The Zipper: Thirteen Years in the Dark

The zipper took thirteen years to fail its way into ordinary life. From Whitcomb Judson's awkward 1893 clasp locker at the Chicago World's Fair to Gideon Sundback's elegant 1913 redesign, the story is one of stubborn engineers, baffled consumers, and — finally — the US Navy.

The Zipper: Thirteen Years in the Dark
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Every morning you reach for it without thinking. A jacket zip, a bag closure, a pair of jeans. One motion, done. The zipper has become so ordinary it's practically furniture.
It took fifty years to get there. Whitcomb Judson debuted the first version — a lurching, jam-prone thing called the clasp locker — at the 1893 Chicago World's Fair. Twenty-seven million people walked past it. Almost none of them bought one. Judson died in 1909 without seeing a single commercially successful application. His partner, Colonel Lewis Walker, kept the company alive on stubbornness and not much else.
The real breakthrough came from Gideon Sundback, a methodical Swedish-American engineer who remade the mechanism from first principles. His 1913 Hookless Fastener replaced Judson's clunky hooks and eyes with fine, interlocking spoon-shaped teeth — ten per inch instead of five, self-aligning under slider pressure. It worked perfectly. The garment industry still wasn't interested. For two more decades, the zipper's primary customers were galoshes manufacturers and tobacco-pouch makers. B.F. Goodrich branded their rubber boots „Zippers" in 1923; the name stuck, which is how a rubber boot became the namesake of an entire category of hardware.
What finally cracked the market open was the US Navy's WWII procurement — millions of flight-suit and cold-weather-gear closures that had to work one-handed, in salt spray, wearing gloves. The veterans who came home in 1945 just... knew how zippers worked. That quiet bodily familiarity, multiplied by a million returning sailors, is what buttons couldn't survive.
This episode traces every stumble of that fifty-year arc — the failed postal-bag trial, Sundback's grief-driven sketchbooks, the decades of niche-market survival, and the institutional moment that finally made the zipper invisible.

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