A trademark used for a fastening tape consisting of a strip of nylon with a 
surface of minute hooks that fasten to a corresponding strip with a surface
of uncut pile. This trademark sometimes occurs in print in lowercase.

The loops on a piece of velcro

Velcro is a brand name of fabric hook-and-loop fasteners used for connecting 
objects. The term VELCRO is a registered
trademark
in most countries. Generic terminology for these fasteners includes "hook 
and loop", "burr" and "touch" fasteners. The VELCRO brand headquarters is in
Manchester, New Hampshire,
USA.

History
Tiny hooks on a Burdock (Arctium Lappa) (detail)
Enlarge
Tiny hooks on a
Burdock
(Arctium Lappa) (detail)

The hook and loop fastener was invented in 1941 by
Georges de Mestral,
a
Swiss
engineer.
The idea came to him after he took a close look at the
Burdock
seeds which kept sticking to his clothes and his dog's fur on their daily 
walk in the Alps, during the summer. He examined their condition and saw the 
possibility
of binding two materials reversibly in a simple fashion. He developed the 
hook and loop fastener and submitted his idea for patent in 1951. De Mestral
named his invention "VELCRO" after the French words velours, meaning 
'velvet', and crochet, or 'hook'. The uses and applications of the product 
are numerous.
Today, the VELCRO mark is the subject of more than 300 trademark 
registrations in over 160 countries.

Composition

Hook and
loop
fasteners consist of two layers: a "hook" side, which is a piece of fabric 
covered with tiny
plastic
hooks, and a "loop" side, which is covered with even smaller and "hairier" 
plastic loops. There are many variations to this which include hooks on both
sides, for example. When the two sides are pressed together, the hooks catch 
in the loops and hold the pieces together. When the layers are separated,
the strips make a characteristic ripping sound. This creates some 
disadvantages to the use of velcro in various occasions.
Velcro: hooks (left) and loops (right).
Enlarge
Velcro: hooks (left) and loops (right).

Use

The strength of the hook and loop bond depends on how well the hooks are 
embedded in the loops and the nature of the force pulling it apart. If hooks 
and
loops are used to bond two rigid surfaces, e.g. auto body panels and frame, 
the bond is particularly strong because any force pulling the pieces apart
is spread evenly across all hooks. Also, any force pushing the pieces 
together is evenly applied over the entire surface, engaging more hooks and 
loops.
Vibration can also cause rigid pieces to improve their bond.

When one or both of the pieces is flexible, e.g. a pocket flap, the pieces 
can be pulled apart with a peeling action which applies the force to 
relatively
few hooks at a time. If a flexible piece is pulled parallel to the plane of 
the fastener surface the force is spread evenly as with very rigid pieces.

Two ways to maximize the strength of a bond with one or more flexible pieces 
are:
. increase the area of the bond, e.g. long purse straps.
. ensure that the force is applied parallel to the plane of the fastener 
surface, e.g. bending around a corner or
pulley.
For example, shoe closures can resist a large force with little bonding area 
by wrapping a strap through a slot which reduces the force on the fastener
by ensuring the force is parallel to the plane of the fastener and by 
halving the force on the bond by acting as a pulley system.

Applications
A shoe using velcro to fasten
Enlarge
A shoe using velcro to fasten

Because it is easy to use, maintenance free, and totally safe, the 
hook-and-loop fasteners have been used for just about every conceivable 
application where
a temporary bond is required. It is especially popular in clothing where it 
replaces buttons or zippers, and as a
shoe
fastener for children who have not yet learned to tie shoelaces and for 
those who choose hook-and-loop over laces.

A stronger version of the hook-and-loop material has even made it possible 
to create semi-permanent bonds (where it is extremely hard to separate the 
hooks
from the loops), useful for higher stress applications (see section above).

The strength of a hook and loop bond depends on how much surface area is in 
contact with the hooks: full-body hook and loop suits have been made that 
can
hold a person to a suitably-covered wall.

Hook and loop fasteners made from stainless steel are used in the automotive 
industry to attach parts such as bumpers. Rather than loosening the 
fasteners
(as would happen with a bolt), the vibration of the automobile actually 
maintains the bond (since any hooks that come loose are more likely to 
re-attach
due to random motion).

Advantages and disadvantages

Advantages:
. Easy to use
. Relatively maintenance free
. Safe
. Convenient

Disadvantages:
. They tend to accumulate hair, dust, lint, and fur in the hooks after a few 
months of regular use.
. The hooks and/or loops can become elongated or broken, reducing the bond 
after a long time.
. It often becomes attached to articles of clothing, especially 
loosely-woven items like sweaters or socks. Additionally, certain materials 
may be damaged
when one attempts to remove the fastener, even if they are separated slowly.
. The tearing noise made by unfastening a hook and loop fastener makes it 
inappropriate for some applications.

Velcro in popular culture
List of 1 items
. Privates in the U.S. Army are now known as "Velcros." On the new
Army Combat Uniform,
the rank emblems are affixed to the uniform by velcro. However, privates in 
the PV1 rank have no rank emblem so they only have a square of naked velcro
visible that is waiting for the PV2 rank badge once they get their first 
promotion.
. In 1978 while out in California,
Alan Gelfand,
inventor of the
Ollie,
a hands-free aerial trick used in
skateboarding,
and later in
surfing
and
snowboarding,
is accused by several skaterboarders of using Velcro to hold the board to 
his feet.
List of 1 items
. In the 1997 film
Men in Black,
Velcro is hinted to be alien technology confiscated by the MIB and adapted 
for use on Earth. This is a play on how
NASA
is popularly credited with the invention of hook-and-loop fasteners.
List of 1 items
. In the 1997 film
The Full Monty,
the four male participants in a strip show decide to cut their trousers and 
reattach it with Velcro, so as to tear their clothes off quickly, gracefully
and in unison.
List of 1 items
. In the season 2 episode of
Star Trek: Enterprise "
Carbon Creek",
T'Pol'
s great-grandmother
T'Mir
and her crewmates crash land on Earth in 1957. To accumulate money for a 
college fund for a young-man the Vulcans befriended, she takes a
Vulcan
pouch, with a hook-and-loop flap, to a speculator who buys her invention. 
She claims it is an "idea that will change the world". According to T'Pol's 
story,
Velcro is of Vulcan origin. However, T'Pol never claims her story to be 
true, and it is implied at the episode's end that it is just a "story". 
Eventually
T'Pol retrieves the purse that was seen earlier in the show, proving that 
the story has ties in truth. The invention is credited to another of the 
Vulcan
crew, Mestral, named after the real inventor of hook-and-loop fasteners.
List of 1 items
. David Letterman, host of CBS's Late Show with
David Letterman,
refers to Velcro as "the miracle fabric of the '80s". His show also 
popularized the Velcro suit, where one dons a suit covered with hook strips 
and jumps
from a trampoline onto a wall covered with loop strips or with fuzzy fabric 
that acts as loops.
List of 1 items
. In an episode of the fictional UK football drama
Dream Team,
the player Casper Rose claims that his grandfather created VELCRO and became 
a billionaire and passed the fortune onto him.
List of 1 items
. In an episode of
Seinfeld,
Jerry's father, a retired clothing designer and salesman, becomes startled 
by the tearing sound of Velcro and reveals his disdain for the product and 
his
past vow to never use it.
List of 1 items
. The band
ZZ Top
wrote and performed a song called "Velcro Fly".

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