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Who came up with the idea for the zipper?
Whitcomb L. Judson was a
lover of gadgets and machines and the idea for his "clasp locker" came from
when a friend had a stiff back from trying to fasten his shoes. Judson's clasp
locker was used mostly on mailbags, tobacco pouches and shoes. However, his
design, like most first inventions needed to be fine-tuned.
A more
practical version came on the scene in 1913 when a Swedish-born engineer,
Gideon Sundback revised Judson's idea and made his with metal teeth instead of
a hook and eye design. In 1917, Sundback patented his "separable
fastener."
The name
changed again when the B. F. Goodrich Co. used it in rubber boots, galoshes,
and called it the "zipper" because the boots could be fastened with one hand.
In the 1930s a sales campaign ran for children's clothing that used the new
zippers. The device was praised for promoting self-reliance in young children.
"Mommy look! One zip and I'm all dressed!"
The 1940s
brought about research in Europe of the coil zipper design. The first design
was of interlocking brass coils. However, since they could be permanently bent
out of shape, making the zipper stop functioning, it was rather bad for
business and wasn't too practical. The new design was improved after the
discovery of stronger, more flexible synthetics. Coil zippers eventually hit
the market in the early 1960s.
In 1934,
Yoshida Kogyo Kabushililaisha was founded. Sixty years later they changed their
name to YKK Co. The privately owned firm, headquartered in Japan, now is made
up of 80 companies at 206 facilities in 52 countries. YKK makes everything from
the dyed fabric around the zipper to the brass used to make the actual
device. |