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"Spiralacing"
Double Helix Shoe Lacing Process
I developed an innovative method for lacing shoes and boots.
It makes shoes and boots faster and easier to tighten and loosen.
The method works with any type of laces and any shoes or boots
with standard lace-holes, such as a typical sneaker or the U.S.
military's formerly-so-called Vietnam jungle boot, as illustrated
in the drawings below, or the military's current
safety boot
or
extreme cold weather boot;
however, it does not work with boots or shoes employing a
"speed lace system," such as the military's current
hot weather combat boot.
I developed the method at a time when I was using boots as illustrated
below for caving, which often involved tightening or loosening laces
that were thoroughly wet and/or caked with mud. The principle of
the method is to eliminate the friction caused by laces crossing
over each other. In achieving this goal, the method also results
in laces that are significantly easier and faster to loosen and
tighten because pairs of adjacent laces are pulled in the same
direction.
The paths followed by the laces describe a double helix, like DNA or zDNA, as
shown in the background of this webpage.
The method involves beginning lacing the shoe or boot through the
lowest pair of lace-holes in such a manner that the lace ends are
pointed in opposite directions relative to the upper surface of
the shoe or boot, and continuing the lacing through the other
lace-holes by inserting the lace end that is on the bottom through
the bottom of the next-highest lace-hole on the opposite side, and
inserting the lace end that is on the top through the top of the
next-highest lace-hole on the opposite side (except with the top-most
lace-holes, where it is more convenient to have both laces
on the top).
I filed a
patent application
on 7/28/01, received a
rejection a/k/a "Office Action,"
submitted my
response,
received a
"Notice of Allowance",
and finally
Patent No. 6,513,211 issued on 2/4/03.
CLICK ON FIGURE TO SEE LARGER VERSION
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