Information about Zipper
This article is about the fastening device. For other uses of the words zip, zipper, and the acronym ZIP, see Zip (disambiguation).
A zipper (British English: zip fastener or zip) is a popular device for temporarily joining two edges of fabric. It is used in clothing, luggage and other bags, sporting goods, camping gear (e.g., tents and sleeping bags), and other textiles.
Descriptions
The bulk of a zipper consists of two strips of fabric tape, each affixed to one of the two pieces to be joined, carrying tens or hundreds of specially shaped metal or plastic teeth. The slider, operated by hand, moves along the rows of teeth. Inside the slider is a Y-shaped channel that meshes together or separates the opposing rows of teeth, depending on the direction of its movement. The friction of the slider against the teeth causes a characteristic buzzing noise, which is probably the origin of the name zip(per). The name also may have originated in the greater speed with which the two sides of a zipper can be joined or separated, compared to the time needed for fastening or undoing laces or buttons.Some zippers have two slides, allowing variation in the opening's size and position. In most jackets and similar garments, the opening is closed entirely when one slide is at each end. In most baggages, the opening is closed entirely when the two slides are next to each other at any point along the zipper.
Zippers may:
- increase the size of an opening to allow the passage of objects, as in the fly of trousers or in a pocket
- join or separate two ends or sides of a single garment, as in the front of a jacket
- attach or detach a separable part of the garment to or from another, as in the conversion between trousers and shorts or the connection / disconnection of a hood and a coat.
- decorate an item.
History of the Zipper
An early device superficially similar to the zipper, "an Automatic, Continuous Clothing Closure", was patented in the United States by Elias Howe in 1851. Unlike the zipper, Howe's invention had no slider; instead a series of clasps slid freely along both edges to be joined, with each clasp holding the two sides together at whichever pair of points along them it was located. The clasps were joined together by a string, which, when pulled taut, caused the clasps to be evenly spaced along the closure, thus holding the two edges together. Pulling in the other direction caused the clasps to become bunched up at one end, by which means the device was opened.The true zipper was the product of a series of incremental improvements over more than twenty years, by inventors and engineers associated with a sequence of companies that were the progenitors of Talon, Inc. This process began with a version called the "clasp locker", invented by Whitcomb L. Judson of Chicago (previously of Minneapolis and New York City), and for which a patent (No. 504,038) was first applied for on Nov. 7, 1891. It culminated in 1914 with the invention, by Gideon Sundback, of the "Hookless Fastener No. 2", which was the first version of the zipper without any major design flaws, and which was essentially indistinguishable from modern zippers.
Initial versions of the zipper were based on the "hook and eye" principle, rather than on interlocking teeth, and tended to come apart easily. Some versions depended on constant pressure from one side of the joined fabric in order to hold together at all, which limited applications. In the 1891 version, the slider detached entirely from the zipper when not being used to open or close.
Judson, together with business partner Harry Earle, founded the first incarnation of what was to eventually become Talon Inc., in Chicago in 1894, as the Universal Fastener Company. The design deficiencies, combined with difficulties in getting the machinery needed for mass production to work, prevented the early devices from reaching market, which led to financial hardships for the company. This in turn led to a series of reorganizations and name changes, as well as relocations, first to Catasauqua, Pennsylvania; then to Elyria, Ohio; Hoboken, New Jersey; and finally Meadville, Pennsylvania.
Sundback, a Swedish-born immigrant, joined the company, then called the Automatic Hook and Eye Company, in Hoboken, in 1906. At that time the company's product, still based on hooks and eyes, was called the "C-curity Fastener". Sundback developed an improved version of the C-curity, called the "Plako", but it too had a strong tendency to pull apart, and wasn't any more successful than the previous versions. Sundback finally solved the pulling-apart problem in 1913, with his invention of the first version of the zipper based on interlocking teeth, the "Hookless Fastener No. 1".
That version, however, had a tendency to wear out quickly, and again was not a commercial success. Finally, in 1914 Sundback developed another version based on interlocking teeth, the "Hookless No. 2", which solved the last remaining major design defect, and opened the way to commercial success. The principle is, each tooth is punched to have a dimple on its bottom and a nib or conical projection on its top. The nib atop one tooth engages in the matching dimple in the bottom of the tooth that follows it on the other side as the two strips of teeth are brought together through the two Y channels of the slider. The teeth are crimped tightly to a strong fabric cord that is the selvage edge of the cloth tape that attaches the zipper to the garment, with the teeth on one side offset by half a tooth's height from those on the other side's tape. They are held so tightly to the cord and tape that once meshed there is not enough play to let them pull apart - - a tooth can't rise up off the nib below it enough to break free, and its nib on top can't drop out of the dimple in the tooth above it. The classic zipper was made of a brass alloy, a metal that has low friction and is long-wearing.
Sundback's invention of the Hookless No. 2 took place while he was working for the Hookless Fastener Company in Meadville, which had previously been set up to manufacture the Hookless No. 1. Depending on which improvement one wants to consider to constitute the "invention" of the zipper, the zipper was invented either in Meadville, Chicago, or one of the other previously mentioned cities. The B. F. Goodrich Company coined the name Zipper in 1923 for the line of rubber overshoes that it made using the fastener. The name slowly came to be associated with the fastener itself, and eventually acquired generic status.
The zipper slowly became popular for children's clothing and men's trousers in the 1920s and 1930s. In the early 1930s the haute couture designer Elsa Schiaparelli featured zippers in her avant-garde gowns, helping it to become acceptable in women's clothing. In 1934, Tadao Yoshida founded a company called San-S Shokai in downtown Tokyo. Later, this company would change its name to YKK and become the world's largest manufacturer of zippers and fastening products. By World War II, the zipper had become widely used in Europe and North America, and after the war quickly spread through the rest of the world.
Clergy in the 1920s and 1930s described zippers as allowing one to take one's clothes off too quickly, thus hastening illicit sexual activity. Clothing with zippers was seen as inappropriate to be worn by women because of this fact, and was not fully adopted until the late 1950s.[citation needed]
Today, such leading global companies as YKK, Opti, TALON, Ideal, NEO, KCC Group, and Tex Corp, make various types of zippers including "invisible" zippers, metallic zippers, and plastic zippers.
In a January 2007 television show in Canada, the zipper was chosen as No. 8 on the list of The Greatest Canadian Inventions; it qualified because Sundback had been president of a Canadian-based company that was one of the earliest manufacturers of the zipper.
Types
- Coil zippers now form the bulk of sales of zippers world-wide. The slider runs on two coils on each side; the "teeth" are the coils. Two basic types of coils are used: one with coils in spiral form, usually with a cord running inside the coils; the other with coils in ladder form, also called the Ruhrmann type. This second type is now used only in a few parts of the world, mainly in South Asia.
- Invisible zippers' teeth are behind the tape. The tape's color matches the garment's, as does the slider, so that, except the slider, the zipper is "invisible". This kind of a zipper is common in skirts and dresses. Invisible zippers are usually coil zippers or to be precise polyester zipper.
- Metallic zippers are the classic zipper type, found mostly in jeans today. The teeth are not a coil, but are individual pieces of metal moulded into shape and set on the zipper tape at regular intervals.
A special type of metal zipper is made from pre-formed wire, usually brass but sometimes other metals too. Only a few companies in the world have the technology. These type of pre-formed metal zippers are mainly used in high grade jeanswear, workwear, etc., where high strength is required and zippers need to withstand tough washing.
- Plastic-molded zippers are identical to metallic zippers, except that the teeth are plastic instead of metal. Metal zippers can be painted to match the surrounding fabric, plastic zippers can be made in any color of plastic. Plastic zippers mostly use polyacetal resin though other resins are used too like polyethylene.
- Open-ended zippers use a "box and pin" mechanism to lock the two sides of the zipper into place, often in jackets. Open-ended zippers can be of any of the above specified types.
- Closed-ended zippers are closed at both ends; they are often used in baggage.
Manufacturing
Japan makes 68% of the world's zippers. A large part of these are manufactured by YKK. Almost all of the rest are made in Southeast Asia. Major zipper manufacturing countries in Southeast Asia are now Bangladesh, China and India. These countries are not only manufacturing zippers for domestic use and use in exported products but are exporting zippers directly to other countries as well.TALON still exists as an American brand, now owned by TagIt Pacific of USA.Tag It recently changed it name to Talon International Inc.
See also
- Buckle
- Button
- Rack and pinion
- Safety pin
- Shoelaces
- Snap fasteners (also known as poppers and press studs)
- Tex Corp
- Velcro
- YKK Group
- Zipper animation
- NEO
- Zips from Coats Opti
References
- Henry Petroski: The Evolution of Useful Things (1992); ISBN 0-679-74039-2
- Robert Friedel: Zipper: An Exploration in Novelty (W. W. Norton and Company: New York, 1996); ISBN 0-393-31365-4
External Links
Zipper! - With Good Reason by VFH Radio Robert Friedel and Alexander Horniman (University of Virgina) examine how the zipper illustrates the limitations and expectations of technology.Patents
- 25 November 1851 U.S. Patent 8,540: "Fastening for Garments & c."
- 29 August 1893 U.S. Patent 504,037: "Shoe fastening"
- 29 August 1893 U.S. Patent 504,038: "Clasp Locker or Unlocker for Shoes"
- 31 March 1896 U.S. Patent 557,207: "Fastening for Shoes"
- 31 March 1896 U.S. Patent 557,208: "Clasp-Locker for Shoes"
- 19 April 1913 U.S. Patent 1,060,378: "Separable fastener"
- 20 March 1917 U.S. Patent 1,219,881: "Separable fastener"
- 22 December 1936 U.S. Patent 2,065,250: "Slider"
Sewing | ||
|---|---|---|
| Techniques: | Basting Cut Darning Dressmaker Embellishment Gather Heirloom sewing Pleat Ruffle Style line Tailor | |
| Stitches: | Backstitch Blanket Buttonhole Chain stitch Cross-stitch Embroidery stitch Lockstitch Overlock Running Sashiko Tack | |
| Notions: | Bias tape Interfacing Passementerie Pattern Simplicity Trim Twill tape | |
| Closures: | Button Buttonhole Frog Shank Snap Velcro Zipper | |
| Materials: | Bias Yarn/Thread Selvage Textiles/Fabric | |
| Tools: | Bobbin Pin Pincushion Pinking shears Pincushion Pinking shears Scissors Seam ripper Sewing needle Stitching awl Tape measure Thimble Tracing paper Tracing wheel Upholstery needle | |
| Sewing machines and parts: | Feed dogs Sewing machine Needle guard Pfaff Singer Tapemaster | |
Zip may refer to:
..... Click the link for more information.
- a zipper, zip being the more common word in the English language for the fastening device outside of North America
- ZIP (file format), a popular data compression and archival format
- Zip
..... Click the link for more information.
British English (BrE, BE, en-GB) is the broad term used to distinguish the forms of the English language used in the United Kingdom from forms used elsewhere in the Anglophone world.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
textile is a flexible material comprised of a network of natural or artificial fibers often referred to as thread or yarn. Yarn is produced by spinning raw wool fibers, linen, cotton, or other material on a spinning wheel to produce long strands known as yarn.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
original research or unverifiable claims.
* It may contain an of published material that conveys ideas not verifiable with the given sources. Please help add reliable sources about the topic "August 2007."
* It does not cite any references or sources.
..... Click the link for more information.
* It may contain an of published material that conveys ideas not verifiable with the given sources. Please help add reliable sources about the topic "August 2007."
* It does not cite any references or sources.
..... Click the link for more information.
Luggage is any number of bags, cases and containers which hold a traveller's articles during transit. The modern traveller can be expected to have packages containing clothing, toiletries, small possessions, trip necessities, and on the return-trip, souvenirs.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
bag (also known as a sack) is a non-rigid container normally made of paper, cloth, thin plastic, or some other flexible material. A bag may have one or two handles, or none at all. A bag may be closable by a zipper, snap fastener, etc., or simply by folding (e.g.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
Sports equipment includes any object used for sport or exercise.
Examples for sports include balls, goals, sticks for hockey and lacrosse, bats, wickets and bails for cricket, nets for tennis, volleyball and badminton.
..... Click the link for more information.
Examples for sports include balls, goals, sticks for hockey and lacrosse, bats, wickets and bails for cricket, nets for tennis, volleyball and badminton.
..... Click the link for more information.
Camping is an outdoor recreational activity, in which the participants, known as campers, get away from civilization and enjoy nature while spending one or more nights at a campsite. Camping may involve the use of a tent, a primitive structure, or no shelter at all.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
worldwide view of the subject.
Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
A tent is a shelter, consisting of sheets of fabric or other material draped over or attached to a frame of poles and/or ropes.Please [ improve this article] or discuss the issue on the talk page.
..... Click the link for more information.
A sleeping bag is a protective "bag" for a person to sleep in, essentially a blanket that can be closed with a zipper or similar means, and functions as a bed in situations where it is impractical to carry around a full bed. Its primary purpose is to provide warmth and insulation.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
textile is a flexible material comprised of a network of natural or artificial fibers often referred to as thread or yarn. Yarn is produced by spinning raw wool fibers, linen, cotton, or other material on a spinning wheel to produce long strands known as yarn.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
button is a small disc- or knob-shaped, typically round, object usually attached to an article of clothing in order to secure an opening, or for ornamentation. Functional buttons work by slipping the button through a fabric or thread loop, or by sliding the button through a slit
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
A jacket is a lightweight, sleeved thigh- or waist-length coat that may be worn by anyone, as jackets are now made for children, adults, the elderly, and even infants. Some jackets are fashionable, while others serve as protective clothing.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
Luggage is any number of bags, cases and containers which hold a traveller's articles during transit. The modern traveller can be expected to have packages containing clothing, toiletries, small possessions, trip necessities, and on the return-trip, souvenirs.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
Trousers (or pants in Canada, South Africa and the United States, and sometimes called slacks or breeches — often pronounced /bɹɪtʃɪz/
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
pocket is a small bag, particularly a bag-like receptacle either fastened to or inserted in an article of clothing. Cargo pants have pockets with an extra large capacity.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
A jacket is a lightweight, sleeved thigh- or waist-length coat that may be worn by anyone, as jackets are now made for children, adults, the elderly, and even infants. Some jackets are fashionable, while others serve as protective clothing.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
Shorts are a garment worn by both men and women over their pelvic area, circling the waist, and covering the upper part of the upper legs or more, sometimes extending as far as mid-calf, but not covering the entire length of the leg, either as outer or undergarment.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
A hood is a kind of headgear that covers most of the head and neck and sometimes the face. They may be worn for protection from the environment, for fashion, as a form of traditional dress or uniform, to prevent the wearer seeing or to prevent the wearer being identified.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
coat (a term frequently interchangeable with jacket) is an outer garment worn by both men and women, for warmth or fashion. Coats typically have long sleeves and open down the front, closing by means of buttons, zippers, hook-and-loop fasteners, toggles, a belt, or a
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
This page has been split:
..... Click the link for more information.
- Skirt
- Dress (garment)
See also
- Dress (disambiguation)
..... Click the link for more information.
Luggage is any number of bags, cases and containers which hold a traveller's articles during transit. The modern traveller can be expected to have packages containing clothing, toiletries, small possessions, trip necessities, and on the return-trip, souvenirs.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
buckle (from Latin buccula) is a clasp used for fastening two things together, such as the ends of a belt, or for retaining the end of a strap. Before the invention of the zipper, buckles were commonly used to fasten boots and other shoes.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
button is a small disc- or knob-shaped, typically round, object usually attached to an article of clothing in order to secure an opening, or for ornamentation. Functional buttons work by slipping the button through a fabric or thread loop, or by sliding the button through a slit
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
A Rack and Pinion is a pair of gears which convert rotational motion into linear motion. The circular pinion engages teeth on a flat bar - the rack.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
A safety pin is a device most commonly used to attach two pieces of fabric together.
..... Click the link for more information.
Origin
The origin of the safety pin dates back to the Mycenaeans during the 14th century B.C. (Late Mycenaean III era)...... Click the link for more information.
- Shoestring redirects here. For the BBC drama, see Shoestring (TV series).
Shoelaces (also shoestrings, shoe laces or boot laces) are the system used to secure shoes.
..... Click the link for more information.
A snap fastener (also called snap, popper, and press stud) is a pair of interlocking discs commonly used in place of buttons to fasten clothing. Snaps can be attached to material by hammering, plying, or sewing.
..... Click the link for more information.
..... Click the link for more information.
Tex Corp
Private
Founded 1987
Headquarters Gurgaon, India
Key people Anil Tandon, CEO
Products Zippers
Employees 500
Website www.texzipper.
..... Click the link for more information.
Private
Founded 1987
Headquarters Gurgaon, India
Key people Anil Tandon, CEO
Products Zippers
Employees 500
Website www.texzipper.
..... Click the link for more information.
This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia.org - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the wikipedia encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
Herod_Archelaus