PSYCHOACOUSTIC FOOTWEAR
Psychoacoustic footwear includes a heel adapted to generate a sound during walking. The sound may be produced electronically or mechanically. In a mechanical implementation, the heel may include a chamber with an opening. A vibrating object within the heel, such as a tuning fork or key, emits an audible sound when the object is struck. A pendulum, hammer, or other mechanical device may be provided to controllably strike the object. Movement and contact with a hard surface during walking produces a distinctive sound that is subtle, yet audible to nearby bystanders. The sound draws attention of bystanders and may evoke favorable emotional reactions. The heel may be comprised of plastic, metal, wood or composites. Electrical implementations may include a speaker, sound producing and/or amplification circuitry, a power supply and a switch for generating or amplifying sound.
This invention generally relates to laced footwear, and more particularly, to shoes designed to produce audible sounds that attract attention and evoke emotional responses.
BACKGROUNDSounds can arouse strong emotions. A certain sound may excite or relax one's body, exhilarate one's soul, bring enjoyment and evoke a whole range of emotions. Physiological responses in reaction to sound stimuli have long been observed. For instance, a soothing sound could lead to a decrease in the tension of muscles, respiration rate, and blood pressure. Sounds can also elicit strong motor responses from listeners such as a quick turn, a jump or a defensive reaction. Additionally, audible stimuli may alleviate physical distress and pain. Sounds are also believed to be capable of triggering the release of endorphins (an opiate-like substance in the brain), and induce increased release of the neurotransmitter serotonin.
Clothing and cosmetic marketers have long appreciated the relationship between appealing to senses and boosting sales. An attractive silk suit harnesses the senses of sight and touch. The scent of a perfume possesses an uncanny power to conjure up memories. While the connection between sound and emotions is also well known, audible stimuli have not been integrated into mainstream fashion.
As a consequence of the foregoing, there exists a longstanding need for an audible fashion. The invention is directed to overcoming one or more of the problems as set forth above.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONTo solve one or more of the problems set forth above, in an exemplary implementation of the invention, footwear is provided with a heel that generates a sound during walking. The sound may be produced electronically, electromechanically or mechanically.
In one aspect of exemplary footwear according to the invention, a heel includes a chamber with an opening. Contact with a hard surface during walking produces a distinctive sound that is subtle, yet audible to nearby bystanders. The sound draws attention of bystanders and may evoke favorable emotional reactions. The heel may be comprised of plastic, metal, wood or composites.
In another aspect of the invention an exemplary heel is a bottom rear support structure for a shoe. The support structure includes an interior chamber and at least one aperture in the support structure leading to the interior chamber. A sound producing means is housed within the interior chamber and configured to produce an audible sound upon a determined action, such as lifting the heel, moving the heel downwardly or striking a surface with the heel. The sound is amplified by the chamber and emitted through the at least one aperture.
In one embodiment, the sound producing means includes a mechanically vibrating element such as a tuning fork or key. In the case of a tuning fork, the tuning fork has a pair of tines. A pendulum may be contained in the housing and configured to swing and impact at least one of the pair of tines to generate an audible sound upon the impact.
Alternatively, the sound producing means includes a pivoting hammer and a key. The pivoting hammer is configured to swing and impact the key as the heel is moved. The key produces an audible sound upon the impact. In one embodiment, the pivoting hammer includes a pivoting arm with a free end and pivotally mounted end, a tension spring generating a tensile force that produces a spring torque that resists pivoting of the pivoting arm in the first direction. A striking head attached to the free end of the pivoting arm. A counterweight is attached to a moment arm attached to the pivotally mounted end of the pivoting arm and configured to generate a weight torque that urges the pivoting arm in the first direction. The weight torque exceeds the spring torque during impact of the heel with a ground surface. The pivoting hammer swings in the first direction and impacts a key as the heel impacts the ground surface. The key produces an audible sound upon the impact.
In another embodiment, the heel includes a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within the compartment. The heel piston is configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position. A compression spring urges the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface. A sound producing within the heel compartment includes a striker and a key. The striker includes a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and an attached ferrous joint coupled to a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring. A magnetic retainer magnetically engages the ferrous joint. A drive shaft couples the heel piston to the magnetic retainer. The striking head impacts the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released. The magnetic retainer exerts a magnetic retaining force on the ferrous joint. The cantilevered leaf spring exerts a striking force on the striking head and the attached ferrous joint. The striking force increases with deflection of the cantilevered leaf spring. The magnetic retainer releases the ferrous joint when the striking force exceeds the magnetic retaining force. The deflection increasing as the heel piston moves to an extended position. The increasing deflection increases the striking force to exceed the magnetic retaining force and thereby cause the magnetic retainer to release the ferrous joint, and thereby allow the striking head to impact the key. The key produces an audible sound upon the impact.
In another aspect of the invention, a method of evoking an emotional response using a shoe is provided. An exemplary method entails associating a synthetic sound with a determined emotion through repeated advertising, and providing shoes with heels having interior compartments and sound producing means configured to produce the synthetic sound during walking. Each of the heels is a bottom rear support structure for a shoe. The support structure includes an interior chamber and at least one aperture in the support structure leading to the interior chamber, and a sound producing means housed within the interior chamber and configured to produce the synthetic sound during walking. The sound is amplified by the chamber and emitted through the aperture.
The foregoing and other aspects, objects, features and advantages of the invention will become better understood with reference to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, where:
Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the figures are not intended to be drawn to any particular scale; nor are the figures intended to illustrate every embodiment of the invention. The invention is not limited to the exemplary embodiments depicted in the figures or the types of shoes, heels, shapes, relative sizes, ornamental aspects or proportions shown in the figures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTIONReferring to the Figures, in which like parts are indicated with the same reference numerals, various views of exemplary shoes with exemplary shoelace retainers according to principles of the invention are shown. The term “shoe” is used herein for convenience to refer to any footwear with a heel. The invention is not limited to high heel footwear as shown in the Figures. Instead, the invention may be utilized with any type of footwear with a heel adequately sized to house a sound producing chamber and one or more sound producing elements therein.
Referring to
The invention comprises sound producing elements integrated with the heel of a shoe 100. For clarification, a portion of an exemplary heel, such as the portion below line 200 is discussed more fully below. The remainder of the shoe 100 may be conventional shoe components.
Referring now to
Sound is generated within the chamber by percussion. A striker (discussed below) impacts a sound emitting element such as a tuning fork, key, membrane, or string. By way of illustration and not limitation, embodiments comprising a tuning fork 700 are shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In the embodiment shown in
In another embodiment, the sound may be produced electronically using an embedded sound generating circuit, a speaker, power supply and switch. Upon activation of the switch, the circuit causes the speaker to emit a programmed sound. In yet another embodiment the chamber may contain a microphone, amplifier circuit, power supply, speaker and switch. Upon activation of the switch, the microphone receives sounds from within the chamber, and the amplifier circuit magnifies and possibly alters the sound and causes the speaker to emit a sound. The amplifier circuit may be configured to amplify only certain sounds within a programmed range of sound properties.
A method of deployment according to the invention may entail associating the produced sound with a determined emotion through advertising, promotion and marketing. The sound is a synthetic sound, i.e., a sound other than the natural sound of the heel striking a ground surface during walking. By way of example and not limitation, it may be an amplified sound and/or a musical sound may be, for example, a standard tuning pitch for music of 440 Hz, or some other pleasant recognizable sound. The emotion may be love, lust, curiosity or ecstasy. Eventually, consumers will relate the sound to the emotion. Then, shoes configured to produce the sound will draw attention and trigger the taught emotional response.
While an exemplary embodiment of the invention has been described, it should be apparent that modifications and variations thereto are possible, all of which fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention. With respect to the above description then, it is to be realized that the optimum relationships for the components and steps of the invention, including variations in order, form, content, function and manner of operation, are deemed readily apparent and obvious to one skilled in the art, and all equivalent relationships to those illustrated in the drawings and described in the specification are intended to be encompassed by the present invention. The above description and drawings are illustrative of modifications that can be made without departing from the present invention, the scope of which is to be limited only by the following claims. Therefore, the foregoing is considered as illustrative only of the principles of the invention. Further, since numerous modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art, it is not desired to limit the invention to the exact construction and operation shown and described, and accordingly, all suitable modifications and equivalents are intended to fall within the scope of the invention as claimed.
Claims
1. A heel comprising
- a bottom rear support structure for a shoe, said support structure including an interior chamber and at least one aperture in the support structure leading to the interior chamber, and
- a sound producing means housed within said interior chamber and configured to produce an audible sound upon a determined action, said sound being amplified in said chamber and emitted through said at least one aperture.
2. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a mechanically vibrating element.
3. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a tuning fork.
4. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a tuning fork having a pair of tines and further comprising a pendulum configured to swing and impact at least one of the pair of tines, said tines being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
5. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a tuning fork having a pair of tines and further comprising a pendulum configured to swing and impact at least one of the pair of tines as the heel is moved, said tines being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
6. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a pivoting hammer and further comprising a key, said pivoting hammer being configured to swing and impact the key as the heel is moved, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
7. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a pivoting hammer, said pivoting hammer comprising a pivoting arm with a free end, a striking head attached to the free end, and
- further comprising a key, said pivoting hammer being configured to swing and impact the key as the heel is moved, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
8. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a pivoting hammer, said pivoting hammer comprising a pivoting arm with a free end and pivotally mounted end, a tension spring restraining the pivoting arm from pivoting in a first direction, a striking head attached to the free end of the pivoting arm, and a counterweight attached to a moment arm attached to the pivotally mounted end of the pivoting arm and configured to urge the pivoting arm in the first direction, and
- further comprising a key, said pivoting hammer being configured to swing in the first direction and impact the key as the heel is moved, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
9. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a pivoting hammer, said pivoting hammer comprising a pivoting arm with a free end and pivotally mounted end, a tension spring generating a tensile force that produces a spring torque that resists pivoting of the pivoting arm in the first direction, a striking head attached to the free end of the pivoting arm, and a counterweight attached to a moment arm attached to the pivotally mounted end of the pivoting arm and configured to generate a weight torque that urges the pivoting arm in the first direction, said weight torque exceeding the spring torque during downward acceleration of the heel, and
- further comprising a key, said pivoting hammer being configured to swing in the first direction and impact the key as the heel is accelerated downward, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
10. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a pivoting hammer, said pivoting hammer comprising a pivoting arm with a free end and pivotally mounted end, a tension spring generating a tensile force that produces a spring torque that resists pivoting of the pivoting arm in the first direction, a striking head attached to the free end of the pivoting arm, and a counterweight attached to a moment arm attached to the pivotally mounted end of the pivoting arm and configured to generate a weight torque that urges the pivoting arm in the first direction, said weight torque exceeding the spring torque during impact of the heel with a ground surface, and
- further comprising a key, said pivoting hammer being configured to swing in the first direction and impact the key as the heel impacts the ground surface, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
11. A heel according to claim 1,
- said sound producing means comprising a cantilevered leaf spring and a striking head mounted on a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring,
- further comprising a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
12. A heel according to claim 1,
- comprising a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within said compartment, said heel piston being configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position,
- a biasing means configured to urge the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface,
- said sound producing means comprising a striker comprising a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and ferrous joint mounted on a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring, a magnetic retainer configured to magnetically engage the ferrous joint, and a drive shaft coupling the heel piston to the magnetic retainer, and a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
13. A heel according to claim 1,
- comprising a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within said compartment, said heel piston being configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position,
- a biasing means configured to urge the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface,
- said sound producing means comprising a striker comprising a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and ferrous joint mounted on a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring, a magnetic retainer configured to magnetically engage the ferrous joint, and a drive shaft coupling the heel piston to the magnetic retainer, and a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
14. A heel cording to claim 1,
- comprising a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within said compartment, said heel piston being configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position,
- a biasing means configured to urge the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface,
- said sound producing means comprising a striker comprising a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and ferrous joint mounted on a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring, a magnetic retainer configured to magnetically engage the ferrous joint, and a drive shaft coupling the heel piston to the magnetic retainer, and a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
15. A heel cording to claim 1,
- comprising a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within said compartment, said heel piston being configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position,
- a compression spring configured to urge the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface,
- said sound producing means comprising a striker comprising a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and an attached ferrous joint coupled to a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring, a magnetic retainer configured to magnetically engage the ferrous joint, and a drive shaft coupling the heel piston to the magnetic retainer, and a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said magnetic retainer exerting a magnetic retaining force on the ferrous joint, said cantilevered leaf spring exerting a striking force on the striking head and the attached ferrous joint, said striking force increasing with deflection of the cantilevered leaf spring, said magnetic retainer being configured to release said ferrous joint when the striking force exceeds the magnetic retaining force.
16. A heel cording to claim 1,
- comprising a bottom heel piston compartment and a heel piston within said compartment, said heel piston being configured for reciprocating motion within the heel piston compartment from a closed position to an extended position,
- a compression spring configured to urge the heel piston from the closed position to the extended position when the heel is lifted from a ground surface,
- said sound producing means comprising a striker comprising a cantilevered leaf spring with a striking head and an attached ferrous joint coupled to a free end of the cantilevered leaf spring, a magnetic retainer configured to magnetically engage the ferrous joint, and a drive shaft coupling the heel piston to the magnetic retainer, and a key,
- said striking head being configured to impact the key as the cantilevered leaf spring is released and move apart from the key as the cantilever leaf spring is deflected, said magnetic retainer exerting a magnetic retaining force on the ferrous joint, said cantilevered leaf spring exerting a striking force on the striking head and the attached ferrous joint, said striking force increasing with deflection of the cantilevered leaf spring, said magnetic retainer being configured to release said ferrous joint when the striking force exceeds the magnetic retaining force, said deflection increasing as the heel piston moves to an extended position, said increasing deflection causing the striking force to exceed the magnetic retaining force and thereby causing the magnetic retainer to release the ferrous joint, and thereby allow the striking head to impact the key, and
- said key being configured to produce an audible sound upon said impact.
17. A heel according to claim 1, said sound producing means comprising a sound generating circuit within the chamber, a speaker within the chamber operably coupled to the sound generating circuit, a power supply within the chamber operably coupled to the sound generating circuit and a switch operably coupled to the heel, said switch being adapted to controllably activate the circuit and cause the speaker to emit a programmed sound upon contact of the heel with a surface.
18. A heel according to claim 1, said sound producing means comprising an amplifier circuit within the chamber, a speaker within the chamber operably coupled to the amplifier circuit, a microphone within the chamber operably coupled to the amplifier circuit, a power supply within the chamber operably coupled to the amplifier circuit and a switch operably coupled to the heel, said switch being adapted to controllably activate the circuit and cause the microphone to receive sounds within the chamber and the speaker to emit an amplified version of the sound.
19. A method of evoking an emotional response using a shoe, said method comprising steps of associating a synthetic sound with a determined emotion through repeated advertising, and providing shoes with heels having interior compartments and sound producing means configured to produce the synthetic sound during walking.
20. A method of evoking an emotional response using a shoe according to claim 19, each of said heels comprising a bottom rear support structure for a shoe, said support structure including an interior chamber and at least one aperture in the support structure leading to the interior chamber, and
- a sound producing means housed within said interior chamber and configured to produce the synthetic sound during walking, said sound being amplified in said chamber and emitted through said at least one aperture.
Type: Application
Filed: May 13, 2008
Publication Date: Nov 19, 2009
Inventor: Dale Carson (Jacksonville, FL)
Application Number: 12/119,591