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  1. Facts on Velcro

    • History Upon returning from a walk in the woods one day in 1948, Mestral discovered burrs clinging to his dog's fur. ...
    sciencing.com/velcro-6470547.html

    Velcro, or hook-and-loop fastener, is the trademark name for a nylon pile fabric that fastens to itself; tiny loops on strip of wooly fabric snag onto tiny hooks of an opposing strip of same material; often used in place of zippers, buttons, shoelaces, snaps, and other fasteners, especially on children’s clothing, athletic footwear, and in medical support devices; invented in 1948 by Swiss engineer George deMaestral, who—after...

    kids.britannica.com/students/article/Velcro/313999
    After more than eight years of research and work, he created what is known now today as Velcro, a combination of the words “velvet” and “crochet.” Made up of two strips of fabric, one covered in thousands of tiny hooks and the other with thousands of tiny loops, the materials gripped together firmly while still allowing easy release.
    www.livescience.com/34572-velcro.html
    Velcro IP Holdings LLC, doing business as Velcro Companies and commonly referred to as Velcro, is a British privately held company, founded by Swiss electrical engineer George de Mestral in the 1950s. It is the original manufacturer of hook-and-loop fasteners, which de Mestral invented.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velcro
    The product commonly thought of as "velcro" is actually called "hook and loop". Hook and loop was first created by a Swiss Electrical Engineer named George de Mestral in 1941 and the brand name VELCRO® actually comes from the mash-up of two words: "velour" and "crochet" (loop and hook).
    www.hookandloop.com/blog/unknown-facts-velcro …
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