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    :This article is about the fastening device called zipper. For other uses of the word zip, zipper, or the acronym ZIP, see zip (disambiguation).

    A zipper (British English: zip fastener or zip) is a device for temporarily joining two edges of fabric together. It is widely used in clothing, luggage and other bags, sporting goods and camping gear (e.g., tents, sleeping bags), and other textiles.


        Zipper
            Description
            History
            Types
            Bibliography
            See also

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    Description

    The bulk of a zip consists of two strips of fabric tape, each affixed to one of the two pieces to be joined, and each carrying tens or hundreds of specially shaped metal or plastic teeth. Another part, the slider, which is 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 its direction of travel. 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 originate 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 jackets and similar garments, the opening usually is entirely closed when one slide is at each end; in baggage, the opening usually is entirely closed when the two slides are next to each other, at any position along the zipper.

    Zippers have multiple uses:
      increasing the size of an opening to allow the passage of larger objects, as in the fly (flies) of trousers or in a pocket
      joining and completely separating two ends or sides of a single garment, effectively creating or breaking a circuit, as in the front of a jacket
      attaching and completely detaching one separable part of the garment to or from another, as in the conversion between trousers and shorts
      decoration

    A zipper costs a fraction of the total cost of the garment. However, if the zipper fails, the garment may be rendered unusable until the zipper is repaired or replaced.

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    History
    An early device superficially similar to the zipper, "an Automatic, Continuous Clothing Closure", was patented in the United States by Elias Howe in 1851; but it was probably never manufactured. Whitcomb L. Judson patented a "Clasp Locker", for fastening shoes and boots, in 1893, and attempted to market the invention through the Universal Fastener company. His designs used hooks and eyes. The true zipper, and the design used today, is based on interlocking teeth. It was invented in Meadville, Pennsylvania by Gideon Sundback, a Swedish-born immigrant to the United States working for the company that had taken over Judson's patents (later to become Talon, Inc.). He made his first "Hookless fastener" in 1913, and designed the complex machinery needed to manufacture it. 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.

    Recently invented is the Excoffier zipper, which possesses a new shape of zipper teeth.

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    Types
      Coil zippers form the bulk of the sales of zippers world-wide—the classic zipper. The slider runs on two coils on each side. The "teeth" on this zipper are coils. Two basic types of coils are used. One type uses coils in spiral form, usually with a cord running inside the coils. The other type uses coil 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.
      Metallic zippers are the type found 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.
      Plastic-moulded zippers are identical with metallic zippers, except that the teeth are plastic instead of metal. While metal zippers must be painted to match the surrounding fabric, plastic zippers can be made in any color of plastic.
      Open-ended zippers use a "box and pin" mechanism to lock the two side 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.

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    Bibliography
      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

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Zipper". link