Mountain boot with Tricouni nails
Tricouni nails

Tricouni is the brand name of a metal nail used on mountain climbing shoes. Widely used in the past by mountain climbers and soldiers, it offers improved gripping on various surfaces. The Tricouni nail was invented in 1912 by a jeweler from Geneva, Félix-Valentin Genecand, alias "Tricouni" (1878-1957).[1] Genecand was also a well known alpinist (several mountains were named after him: Mount Genecand in Antarctica, Tricouni Peak in Canada). Tricouni nails are also referred to as hobnails, boot nails, cleats and shoe studs.[2]

Tricouni is now the name of a British luxury fashion house, designing women’s luxury outerwear. Tricouni is a privately held company, headquartered in London, England. [3]


See also

References

  1. See death notices (search "Tricouni n'est plus" (without quotation marks) on the Journal de Genève, and access to the death notices of 21.01.1957), and also his necrology in the SAC-Jahrbuch: "Félix Genecand, genannt "Tricouni" (1878-1957), Louis Seylaz, p. 158 of the french version, or p. 159 of the german version". In the "brief biography" of the external links the indicated year of birth (1879) is incorrect: the SAC-Jahrbuch gives 1878, and the notice in the Journal de Genève recalls that he recently celebrated his 78th birthday.
  2. Cooper, Hermione (December 10, 2008). "Boot nails and shoe studs". Retrieved May 18, 2012.
  3. http://www.drapersonline.com/news/thomas-pink-founder-backs-outerwear-label/7005684.fullarticle, Tara Hounslea, "Thomas Pink founder backs outerwear label", Drapers, EMAP Publishing Limited Company, 2016-03-14, Accessed 2016-08-12
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.