Popular Science 2018 sep

(Jeff_L) #1

76 POPULAR SCIENCE


by Bryan Gardiner / photograph by The Voorhes

The ubiquitous fastener we all use (and some fashion designers overuse) has under-
gone more than a century of reinements. It began with Elias Howe’s 1851 patent for
“a series of clasps united by a connecting-cord... running or sliding upon ribs.” Kind of
awkward. So, 40 years later, engineer Whitcomb Judson replaced the clasps with hooks
and eyes joined by a slider. Better. But in 1913, Otto Frederik Gideon Sundback added
a reliable interlocking system made of oval teeth. The then-president of B.F. Goodrich,
Bertram Work, bestowed the “zipper” moniker to a company- made boot that featured
one. The name stuck; the footwear did not. Like cola, the battle for the $16 billion+
international zipper market dominance became ierce. China is currently winning.

ITEM:
Zipper slider

INVENTED:
1851

USE:
Zipping
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