The Burr That Became Velcro

In 1941, a Swiss engineer came home from a hike covered in cocklebur seeds and held one under a microscope. What he saw launched a twelve-year patent journey — through failed materials, skeptical weavers, and heat-treated nylon — before NASA turned a commercial misfit into a household name.

The Burr That Became Velcro
0:008:27
In 1941, a Swiss engineer named Georges de Mestral came home from a hike through the Jura mountains covered in cocklebur seeds — and instead of pulling them off and moving on, he held one under a microscope. What he found there was the beginning of one of the twentieth century's most quietly consequential inventions: a fastener made not from metal or thread, but from the geometry of a plant.
This episode follows de Mestral from that afternoon in the Alps through twelve years of failed materials, skeptical Lyon weavers, and an ultimately breakthrough with heat-treated nylon — to the patent filings of the early 1950s and the unexpected customer that changed everything: NASA. By the time Apollo astronauts were using hook-and-loop fastener to keep gear pinned to the walls of a zero-gravity command module, the fashion industry's polite indifference had become a footnote. From ski jackets to children's sneakers to operating rooms, Velcro found its footholds in the places that needed function over form — and then quietly took over everything else. The episode closes on a detail that captures something true about how invention actually works: de Mestral's patent expired in 1978, almost precisely the moment the market finally reached the scale he'd spent three decades chasing.

このコンテンツについて、さらに観点や背景を補足しましょう。

  • ログインするとコメントできます。