US348727A - olszewski - Google Patents

olszewski Download PDF

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US348727A
US348727A US348727DA US348727A US 348727 A US348727 A US 348727A US 348727D A US348727D A US 348727DA US 348727 A US348727 A US 348727A
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shoe
foot
springs
stays
edges
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    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43CFASTENINGS OR ATTACHMENTS OF FOOTWEAR; LACES IN GENERAL
    • A43C1/00Shoe lacing fastenings
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T24/00Buckles, buttons, clasps, etc.
    • Y10T24/48Pivoted edge stays

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  • the invention relates to improvements 'in shoes, and particnlarly to a novel means to be used in lieu of the usual lacing or buttons for securing tle neetiug edges of the shoe-upper upon 'and around the foot.
  • the invention consists in the application of metallic stays or springs to said meeting edges down the front of the shoe-upper, one being rigidly secured at each edge, and their arrangement being such that they conforn as nearly as may be to the top of the foot, and operate as torsional springs to bring said edges together after the same have been separated and the footintroduced into the shoe.
  • the upper end of said cdges will be connected by a small strap and buckle or other suitable means.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a shoe having the meeting edges of its upper closed down the front by means of the present nvention, the springs being shown by dotted lines.
  • F'g. 2 is a like View of same, illnstrating the neeting edges of the upper spread apart for the reception of the foot.
  • Fig. 3 is a perspective View of the pair of springs detached from the shoe and shown in about the same relation to each other they occupy when the shoe-upper is closed over the foot; and Figs. 4, 5, and 6 are detachedviews c the iower end of the pair of Springs, illustrating various methods of connecting them together.
  • Ade notes the shoe-upper
  • the stays C C may be of any suitahle fiexible spring uetal, and fastened in, to, or upon the meeting edges B B in any suitable mauner and by any convenient means; but we prefer to constrnct them of thin tenpered sheet-steel, and to secnre them in position between the nsual inner and outer parts ofthe shoe-upper by rows ofstitching on either side ofeach of then,about on the dotted lines along the meeting edges. (Shown in Figs.
  • the stays or Springs O C should be sniciently thin to yield to the foot during the act of walking, and of proper width to resist any pressure tending to bulge them open at their center after the strap and buckle or other fastening D has been secured.
  • the stays or Springs O G should be tempered to conforn as nearly as possible to the top of the foot, and their upper portions-say that part above the instep-rmay be given a slight twist in opposite directions in the line of the upper opposite sides of the front part of the foot, as indicated in Fig. 3, wherein a b designate the oppositely-twisted portions of the stays.
  • the lower ends of the Springs or stays C C should be secured in asnbstantially rigid relation to each otler, so as not to'be affected by the twisting or torsional action of the upper part of the stays during the Opening and closing of the shoe-upper, and this may nsually be accomplished by the customary means employed in the manufacture of shoes for preventing the lower ends of the edges B B fronr tearing away from the lower part of the shoe.
  • the additional strength and rigidity nsually given to that part of the shoe where the ends of the edges B B neet the lower part of the article will, as a rule, be found to give sufficient firnness to the lower ends of the Springs O C with regard to their relation to each other for the purposes of theinvention.
  • Tle fastening D when the shoe is in use, effectually retains the upper ends of the Springs C G in positive relation to each other, and, as aforesaid, the lower ends of the springs are substantially rigid in their position; henee the Springs will yield to the forward bond of the foot, but not to any lateral pressure, for the reason that, their ends being secured, said pressure would act on their edgcs and directly in line with their Width. Under this condition a very light spring is eapable of resisting great strain, and
  • the stays O O may be coated with leather or celluloid, or otherwise treated as to their appearance or finish, as may'be preferred, and lence this, together with the methods pursued in applying them to the shoe and the style of shoein connection with which they are to be used, are matters which will be regulated according to the facilities or wish of the manufacturer.
  • shoe as herein employed, we mean to embraee all kinds of foot-wear to which the invention would be applicable and prove of practical benefit.
  • a shoe having the ⁇ meeting edges of its upper along the top of the foot, and provided with a fastening device, D, and along said edges with the fiexible spring metallicstays O C, which conforn in their length to the shape of the top of the foot, and are held in their flat position at their lower ends, said stays being applied so as to be, when normal, substantially parallel to each other, with said cdges of the shoe closed, and to return to their normal position by their torsional action after that portion of them above their lower ends has been opened to adnit the foot by being twisted and pressed apart in opposite directions from each other, substantially as set forth.

Description

(No Model.) v J." EVERDING 827 A. V. OLSZEWSKI.
SHOE FASTENING. No. 348,'72'7.` Patented Sept. '7, 1886.
mm; Ilm/mzima?,-
UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
JOHN EVERDING AND ALEXANDER V. OLSZEWSKI, OF N EVVARK, N. J.
SHOE-FASTENING.
SPECIPICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 348,727. ated September '7, 1886. Application filed February 1, IFBG. Serial No.190,458. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern;
Be it known that. we, JOHN EVERDING and ALEXANDER v. OLSZEWSK, citizens of the United States, and residents of Newark, in the county of Essex and State of New Jersey, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Shoes, of which the following is a specification.
The invention relates to improvements 'in shoes, and particnlarly to a novel means to be used in lieu of the usual lacing or buttons for securing tle neetiug edges of the shoe-upper upon 'and around the foot.
The inventionconsists in the application of metallic stays or springs to said meeting edges down the front of the shoe-upper, one being rigidly secured at each edge, and their arrangement being such that they conforn as nearly as may be to the top of the foot, and operate as torsional springs to bring said edges together after the same have been separated and the footintroduced into the shoe. After the meeting edges of the upper have been thns brought together down the front of the foot, the upper end of said cdges will be connected by a small strap and buckle or other suitable means.
There are many advantages derived from the nvention songht to be protected hereby, and among them may be mentioned theease and rapidity with which the shoe may be secured on the foot, the entire discarding of the trou blesome lacing-cord and buttons, the increased comfort to the wearer, and the fact that the Springs offer no resistance to the foot during the act of walking, and at the same time do not bulge apart at their center.
The invention will be more clearly understood from the detailed description hereinafter presented, reference being had to the accompanying drawings, in which- Figure 1 is a perspective view of a shoe having the meeting edges of its upper closed down the front by means of the present nvention, the springs being shown by dotted lines. F'g. 2 is a like View of same, illnstrating the neeting edges of the upper spread apart for the reception of the foot. Fig. 3 is a perspective View of the pair of springs detached from the shoe and shown in about the same relation to each other they occupy when the shoe-upper is closed over the foot; and Figs. 4, 5, and 6 are detachedviews c the iower end of the pair of Springs, illustrating various methods of connecting them together.
In the drawings, Adenotes the shoe-upper; 5
B B, the meeting edges of same, adapted to cone together down the front of the foot; O O, the Springs or stays, one being applied to each of said meeting edges, and D the strap and bnckle at the upper end of said edges. The stays C C may be of any suitahle fiexible spring uetal, and fastened in, to, or upon the meeting edges B B in any suitable mauner and by any convenient means; but we prefer to constrnct them of thin tenpered sheet-steel, and to secnre them in position between the nsual inner and outer parts ofthe shoe-upper by rows ofstitching on either side ofeach of then,about on the dotted lines along the meeting edges. (Shown in Figs. land 2.) The stays or Springs O C should be sniciently thin to yield to the foot during the act of walking, and of proper width to resist any pressure tending to bulge them open at their center after the strap and buckle or other fastening D has been secured. The stays or Springs O G should be tempered to conforn as nearly as possible to the top of the foot, and their upper portions-say that part above the instep-rmay be given a slight twist in opposite directions in the line of the upper opposite sides of the front part of the foot, as indicated in Fig. 3, wherein a b designate the oppositely-twisted portions of the stays. The lower ends of the Springs or stays C C should be secured in asnbstantially rigid relation to each otler, so as not to'be affected by the twisting or torsional action of the upper part of the stays during the Opening and closing of the shoe-upper, and this may nsually be accomplished by the customary means employed in the manufacture of shoes for preventing the lower ends of the edges B B fronr tearing away from the lower part of the shoe. The additional strength and rigidity nsually given to that part of the shoe where the ends of the edges B B neet the lower part of the article will, as a rule, be found to give sufficient firnness to the lower ends of the Springs O C with regard to their relation to each other for the purposes of theinvention. Ininstances, however, where supplemental means for connecting the lower ends of the Springs C O together are necessary, they may be employed, and in Figs. 4, 5, and 6 we illustrate several expedients that may be adopted for this purpose without prejudice to either the form or confort of the shoe, In Fig. 4 the ends of the stays are shown curved toward andbeyond eaehother and pivoted together. In Fig. 5 said ends are illustrated as pivotcd to a connecting-strip, d, and in Fig. 6 we indicate the two ends sinply eonnected by apiece of wire. i XVe do not limit the invention to any special means for Connecting the lower ends of the stays; but those we have shown will usually be found effective and satisfactory. The normal position of the cdges B B, when provided With the stays C O, is closed, and said edges are pressed apart at their upper portion during the insertion of the foot into the shoe, the effect of which movement is to give the Springs or stays a twist outward from opposite sides of the foot between their upper ends and lower firmly-secured portion, and to thus create in them a torsional tension to return to their normal condition, which they speedily do as soon as the foot has been seatcd in the sloe, thereby closing the edges B B around the foot, after which the fastening D will be secured. Tle fastening D, when the shoe is in use, effectually retains the upper ends of the Springs C G in positive relation to each other, and, as aforesaid, the lower ends of the springs are substantially rigid in their position; henee the Springs will yield to the forward bond of the foot, but not to any lateral pressure, for the reason that, their ends being secured, said pressure would act on their edgcs and directly in line with their Width. Under this condition a very light spring is eapable of resisting great strain, and
we have determined that a thin spring is ainply snfficient to prevent the bulging apart of l the edges B B. The stays O O may be coated with leather or celluloid, or otherwise treated as to their appearance or finish, as may'be preferred, and lence this, together with the methods pursued in applying them to the shoe and the style of shoein connection with which they are to be used, are matters which will be regulated according to the facilities or wish of the manufacturer.
By the term shoe, as herein employed, we mean to embraee all kinds of foot-wear to which the invention would be applicable and prove of practical benefit.
What we claim as our invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
A shoe having the` meeting edges of its upper along the top of the foot, and provided with a fastening device, D, and along said edges with the fiexible spring metallicstays O C, which conforn in their length to the shape of the top of the foot, and are held in their flat position at their lower ends, said stays being applied so as to be, when normal, substantially parallel to each other, with said cdges of the shoe closed, and to return to their normal position by their torsional action after that portion of them above their lower ends has been opened to adnit the foot by being twisted and pressed apart in opposite directions from each other, substantially as set forth.
Signed at New York, in the eounty of New York and State of New York, this 30th day of January, A. D. 1886.
JOHN EVERDING. ALEXANDER v. OLSZEXVSK. \Vitnessesz CIIARLES C. GILL, EDWARD \VOLFR
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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100071230A1 (en) * 2007-03-26 2010-03-25 Hassid Pablo Laced garment closure

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100071230A1 (en) * 2007-03-26 2010-03-25 Hassid Pablo Laced garment closure

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