US3142912A - Devices for circulating air in footwear - Google Patents

Devices for circulating air in footwear Download PDF

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US3142912A
US3142912A US126063A US12606361A US3142912A US 3142912 A US3142912 A US 3142912A US 126063 A US126063 A US 126063A US 12606361 A US12606361 A US 12606361A US 3142912 A US3142912 A US 3142912A
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heel
cavity
toe
cavity portion
shank
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Larsen Truls Owe
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B7/00Footwear with health or hygienic arrangements
    • A43B7/06Footwear with health or hygienic arrangements ventilated

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  • This invention relates to devices for circulating air internally in footwear and of the kind comprising a cavity member arranged in or adapted to be inserted into the bottom part of a footwear, which cavity member acts as a pump connected through openings or apertures to the inside of the footwear.
  • Valves do not only add to the cost of manufacture, but are easily damaged and thus render the pump inefficient as it continuously sucks in and pumps out the same air without providing the required circulation.
  • Valves do not only add to the cost of manufacture, but are easily damaged and thus render the pump inefficient as it continuously sucks in and pumps out the same air without providing the required circulation.
  • Such devices have gained very little popularity as they have proved, after a time, to be too inefficient.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to, by which the fact is utilized that, during the process of working the foot does not exert a pressure on different portions of the bottom of the footwear at the same time but rather effects a rolling movement causing first a pressure on the heel portion after which the pressure is progressively shifted forward to the toe portion; and vice versa during backwards walk.
  • a further object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to,- which device comprises a cavity member defining a compressible and self-expandable 1ongitudinal channel, and which cavity member is provided at the heel portion thereof with at least one opening connecting the rear end of said channel to an internal portion of the footwear under or immediately behind the wearers heel, and at the foremost part thereof with at least one opening connecting the foremost part of said channel to an internal portion of the footwear close to the wearers toes, whereas said channel is adapted to be compressed by the wearers foot over a portion extending from a point below the wearers heel to a point under his sole.
  • the channel will also provide air circulation under different circumstances for example during backwards walk in which case the operation just described is reversed.
  • air circulation will also be produced as it has been found that a person at rest moving his foot will do so in a manner corresponding to the rolling movement of a normal walk.
  • lt is also an object of the invention to prevent such reversing of the air.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to and provided with a channel as aforesaid, which channel has comparatively wide heel and sole portions connected by a narrow shank portion which is arranged to be aligned with the outside part of the wearers longitudinal arch, the very part of the wearers longitudinal arch which is capable of exerting at least some pressure. on the device and thereby to compress the channel.
  • a still further object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to and provided with a channel as aforesaid, which channel is filled with a sponge material such as sponge rubber or yieldable foam plastic, so that a pleasant support of the wearers foot is obtained without the discomforts experienced with the previously used, known, cavity members which were made from comparatively hard rubber.
  • a sponge material such as sponge rubber or yieldable foam plastic
  • Another object of the invention is to make it possible in a device of the kind referred to to utilize the property of such sponge material consisting therein that air is readily pressed through the material and at the same time a comparatively high resistance to the passage of air arises when the sponge material is partly compressed.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide an insole or sock lining adapted for insertion into footwear and consisting of or provided with a cavity member aS aforesaid for circulating air internally in the footwear.
  • FIG. l shows a vertical longitudinal section of a shoe provided with an embodiment of the invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a sectional view along the line II-II in FEG. 1;
  • FIG. 3 shows a plan view of a sock lining constituting another embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 4 shows a sectional View along the line IV-IV of FIG. 3.
  • the shoe shown in FIG. l has an upper part fastened along its edge between an insole 12 and an outsole 14.
  • the insole 12 made of a flexible resilient material, such as rubber, is provided with a cavity 16 which opens onto its underside and extends along the major part of its length and forms a channel between the upper part 18 of the insole 12 which upper part 18 constitutes a cover for the channel, and the outsole 14.
  • the cover 1S is provided with apertures Ztl arranged at the heel end of the shoe and connecting the interior 22 of the shoe with the channel 16. Similar apertures 24 are provided near the front end of the cover 18 but at such distance from the front end thereof that the apertures 24 are disposed immediately behind the toes of the wearer.
  • the cover 18 On the underside of the cover 18 and near its shank where it contacts the longitudinal arch of the wearers foot, the cover 18 is provided with a transverse ridge 26 which ensures that even the low pressure exerted by the wearerls longitudinal arch is suiiicient to close the channel and prevent the air from being pressed in the opposite direction to that in which the foot during walking progressively shifts the pressure.
  • the channel 16 When a wearer of the shoe described walks forwardly the channel 16 will when the wearer lifts his foot off the ground be filled with air. When the foot is subsequently put to the ground, the portion of the channel 16 near the heel of the wearer will first be subjected to a comparatively high pressure and thus be compressed whereupon the pressure will shift progressively forwards and the air ⁇ contained in the channel 16 will correspondingly be pressed forward in the channel 16 and leave this through the aperture 24 near the wearers toe. By then the pressure of the heel will have substantially reduced and consequently air will be sucked into the channel 16 through the apertures near the heel partly at the same time as air leaves at the toe.
  • FIGS. 3 and 4 show a sock lining made from two layers, an upper layer 36, and a lower layer 32 of soft leather or similar suitable material assembled by a stitching 34 in such a manner that a channel is formed inside the sock lining along the whole or the major part of its length and so shaped that it has a comparably wide heel portion 35 and a comparably wide sole portion 36 the two portions 3S and 36 being mutually connected by a comparably narrow shank portion 38 displaced towards the side of the sock lining nearest the outside of the foot and thus positioned under the part of the longitudtinal arch which at least exerts a signicant pressure against the sock lining during walk.
  • the channel 16 as shown in FIG. 4 is filled with sponge rubber or foam plastic 4t) which is compressible, but after d from the heel portion of the channel into the front part of the shoe. It has to be noted that in most cases the apertures 42 will be left out.
  • the apertures 2t), 24 and 42 may be formed in the upper layer 30 prior to assembly of the two layers 30 and 32 by the stitching 34. It is preferable, however, to cut the apertures after assembly when the sponge material 4t) is in position, thus ensuring that the apertures extend through all three layers 3), 32 and 4G.
  • the apertures in the under side of the sock lining will have practically no effect while the apertures through the sponge material will add to the air circulation since a larger sponge material surface area will be exposed to admit the passage of air, through the apertures.
  • a pocket 46 is formed alongside the shank portion of the channel 16. This may serve to Ieceive an orthopedic longitudinal arch support member.
  • a similar pocket 48 is formed under the front end of the insole to receive a support member for the front part of the foot.
  • the channel shown in FIGS. l and 2 may also be filled with a sponge material in which case the ridge 26 may be wholly of partly left out.
  • the ridge 26 may be left out in any cas-e if the channel 16 is made suiciently narrow at the shank of the shoe.
  • the apertures 24 and 20 may be formed as slots, and if the channel 16 or the channel forming cavity member is arranged at a higher level than the remaining top surface of the shoe bottom, these slots may be so arranged, for example at the front and rear end of the channel that they are not covered up by the foot.
  • the channel may also be given a depth which varies along its length with the maximum depth arranged where the highest pressure is exerted during walk, that is, preferably at the heel, but also immediately in front of the shank.
  • the channel 16 is formed either in a built in in sole or on a loose insole or sock-lining, and the arrangement of the channel 16 in such a cavity member will generally be most convenient. It is, however, possible, to arrange the channel 16 in the slip sole of a shoe bottom,
  • the slip sole or the outsole serves as cavity member.
  • the use of the out sole as cavity member may be convenient where rubber soled footwear is concerned.
  • a device for circulating air in footwear comprising a sole member adapted to be arranged in footwear, said l member having a heel portion, a shank portion and a toe portion, corresponding to the heel, longitudinal arch, and forefoot, respectively, of a Wearers foot, said sole member including an upper layer and a lower layer spaced therefrom, said layers being connected together at least along a line which defines a closed geometrical figure which in size is equal to substantially the major portion of the areaV of the upper layer, thereby to define a single cavity extending from said heel portion through said shank portion and into said toe portion, the cavity thereby dened including a heel cavity portion within said heel portion, a shank cavity portion within said shank portion, and a toe cavity portion within said toe portion, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening disposed in the heel portion only near the rearward end thereof and for providing free communication between said heel cavity portion and the atmosphere, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening in the toe portion and only near the forward end thereof for providing
  • a device for circulating air in footwear comprising, a sole member adapted to be arranged in footwear, said member having a heel portion, a shank portion, and a toe portion, corresponding to the heel, longitudinal arch, and forefoot, respectively, of a wearers foot, said sole member yincluding an upper layer and a lower layer spaced therefrom, said layers being connected together at least along a line which defines a closed geometrical gure, thereby to define a single cavity extending from said heel portion through said shank portion and into said toe portion, the cavity thereby defined including a heel cavity portion within said heel portion, a shank cavity portion within said shank portion, and a toe cavity portion within said toe portion, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening disposed in the heel portion for providing free communication between said heel cavity portion and the atmosphere, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening in the toe portion for provid-ing free communication between said toe cavity portion and the atmosphere, the portions of the upper and lower layers which deline said shank cavity portion

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  • Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Epidemiology (AREA)
  • General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
  • Public Health (AREA)
  • Footwear And Its Accessory, Manufacturing Method And Apparatuses (AREA)

Description

Aug. 4,1964 1o, LARSEN 3,142,912
DEVICES FOR CIRCULATING AIR IN FOOTWEAR Filed July 24, 1961 594 im @um y mi United States Patent O 3,142,912 DEVICES FOR CIRCULATING AIR IN FOOTWEAR Truls Owe Larsen, 51 E. Colletsgate, Oslo, Norway Filed .luly 24, 1961, Ser. No. 126,063 Claims priority, application Norway July 28, 1960 6 Claims. (Cl. 36-3) This invention relates to devices for circulating air internally in footwear and of the kind comprising a cavity member arranged in or adapted to be inserted into the bottom part of a footwear, which cavity member acts as a pump connected through openings or apertures to the inside of the footwear.
Many devices have been suggested for providing air circulation, particularly in rubber or heavy footwear, in such a manner that damp air may be removed from the lower portion thereof. In such devices a cavity acting as a pump has been formed in the bottom part of the footwear and so arranged that the foot will provide alternating pressures against this part and thus cause a pumping effect. However, in every known device of this kind the cavity has been arranged as a bellow pump having at least an exhaust valve and usually both an intake valve and an exhaust valve and generally the cavity has been so positioned and shaped that the pump was operated only by the heel although some bellows pumps have been known to be operated by the sole of the foot or to extend the full length of the bottom of the footwear.
In the known devices of the kind referred to a considerable disadvantage has been, however, the necessity of using valves. Valves do not only add to the cost of manufacture, but are easily damaged and thus render the pump inefficient as it continuously sucks in and pumps out the same air without providing the required circulation. Despite the many advantages obtained by providing air circulation in footwear such devices have gained very little popularity as they have proved, after a time, to be too inefficient.
It is an object of the invention to provide a device of the kind referred to which is extremely simple and accordingly inexpensive to manufacture, and which has no valves and is accordingly not liable to become ineective in time.
Another object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to, by which the fact is utilized that, during the process of working the foot does not exert a pressure on different portions of the bottom of the footwear at the same time but rather effects a rolling movement causing first a pressure on the heel portion after which the pressure is progressively shifted forward to the toe portion; and vice versa during backwards walk.
A further object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to,- which device comprises a cavity member defining a compressible and self-expandable 1ongitudinal channel, and which cavity member is provided at the heel portion thereof with at least one opening connecting the rear end of said channel to an internal portion of the footwear under or immediately behind the wearers heel, and at the foremost part thereof with at least one opening connecting the foremost part of said channel to an internal portion of the footwear close to the wearers toes, whereas said channel is adapted to be compressed by the wearers foot over a portion extending from a point below the wearers heel to a point under his sole.
During the wearers forward walk and while his foot is lifted off thek ground such a channel will be filled with air. When the foot is subsequently put to the ground the channel portions near the heel will first be subjected to a comparatively high pressure and thus be compressed 3,MZ,92 Patented Aug. 4., 1964 ICC whereupon the pressure will shift progressively forward and the air contained in the channel will correspondingly be pressed forward in the channel and leave this through the aperture near the toe. By then the pressure at the heel will have been substantially reduced and consequently air will be sucked in through the aperture near the heel partly at the same time as air leaves at the toe.
When the foot is again lifted from the ground the channel will be filled with air derived from the rear aperture and at the next step it will be this fresh intake of air which will be pressed out through the front end of the channel,
The channel will also provide air circulation under different circumstances for example during backwards walk in which case the operation just described is reversed. When the wearer is at rest, for example sitting with his foot resting on the ground air circulation will also be produced as it has been found that a person at rest moving his foot will do so in a manner corresponding to the rolling movement of a normal walk.
While a persons heel and sole is in contact with a comparably wide area of the bottom of his footwear and exerts a comparably high pressure thereon, his longitudinal arch presses only slightly and only along a very narrow portion near the outer side of the foot. It is possible, therefore, that in the portion of the above said channel immediately below the longitudinal arch, a cavity remains wherein part of the air which has been advanced by the pressure of the heel may accumulate and then return rearwards by the subsequent sole pressure and which thus renders a large part of the channel ineffective as a pump.
lt is also an object of the invention to prevent such reversing of the air.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to and provided with a channel as aforesaid, which channel has comparatively wide heel and sole portions connected by a narrow shank portion which is arranged to be aligned with the outside part of the wearers longitudinal arch, the very part of the wearers longitudinal arch which is capable of exerting at least some pressure. on the device and thereby to compress the channel.
A still further object of the invention is to provide a device of the kind referred to and provided with a channel as aforesaid, which channel is filled with a sponge material such as sponge rubber or yieldable foam plastic, so that a pleasant support of the wearers foot is obtained without the discomforts experienced with the previously used, known, cavity members which were made from comparatively hard rubber.
Another object of the invention is to make it possible in a device of the kind referred to to utilize the property of such sponge material consisting therein that air is readily pressed through the material and at the same time a comparatively high resistance to the passage of air arises when the sponge material is partly compressed.
Still another object of the invention is to provide an insole or sock lining adapted for insertion into footwear and consisting of or provided with a cavity member aS aforesaid for circulating air internally in the footwear.
It is also an object of the invention to provide such an insole or sock lining which simultaneously may be used as an orthopedic insole or sock lining.
These and other objects of the invention will 'appear fromV the following description in which by way of eX- amples two different embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawing in which FIG. l shows a vertical longitudinal section of a shoe provided with an embodiment of the invention;
FIG. 2 shows a sectional view along the line II-II in FEG. 1;
FIG. 3 shows a plan view of a sock lining constituting another embodiment of the invention, and
FIG. 4 shows a sectional View along the line IV-IV of FIG. 3. Y
The shoe shown in FIG. l has an upper part fastened along its edge between an insole 12 and an outsole 14. The insole 12, made of a flexible resilient material, such as rubber, is provided with a cavity 16 which opens onto its underside and extends along the major part of its length and forms a channel between the upper part 18 of the insole 12 which upper part 18 constitutes a cover for the channel, and the outsole 14. The cover 1S is provided with apertures Ztl arranged at the heel end of the shoe and connecting the interior 22 of the shoe with the channel 16. Similar apertures 24 are provided near the front end of the cover 18 but at such distance from the front end thereof that the apertures 24 are disposed immediately behind the toes of the wearer.
On the underside of the cover 18 and near its shank where it contacts the longitudinal arch of the wearers foot, the cover 18 is provided with a transverse ridge 26 which ensures that even the low pressure exerted by the wearerls longitudinal arch is suiiicient to close the channel and prevent the air from being pressed in the opposite direction to that in which the foot during walking progressively shifts the pressure.
When a wearer of the shoe described walks forwardly the channel 16 will when the wearer lifts his foot off the ground be filled with air. When the foot is subsequently put to the ground, the portion of the channel 16 near the heel of the wearer will first be subjected to a comparatively high pressure and thus be compressed whereupon the pressure will shift progressively forwards and the air `contained in the channel 16 will correspondingly be pressed forward in the channel 16 and leave this through the aperture 24 near the wearers toe. By then the pressure of the heel will have substantially reduced and consequently air will be sucked into the channel 16 through the apertures near the heel partly at the same time as air leaves at the toe.
Normally the longitudinal arch of a wearers foot will only exert a comparatively slight pressure on the part of the cover 18 below said longitudinal arch and only at the part thereof nearest the outside of the wearers foot. However, owing to the ridge 26 even this slight pressure will be suiiicient for closing the channel below the wearers longitudinal arch, so that air cannot escape backwards from the front part of the channel 16.
FIGS. 3 and 4 show a sock lining made from two layers, an upper layer 36, and a lower layer 32 of soft leather or similar suitable material assembled by a stitching 34 in such a manner that a channel is formed inside the sock lining along the whole or the major part of its length and so shaped that it has a comparably wide heel portion 35 and a comparably wide sole portion 36 the two portions 3S and 36 being mutually connected by a comparably narrow shank portion 38 displaced towards the side of the sock lining nearest the outside of the foot and thus positioned under the part of the longitudtinal arch which at least exerts a signicant pressure against the sock lining during walk.
The channel 16 as shown in FIG. 4 is filled with sponge rubber or foam plastic 4t) which is compressible, but after d from the heel portion of the channel into the front part of the shoe. It has to be noted that in most cases the apertures 42 will be left out.
The apertures 2t), 24 and 42 may be formed in the upper layer 30 prior to assembly of the two layers 30 and 32 by the stitching 34. It is preferable, however, to cut the apertures after assembly when the sponge material 4t) is in position, thus ensuring that the apertures extend through all three layers 3), 32 and 4G. The apertures in the under side of the sock lining will have practically no effect while the apertures through the sponge material will add to the air circulation since a larger sponge material surface area will be exposed to admit the passage of air, through the apertures.
As seen in FIG. 4 a pocket 46 is formed alongside the shank portion of the channel 16. This may serve to Ieceive an orthopedic longitudinal arch support member. A similar pocket 48 is formed under the front end of the insole to receive a support member for the front part of the foot.
The invention is not restricted to the embodiments shown and described as these may be varied in many ways within the scope of the invention. For example the channel shown in FIGS. l and 2 may also be filled with a sponge material in which case the ridge 26 may be wholly of partly left out. The ridge 26 may be left out in any cas-e if the channel 16 is made suiciently narrow at the shank of the shoe. It should be noted also that the apertures 24 and 20 may be formed as slots, and if the channel 16 or the channel forming cavity member is arranged at a higher level than the remaining top surface of the shoe bottom, these slots may be so arranged, for example at the front and rear end of the channel that they are not covered up by the foot.
The channel may also be given a depth which varies along its length with the maximum depth arranged where the highest pressure is exerted during walk, that is, preferably at the heel, but also immediately in front of the shank.
Further it has to be noted that in the embodiments shown the channel 16 is formed either in a built in in sole or on a loose insole or sock-lining, and the arrangement of the channel 16 in such a cavity member will generally be most convenient. It is, however, possible, to arrange the channel 16 in the slip sole of a shoe bottom,
or even in the outsole itself so that the slip sole or the outsole serves as cavity member. The use of the out sole as cavity member may be convenient where rubber soled footwear is concerned.
I claim:
1. A device for circulating air in footwear, comprising a sole member adapted to be arranged in footwear, said l member having a heel portion, a shank portion and a toe portion, corresponding to the heel, longitudinal arch, and forefoot, respectively, of a Wearers foot, said sole member including an upper layer and a lower layer spaced therefrom, said layers being connected together at least along a line which defines a closed geometrical figure which in size is equal to substantially the major portion of the areaV of the upper layer, thereby to define a single cavity extending from said heel portion through said shank portion and into said toe portion, the cavity thereby dened including a heel cavity portion within said heel portion, a shank cavity portion within said shank portion, and a toe cavity portion within said toe portion, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening disposed in the heel portion only near the rearward end thereof and for providing free communication between said heel cavity portion and the atmosphere, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening in the toe portion and only near the forward end thereof for providing free communication between said toe cavity portion and the atmosphere, the portions of the upper and" lower layers which define said shank cavity portion being imperforate and free of structure which will normally impede free air passage in both directions between said heel cavity portion and said toe cavity portion, said sole member being oompressible for pumping air from the heel cavity portion into the shank cavity portion and then into the toe cavity portion due to the compression between said layers caused by the walking of a wearer, and means disposed within said shank cavity portion for interrupting free communication between said heel cavity portion and said toe cavity portion when the foot of the wearer compresses said shank portion, thereby to prevent air within said cavity from being returned to said heel cavity portion.
2. A device for circulating air in footwear, comprising, a sole member adapted to be arranged in footwear, said member having a heel portion, a shank portion, and a toe portion, corresponding to the heel, longitudinal arch, and forefoot, respectively, of a wearers foot, said sole member yincluding an upper layer and a lower layer spaced therefrom, said layers being connected together at least along a line which defines a closed geometrical gure, thereby to define a single cavity extending from said heel portion through said shank portion and into said toe portion, the cavity thereby defined including a heel cavity portion within said heel portion, a shank cavity portion within said shank portion, and a toe cavity portion within said toe portion, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening disposed in the heel portion for providing free communication between said heel cavity portion and the atmosphere, said upper layer being provided with at least one opening in the toe portion for provid-ing free communication between said toe cavity portion and the atmosphere, the portions of the upper and lower layers which deline said shank cavity portion being imperforate and free of structure which will normally impede free air passage in both directions between said heel cavity portion and said toe cavity portion, said sole member being compressible for pumping air from the heel cavity portion into the shank cavity portion and then into the toe cavity portion due to the compression between said layers caused by the walking of a wearer, and means disposed within said shank cavity portion for interrupting free communication between said heel cavity portion and said toe cavity portion when the foot of the wearer compresses said shank portion, thereby to prevent air Within said cavity from being returned to said heel cavity portion.
3. A device as defined in claim 2 wherein said means includes a transverse ridge 'arranged within said shank cavity portion and limiting the height thereof.
4. A device as dened in claim 2 wherein at least said shank cavity portion is lled with a sponge material constituting said means.
5. A device as dened in claim 2 wherein said cavity is lled with a sponge material.
6. A device as dened in claim 5 wherein said openings constitute parts of holes cut through at least said upper layer and said sponge material.
References Cited in the le of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 628,836 McMahon Iuly 11, 1899 1,005,674 Valiant Oct. 10, 1911 1,264,122 Paul Apr. 23, 1918 1,597,672 Dahlqvist Aug. 31, 1926 2,150,057 Fisch Mar. 7, 1939

Claims (1)

1. A DEVICE FOR CIRCULATING AIR IN FOOTWEAR, COMPRISING A SOLE MEMBER ADAPTED TO BE ARRANGED IN FOOTWEAR, SAID MEMBER HAVING A HEEL PORTIONS, A SHANK PORTION AND A TOE PORTION, CORRESPONDING TO THE HEEL, LONGITUDINAL ARCH, AND FOREFOOT, RESPECTIVELY, OF A WEARER''S FOOT, SAID SOLE MEMBER INCLUDING AN UPPER LAYER AND A LOWER LAYER SPACED THEREFROM, SAID LAYERS BEING CONNECTED TOGETHER AT LEAST ALONG A LINE WHICH DEFINES A CLOSED GEOMETRICAL FIGURE WHICH IN SIZE IS EQUAL TO SUBSTANTIALLY THE MAJOR PORTION OF THE AREA OF THE UPPER LAYER, THEREBY TO DEFINE A SINGLE CAVITY EXTENDING FROM SAID HEEL PORTION THROUGH SAID SHANK PORTION AND INTO SAID TOE PORTION, THE CAVITY THEREBY DEFINED INCLUDING A HEEL CAVITY PORTION WITHIN SAID HEEL PORTION, A SHANK CAVITY PORTION WITHIN SAID SHANK PORTION, AND A TOE CAVITY PORTION WITHIN SAID TOE PORTION, SAID UPPER LAYER BEING PROVIDED WITH AT LEAST ONE OPENING DISPOSED IN THE HEEL PORTION ONLY NEAR THE REARWARD END THEREOF AND FOR PROVIDING FREE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN SAID HEEL CAVITY PORTION AND THE ATMOSPHERE, SAID UPPER LAYER BEING PROVIDED WITH AT LEAST ONE OPENING IN THE TOE PORTION AND ONLY NEAR THE FORWARD END THEREOF FOR PROVIDING FREE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN SAID TOE CAVITY PORTION AND THE ATMOSPHERE, THE PORTIONS OF THE UPPER AND LOWER LAYERS WHICH DEFINE SAID SHANK CAVITY PORTION BEING IMPERFORATE AND FREE OF STRUCTURE WHICH WILL NORMALLY IMPEDE FREE AIR PASSAGE IN BOTH DIRECTIONS BETWEEN SAID HEEL CAVITY PORTION AND SAID TOE CAVITY PORTION, SAID SOLE MEMBER BEING COMPRESSIBLE FOR PUMPING AIR FROM THE HEEL CAVITY PORTION INTO THE SHANK CAVITY PORTION AND THEN INTO THE TOE CAVITY PORTION DUE TO THE COMPRESSION BETWEEN SAID LAYERS CAUSED BY THE WALKING OF A WEARER, AND MEANS DISPOSED WITHIN SAID SHANK CAVITY PORTION FOR INTERRUPTING FREE COMMUNICATION BETWEEN SAID HEEL CAVITY PORTION AND SAID TOE CAVITY PORTION WHEN THE FOOT OF THE WEARER COMPRESSES SAID SHANK PORTION, THEREBY TO PREVENT AIR WITHIN SAID CAVITY FROM BEING RETURNED TO SAID HEEL CAVITY PORTION.
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Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4885849A (en) * 1988-06-24 1989-12-12 Space Age Enterprises, Inc. Insole
US4974342A (en) * 1988-07-06 1990-12-04 Toshimitsu Nakamura Inner sole for shoe
US5675914A (en) * 1995-11-13 1997-10-14 The Rockport Company, Inc. Air circulating footbed
US20110283566A1 (en) * 2010-05-21 2011-11-24 Hui-Ping Chou High heel shoe structure

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US628836A (en) * 1897-11-04 1899-07-11 Martin Mcmahon Boot or shoe.
US1005674A (en) * 1905-06-17 1911-10-10 George Valiant Ventilated boot and shoe.
US1264122A (en) * 1917-08-10 1918-04-23 Frederick N Paul Ventilated shoe.
US1597672A (en) * 1922-05-09 1926-08-31 Erik Wiklander Removable innersole for boots or shoes
US2150057A (en) * 1938-01-08 1939-03-07 Fisch Arthur Shoe sole

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US628836A (en) * 1897-11-04 1899-07-11 Martin Mcmahon Boot or shoe.
US1005674A (en) * 1905-06-17 1911-10-10 George Valiant Ventilated boot and shoe.
US1264122A (en) * 1917-08-10 1918-04-23 Frederick N Paul Ventilated shoe.
US1597672A (en) * 1922-05-09 1926-08-31 Erik Wiklander Removable innersole for boots or shoes
US2150057A (en) * 1938-01-08 1939-03-07 Fisch Arthur Shoe sole

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
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US4974342A (en) * 1988-07-06 1990-12-04 Toshimitsu Nakamura Inner sole for shoe
US5675914A (en) * 1995-11-13 1997-10-14 The Rockport Company, Inc. Air circulating footbed
US20110283566A1 (en) * 2010-05-21 2011-11-24 Hui-Ping Chou High heel shoe structure

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