US2549340A - Shoe heel - Google Patents

Shoe heel Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2549340A
US2549340A US118229A US11822949A US2549340A US 2549340 A US2549340 A US 2549340A US 118229 A US118229 A US 118229A US 11822949 A US11822949 A US 11822949A US 2549340 A US2549340 A US 2549340A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
section
heel
openings
upper section
bosses
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US118229A
Inventor
John B Sniezek
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US118229A priority Critical patent/US2549340A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2549340A publication Critical patent/US2549340A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B21/00Heels; Top-pieces or top-lifts
    • A43B21/36Heels; Top-pieces or top-lifts characterised by their attachment; Securing devices for the attaching means
    • A43B21/44Heels; Top-pieces or top-lifts characterised by their attachment; Securing devices for the attaching means by claw-like means

Definitions

  • My invention relates to a, new and useful improvement in a shoe heel adapted for attaching to shoes, and particularly relates to that class of shoe heel which is made from a pair of setions.
  • Another object of the invention is the provsion of a heel of this class having an upper section and a lower section, the lower section being secured to the upper section by bosses mounted thereon which project nto onenings formed in the upper section and in which the lower section has an inclined face engaeing the opposed face of the upper section which straightens out upon being mounted in position so as to provide a vacuum seal.
  • Another object of the invntion is the provision of a heel havine an upoer section and a lower section formed from rubber or the like and in which the lower section has its peripheral edge inclined to the plane of the heel proper so that when the two sections are mounted together, the peripheral edge of the lower section will align wi+h the neripheral edee of the upper section.
  • Fig. 1 is a side elevational view of a fragment of a shoe showing the invention attached, the invention beine shown in sections.
  • Fig. 2 is a, perspectve view of the upper section of the heel attached to a shoe
  • Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the lower sectin of the heel
  • Fig. 4 is a fragmentary sectional view showing the parts in separated relation with the upper part mounted on a fragment of a shoe.
  • these bosses I4 are of less leneth than the thickness of the heel section ID so that there is a space in the opening II at the upper or inner end of the boss I4.
  • the diameter of the bosses I! is slightly larger than the diameter of the openings II and, the opposed face I 5 of the heel section I 3 adjacent to the bosses I 4 is inclined to the main plane of the heel section I 3. It will a so be noted that the perimeter I 6 of the heel section I3 is inclned to its plane.
  • the openings I I will be projected outwardly bevond the outer part of the nail. Consequently, a part of the heel and a part of the openings II in the heel section I0 are positoned outwardy bevond the nails so that a twistimz or bending of the edze of the heel surnoortine secton I0 will not disturb the nails I 1 and cause them to pull loose.
  • the lower section is mounted on the upper section bv forcine the resilient. yieldable bosses or projectons I4 nto the slightly smaller openings II.
  • these bosses are placed under strain and distorted out of their natural shape and size so that they form a sealine contact with the openinsr H. At the top of the opening there is a space in which a r is imnrisoned thus formina a cushion. Due to the fact that the members I4 tightly seal the openinzs I I. air cannot enter the. openinqs II and consequentlv, the removal of the section I 3 is prevented. The section I 3 aan however. be removd bv further distorting and lene hen ng the projections or bosses I4. Conseouently, these bosses must be fiexible and stretchable.
  • a heel constructed and mounted in ths manner is one which has proven most efiioient in use. It is durable, easly and quckly attached and may be easily and quickly detached when the lower section 13 becomes worn.

Landscapes

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

Description

April 17, 1951 J. B. SNIZEK SHOE HEEL Filed Sepb. 28, 1949 Patented Apr. 17, 1951 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE 1 Claim.
My invention relates to a, new and useful improvement in a shoe heel adapted for attaching to shoes, and particularly relates to that class of shoe heel which is made from a pair of setions.
One of which is permanently attached to the shoe and the other of which is detachably engaged by the sections.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a shoe heel of this class having an upper section and a lower section, the upper section beins secured to the shoe, and the lower seetion having a plurality of projections or bosses which engage in openings formed in the upper section for securing the two sections together.
It is another object of the invention to provide a heel embodying a pair of sections one of which has openings, the other having bosses and in which the bosses are slightly larger in diameter than the openings.
Another object of the invention is the provsion of a heel of this class having an upper section and a lower section, the lower section being secured to the upper section by bosses mounted thereon which project nto onenings formed in the upper section and in which the lower section has an inclined face engaeing the opposed face of the upper section which straightens out upon being mounted in position so as to provide a vacuum seal.
Another object of the invntion is the provision of a heel havine an upoer section and a lower section formed from rubber or the like and in which the lower section has its peripheral edge inclined to the plane of the heel proper so that when the two sections are mounted together, the peripheral edge of the lower section will align wi+h the neripheral edee of the upper section.
Other objects will appear herein.
Forminzz a part of this specification are drawings in which,
Fig. 1 is a side elevational view of a fragment of a shoe showing the invention attached, the invention beine shown in sections.
Fig. 2 is a, perspectve view of the upper section of the heel attached to a shoe,
Fig. 3 is a perspective view of the lower sectin of the heel,
Fig. 4 is a fragmentary sectional view showing the parts in separated relation with the upper part mounted on a fragment of a shoe.
In the drawings I have shown a fragment of a shoe 8 having the heel supporting portion 9 to which is secured a rubber upper section Ill of a heel. Formed in this section I 0 are spaced 2 apart openings II which are spaced inwardly from the perimeter of the heel section. The openings I2 are formed for recepton of securing means II and it will be noted that these openings I2 are positioned inwardly of the outer edge of the openings I I. The lower secton I3 of the heel is provided with the spaced apart projections or bosses I4 which are adapted to enter the openings II. As shown in Fig. 1 these bosses I4 are of less leneth than the thickness of the heel section ID so that there is a space in the opening II at the upper or inner end of the boss I4. As shown in Fig. 4, the diameter of the bosses I! is slightly larger than the diameter of the openings II and, the opposed face I 5 of the heel section I 3 adjacent to the bosses I 4 is inclined to the main plane of the heel section I 3. It will a so be noted that the perimeter I 6 of the heel section I3 is inclned to its plane.
When the upper section Ill is secured by the nail I'I to the heel supporting portion 9 of the shoe 8, the openings I I will be projected outwardly bevond the outer part of the nail. Consequently, a part of the heel and a part of the openings II in the heel section I0 are positoned outwardy bevond the nails so that a twistimz or bending of the edze of the heel surnoortine secton I0 will not disturb the nails I 1 and cause them to pull loose. After this upper section I I! has been fastened in positon, the lower section is mounted on the upper section bv forcine the resilient. yieldable bosses or projectons I4 nto the slightly smaller openings II. In this operation, these bosses are placed under strain and distorted out of their natural shape and size so that they form a sealine contact with the openinsr H. At the top of the opening there is a space in which a r is imnrisoned thus formina a cushion. Due to the fact that the members I4 tightly seal the openinzs I I. air cannot enter the. openinqs II and consequentlv, the removal of the section I 3 is prevented. The section I 3 aan however. be removd bv further distorting and lene hen ng the projections or bosses I4. Conseouently, these bosses must be fiexible and stretchable. As the inclined face I5 is brought nto ensaeement with the opposed face of the section II), this inclined face is straghtened out by shoving the bosses 01 projections I4 inwardly a sufiicient distance and by straightening out this inclined face, a tight seal between the opposed faces of the two sections I 0 and I3 is eiected so that air cannot enter between these sections thus further resisting any undue remo val of one section from the other. Experience has shown that t is necessary to form the perimeter I6 inclined as shown in Fg. 4, so that when the section [3 is mounted on the section HJ as shown in Fg. 1, this perimeter l6 w11 register wth the perimeter of the upper section II]. Wth ths inclined face not present, the perimeter of the lower section I3 would nc1ne nwardly from the perimeter of the upper section I.
A heel constructed and mounted in ths manner is one which has proven most efiioient in use. It is durable, easly and quckly attached and may be easily and quickly detached when the lower section 13 becomes worn.
What I claim is:
A heel constructon of the c1ass descrbed oom prsng an upper section and a lower section, sad upper section beng adapted for attachng to the shoe and having a pluraltyof spaced apart openings extendng around and postioned inwardly of the perimeter thereof; said openngs being of constant diameter from end to end; a. plurality of eylndrcal projectons extending outwardly in spaced relation to each other from one faoe of said lower section, and of slightly greater diameter than the openngs in said upper section and formed from yeldable, stretchable materia l and insertable into said openngs for securing sad lower section on said upper section, the face of said lower section opposng the face of said upper section being inclined around said projectons prior to entry of sad projeotons nto sad openings and, upon entry of sad projections into said openings, 1ying fiat in engagement with the face of said upper section, the perimeter of said lower section beng inclined outwardly and downwardly from ts upper fase prior to mounting on to sad upper section and adapted upon mountng on sad upper section to be distorted to be in algnment with the perimeter of sad upper sectionand said cylindrcal openings being longer than said projections whereby air cushion pockets are provided at the upper ends of the projectons.
JOHN B. SNIEZEK.
REFERENCES CITED The followng references are of record in the file ofthis patent:
UNITED STA'I'ES PATENTS FOREIGN PATENTS Country Date Germany Sept. 3, 1931 Number
US118229A 1949-09-28 1949-09-28 Shoe heel Expired - Lifetime US2549340A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US118229A US2549340A (en) 1949-09-28 1949-09-28 Shoe heel

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US118229A US2549340A (en) 1949-09-28 1949-09-28 Shoe heel

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2549340A true US2549340A (en) 1951-04-17

Family

ID=22377293

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US118229A Expired - Lifetime US2549340A (en) 1949-09-28 1949-09-28 Shoe heel

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2549340A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2967361A (en) * 1957-11-22 1961-01-10 Oxe Walter Footwear heel
US2991565A (en) * 1957-10-01 1961-07-11 Frey Simon Detachable top lift for shoe heels
DE1139408B (en) * 1957-11-22 1962-11-08 Walter Oxe Sen Exchangeable tread for footwear heels
US3068592A (en) * 1960-08-25 1962-12-18 Antelo Rodolfo Barriga Heel structure for shoes

Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US953099A (en) * 1909-11-13 1910-03-29 John H Nash Heel.
US1283468A (en) * 1918-03-26 1918-11-05 Walter H Clarke Rubber heel.
US1387976A (en) * 1921-08-16 Rubber heel
DE532749C (en) * 1929-11-02 1931-09-03 Ernst Camille Loewenguth Rubber patch for footwear
US2098346A (en) * 1936-02-12 1937-11-09 Robert D Macdonald Shoe heel construction
US2221718A (en) * 1937-11-09 1940-11-12 Niedworok Pawel Exchangeable heel

Patent Citations (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1387976A (en) * 1921-08-16 Rubber heel
US953099A (en) * 1909-11-13 1910-03-29 John H Nash Heel.
US1283468A (en) * 1918-03-26 1918-11-05 Walter H Clarke Rubber heel.
DE532749C (en) * 1929-11-02 1931-09-03 Ernst Camille Loewenguth Rubber patch for footwear
US2098346A (en) * 1936-02-12 1937-11-09 Robert D Macdonald Shoe heel construction
US2221718A (en) * 1937-11-09 1940-11-12 Niedworok Pawel Exchangeable heel

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2991565A (en) * 1957-10-01 1961-07-11 Frey Simon Detachable top lift for shoe heels
US2967361A (en) * 1957-11-22 1961-01-10 Oxe Walter Footwear heel
DE1139408B (en) * 1957-11-22 1962-11-08 Walter Oxe Sen Exchangeable tread for footwear heels
US3068592A (en) * 1960-08-25 1962-12-18 Antelo Rodolfo Barriga Heel structure for shoes

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2509423A (en) Wedge heel shoe
US2873540A (en) Shoe with changeable elements
US2289225A (en) Elastic shoelace
US2588061A (en) Shoe having an upper formed of strap members each secured by a flat fastener member
US2549340A (en) Shoe heel
US2918735A (en) Rubber sole attaching means for shoes having a flexible attaching flange
US2454228A (en) Spur
US2596188A (en) Footwear
US2614342A (en) Shoe with sole having raised portions on its upper face
US1561430A (en) Footwear
US2867920A (en) Shoe counters
US1669790A (en) Stocking protector
US761956A (en) Garment-supporter.
US1962948A (en) Toy
US1652034A (en) Automatic arch support for shoes
US3359659A (en) Detachable antislipping device for shoes
US2285254A (en) Shoe construction
US2228468A (en) Shoe heel construction
US1651345A (en) Shoe tip
USD167994S (en) Stair tread mat
US1300072A (en) Shoe-heel.
US2060123A (en) Shoetree
US1160541A (en) Shoe-dummy.
US2112100A (en) Tassel
US2145658A (en) Reinforcing plate for shoes