Jan 3, 2010
Velcro™, the fabric-strip fastener, is the invention of Swiss engineer Georges de Mestral (1908-1990). De Mestral came up with the idea for velcro™ around 1948, when he returned from hiking in the Alps and had to pull burdock burrs off his clothing. He placed a burr under a microscope and studied its thousands of tiny hooks.
De Mestral worked for seven years to perfect his invention. He was granted a U.S. patent in 1955 and a worldwide patent in 1957. (A patent is a government document that grants an inventor the sole right to manufacture his or her invention for a certain period of time.) De Mestral opened the first factory to produce velcro™ in 1957.
The name "velcro" is a combination of the French words velours for "velvet" and crochet for "small hook." A velcro™ fastener consists of two nylon strips, one containing thousands of tiny hooks and the other, tiny loops....
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