R. DAVIS 1,795,276
SHOE
Filed Aug. 21, 1930 INVENTOR www Repairs are easy, because` if necessary, the4 outsole may be stripped oif and an entire new outer sole be cemented on in place of an i11- jured or worn outsole. The uppers may be attached to the insoles vat one place by labor `familiar with such work and theoutersoles be alixed at an entirely diiferentlplace. Thus labor and factory costs may be kept at a minimum.
' The full thickness atthe edge of ythe outsole protects theupp1e1, where., it ,turns in under the edge of `the insole, nieetingthis inturned portion ofthe upper, substantially as indicated in Fig. 2.1 Thestructure is particularly light, the more fso,`be`,cla`use no nails or y other metallic fasteningsfarenecessary, eX- cept possiblyfor a screw or the like, such as may be employed for fastening `the heel in place.
What is claimed 1s:
1. A shoe comprisingan inner sole having a continuous, smooth, upper face and having a channeled lower face, an upper extending down about the edge of said inner sole, channel stitching securingthe edges o-saidupper to said channeled lower portion 'of the inner sole, and a separate outer solecemented in flat face-to-face engagement with said inner sole and having a gutter inthe upper face of the same .set inward from the edge of said outer sole and receiving the extra thickness formed by the channel stitching on the underface of the inner sole.'
2. In a shoe structure, the combination of an outer sole having a gutter in the upper Iface of the samel formed by an outwardly an upper having its edges extending down about the edge of the inner sole, and channel stitching securing the edge of the upper to the underside of the inner sole, the outer sole having a gutter in the upper face of the same receiving said channel stitched portion of the inner sole and upper and `whereby the eXibility of thininner and outer soles is attained without exposed stitching either inside or outside the shoe.
4. The `method of manufacturing shoes, which comprises splitting a layer of leather to provide a thin layer having a grain side for the outer sole and a thin layer having a fiesh'side4 for the inner sole, channelling the underside of the flesh layer, providing a gutter in the cut face ofthe grain layer, channel stitching the edge of anupper to the channeled face portion of the inner sole layer, and cementing the outer sole in face-toface engagement over the lower face of the innersole and with theguttered portion of the outer solel receiving the channel stitched portlons .on the' underface of the inner sole.
V*.In testimony whereof I aiiix my signature.
ROBERT DAVIS.
beveled cut and a cut normal to the general I plane of the outsole, aninner sole having a continuous, smooth, upper face and channeled in the underface of the same, an upper extendinfir down aboutthe edge of the inner sole to the channeled under portion of the same, channel stitching securing the edge of the upper to the channeled ortion of the inner sole, and said inner so e and outer sole` being secured byvcement in fiat face-to-face engagement with the channel stitched portion of the inner sole and upper received within the gutter and definitely positioned by the outwardly beveled and normal cut Walls of said gutter.
3. In a shoe structure, the combination of thin, continuous, inner and outer soles cemented together in coextensive incesto-face engagementwithout any intervening filler,
US476823A 1920-08-21 1920-08-21 Shoe Expired - Lifetime US1795276A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US476823A US1795276A (en) 1920-08-21 1920-08-21 Shoe

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US476823A US1795276A (en) 1920-08-21 1920-08-21 Shoe

Publications (1)

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US1795276A true US1795276A (en) 1931-03-03

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Family Applications (1)

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US476823A Expired - Lifetime US1795276A (en) 1920-08-21 1920-08-21 Shoe

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2838855A (en) * 1956-03-16 1958-06-17 Maccarone Fred Narrow shank shoe and process of making the same

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2838855A (en) * 1956-03-16 1958-06-17 Maccarone Fred Narrow shank shoe and process of making the same

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