FOOTWEAR UTILIZING FRICTION RIDGE PATTERNS
20200000174 ยท 2020-01-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
F41C23/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
A43B13/22
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A63B59/70
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B60R13/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B62D29/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41C23/10
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04F15/02172
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
F41C23/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B60R13/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
A63B59/50
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B60C11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
A43B13/22
HUMAN NECESSITIES
B62D29/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F41C23/16
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
E04F15/02
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
Abstract
Footwear, sports equipment, weapons, gloves, vehicle controls, floor surfaces, and vehicle tires three dimensionally imprinted with friction ridge patterns derived from individuals.
Claims
1. A method to enhance an individual endorsement of a product comprising the steps of: recording a friction ridge pattern of an individual endorsing a product, and forming a three dimensional derivation of the recorded friction ridge pattern into the product endorsed by the individual.
2. The method of claim 1 further including advertising in media that the product endorsed by the individual includes the friction ridge pattern derived from the individual endorsing the product.
3. The method of claim 1, further including the endorsed product being configured specifically for use in an athletic activity.
4. The method of claim 1, further including the formed friction ridge pattern being at the same scale as the recorded friction ridge pattern.
5. The method of claim 1, further including the formed friction ridge pattern being enlarged in scale from the recorded friction ridge pattern.
6. The method of claim 1, further including the formed friction ridge pattern being reduced in scale from the recorded friction ridge pattern.
7. The structure of claim 1, further including the formed friction ridge pattern being derived from a professional sports competitor.
8. The method of claim 1, further including the endorsed product being a footwear product.
9. The method of claim 3, further including the endorsed product being a baseball bat, hockey stick, tennis racket, racquetball racket, squash racket, badminton racket, ping-pong paddle, golf club, or ski pole; with the formed three dimensional derivation of the recorded friction ridge pattern is disposed on a handle portion of the endorsed product.
10. An athletic footwear product with versatile performance, comprising: an upper enclosure configured to surround upper and rear portions of a foot, a sole coupled on its periphery to a lower portion of the upper enclosure, and the sole having a downward directed lower face, and wherein the lower face is three dimensionally imprinted with a friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
11. The athletic footwear product of claim 10, further including the imprinted friction ridge pattern being imprinted at a same scale as the friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
12. The athletic footwear product of claim 10, further including the imprinted friction ridge pattern being imprinted at an enlarged scale from the friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
13. The athletic footwear product of claim 10, further including the imprinted friction ridge pattern being imprinted at a reduced scale from the friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
14. A versatile firearm grip, comprising a firearm including a gripping handle portion, wherein the gripping handle portion is three dimensionally imprinted with a friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
15. The versatile firearm grip of claim 14, wherein the firearm is a member of the set: pistol, rifle, grenade launcher, and surface to air rocket launcher.
16. A versatile vehicle control hand interface, comprising vehicle control hand interface gripping surface, disposed on a steering wheel, brake pedal, accelerator pedal, gearshift, or turn direction signal stalk, wherein the hand interface gripping surface is three dimensionally imprinted with a friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
17. A glove having versatile gripping surfaces, comprising: a glove, including hand enveloping surfaces comprising gripping areas configured to contact objects being grasped, wherein the gripping areas are three dimensionally imprinted with friction ridge patterns derived from an individual.
18. A vehicle tire with a versatile tread surface, comprising vehicle tire, including a tread surface, wherein the tread surface is three dimensionally imprinted with a friction ridge pattern derived from an individual.
19. A horizontal floor surface, comprising an upward directed foot contacting surface, wherein the upward directed foot contacting surfaces being three dimensionally imprinted with friction ridge patterns derived from an individual.
20. The floor surface of claim 19, wherein the foot contacting surface is both padded and resilient.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0021] Various embodiments will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0061] Each such imprint may be formed into a basically non-contoured sole 128 as shown in
[0062] Alternatively, each fingerprint-like imprint may be formed into a contoured substructure 130 of its own, such as, as a non-limiting and non-exhausted example, the domed substructures shown in
[0063] Such contoured structures may overlap (not shown), or be isolated as shown in
[0064] Likewise, each contoured substructure may be unique, or may be partially or completely identical, or be rotated relative to one another, or be mixed with other similar or dissimilar contoured substructures in any of a variety of useful ways.
[0065] Further each contoured substructure may be of uniform size, or be of varying sizes.
[0066] Or one or more friction ridge patterns may be repeated or partially repeated or may be completely dissimilar, including, but not limited to, in size and/or scale, and/or its distortion relative to the origins it's based upon.
[0067] Or imprinted friction ridge patterns, and/or contoured substructure may be arranged and derived in any other useful ways.
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[0069] Again, each such friction ridge pattern may be unique, or may be duplicated, or may be rotated to any angle, or may be produced at any scale, or may be distorted, or may be a derivative of any other useful organizational or distorting process.
[0070] Also, the rectangular tiling may be replaced with any other useful organizational structure. As non-limiting and non-exhausted examples, regular patterns of repeating geometric forms may be used, including, but not limited to, triangular, hexagonal, combinations of octagons and squares, tetrahedrons, other singular or combined regular or irregular polygons, irregular polygons, random forms, curved forms, or any other useful geometric structure.
[0071] The relief of such friction ridges may be of any useful contour or depth. As non-limiting and non-exhausted examples, such ridges may be the same as or greater or lesser in scaled depth than the natural occurring friction ridges from which the imprinted friction ridges are derived. Or the receding or advancing friction ridge sides may be perpendicular, or formed to duplicate the natural structure from which the friction ridges are derived, or be of any other useful form structure.
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[0073] Such randomized patterns, as with virtually all patterns of friction ridges shown herein, might also be segregated into areas exhibiting specific characteristics.
[0074] As non-limiting and non-exhaustive examples, some areas might have friction ridges imprinted to greater depth to decrease the effects of expected wear. Or some areas might have friction ridges with greater or lesser thickness of sole underneath the friction ridge imprint to convey greater or lesser forces from the shoed foot to the bottom of the friction ridge. Or friction ridges might be segregated in other useful structures.
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[0077] Friction ridge patterns may also be advantageously fabricated into the handles of rackets for: badminton, racquetball, ping-pong, as well as handles for other sports equipment.
[0078] Likewise, these may be friction ridge patterns of, or derivative of friction ridge patterns of, celebrities, including, but not limited to sports celebrities. Here again, such patterns may help reinforce the value of celebrity endorsements.
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[0090] Any effective arrangement of friction ridge patterns, including those described herein, may be used alone and/or in combination, and/or at any useful scale, and/or at any effective relief contours, and/or utilizing any compatible fabrication technique, to potentially increase the performance of products, and/or to enhance the effectiveness of celebrity endorsements for such products, and/or for other reasons. This is true for any of a wide variety of products, including specifically those described herein.
[0091] As non-limiting and non-exhausted examples, such products may include: footwear (including footwear for: track, track and cross-country running, marathons, climbing, baseball, basketball, football, track and field, swimming, snorkel and skin diving, tennis, golf, boating, rowing, auto racing, weightlifting, all sports, work, dress and/or leisure wear, gymnastics, hunting, fishing, and other indoor and outdoor activities, etc.); gloves and hand wear for the above activities, as well as handles and gripping surfaces on products including, but not limited to: tennis, badminton, squash, and racquetball rackets; ping-pong paddles; golf clubs, croquet mallets, hockey sticks, yard utensils, including shovels, rakes, trowels, lawnmowers, weed whackers, cythes; power and manual hand tools, automobile steering wheels, aircraft yokes and joysticks, bicycle and motorcycle handle grips, military and sports rifles and pistols; hand grips on weapons such as grenade launchers and surface to air rocket launchers; floor coverings such as tumbling, yoga, and exercise mats, and area and general floor and wall surfaces; hand and foot gripping and contact areas, including those on: gym equipment, eating utensils, automobile and other device control pedals; knives and cutlery; archery bows; appliance and tool handles; bottles, jars and containers; door knobs, stair and other railings; as well as other gripping and contact areas on other products including automobile and other tires, and tractor treads; as well as gripping and contact areas on other products.