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  2. Cork (material) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cork_(material)

    Harvesting of cork from the forests of Algeria, 1930. Cork is a natural material used by humans for over 5,000 years. It is a material whose applications have been known since antiquity, especially in floating devices and as stopper for beverages, mainly wine, whose market, from the early twentieth century, had a massive expansion, particularly due to the development of several cork-based ...

  3. Rocker bottom shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rocker_bottom_shoe

    The shoes are generically known by a variety of names, including round bottom shoes, [1] round/ed sole shoes, [2] and toning shoes, [3] but also by various brand names. [4] Tyrell & Carter identified at least six standard variations of the rocker sole shoe and named them: toe-only rocker , rocker bar , mild rocker , heel-to-toe rocker ...

  4. Canobie Corkscrew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canobie_Corkscrew

    Canobie Corkscrew was a steel sit-down roller coaster located at Canobie Lake Park amusement park in Salem, New Hampshire. Canobie Corkscrew is one of many Arrow Development Corkscrew models produced between 1975 and 1979. The coaster was removed in 2021.

  5. Goodyear welt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodyear_Welt

    The components of a Goodyear welted shoe. A Goodyear welt is a strip of leather, rubber, or plastic that runs along the perimeter of a shoe outsole. [1] The basic principle behind the Goodyear welt machine was invented in 1862 by Auguste Destouy, who designed a machine with a curved needle to stitch turned shoes.

  6. Platform shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platform_shoe

    While a wide variety of styles were popular during this period, including boots, espadrilles, oxfords, sneakers, and sandals of all description, with soles made of wood, cork, or synthetic materials, the most popular style of the late 1960s and early 1970s was a simple quarter-strap sandal with tan water buffalo-hide straps, on a beige suede ...

  7. Caulk boots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caulk_boots

    Caulk boots or calk boots [1] (also called cork boots, timber boots, logger boots, logging boots, or corks) [2] are a form of rugged spike-soled footwear that are most often associated with the timber industry. [3] They are worn for traction in the woods and were especially useful in timber rafting. [4]

  8. Inverted roller coaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_roller_coaster

    The inverted coaster was developed in the early 1990s by engineers Walter Bolliger and Claude Mabillard of the Swiss roller coaster manufacturer Bolliger & Mabillard in cooperation with engineer Robert Mampe and Jim Wintrode, at the time the general manager of Six Flags Great America, who first envisioned a suspended coaster capable of inversions.

  9. Sandal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sandal

    The sole was made of wood, cork, or leather and the upper chiefly consisted of a strap between the big toe and second toe and another around the ankle. [6] The sandal of Homer was the pédila (πέδιλα). [7] [8] By the Classical Period, the general term for sandals was hypódēma (ὑπόδημα). [8]

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