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Brannock Device

Shoe size measuring instrument From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brannock Device
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The Brannock Device is a measuring instrument invented by Charles F. Brannock for measuring a person's shoe size. Brannock spent two years developing a simple means of measuring the length, width, and arch length of the human foot. He eventually improved on the wooden RITZ Stick, the industry standard of the day,[2] patenting his first prototype in 1925[3] and an improved version in 1927.[1] The device has both left and right heel cups and is rotated through 180 degrees to measure the second foot. Brannock later formed the Brannock Device Company to manufacture and sell the product, and headed the company until 1992 when he died at age 89. The Smithsonian Institution has the nearly complete records of the development of the Brannock Device and subsequent marketing.[4]

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Brannock Device[1]
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Brannock Device at shoe museum in Zlín, Czechia

The Brannock Device Company was headquartered in Syracuse, New York, until shortly after Charles Brannock's death. Salvatore Leonardi purchased the company from the Brannock Estate in 1993, and moved manufacturing to a small factory in Liverpool, New York.

On May 31, 2018, the Syracuse minor league baseball team had a one-night promotion and rebranded as the Syracuse Devices in honor of the Brannock Device.[5]

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Sizing system

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The modern Brannock device takes three measurements of each foot:

Foot length
the length from heel to the tip of the longest toe (in increments of barleycorns)
Arch length
the length from heel to the inside of the ball of the foot, or medial metatarsophalangeal joint
Width
the width of the foot perpendicular to the length

Foot and arch lengths correspond to numeric Brannock sizes, and foot widths correspond to letter Brannock widths AAAA (narrowest) to EEEE (widest), as follows:

Women's Brannock sizes are offset from men's by one:

More information 1​, 1+1⁄2​ ...
More information Heel-to-Toe (Foot) Length, Heel-to-Ball (Arch) Length ...
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