2017年4月27日星期四

Zipper in My Life

A typical morning for me goes something like this: I get up, shower, shave, and get dressed for work. I button my shirt, zipper my pants, tighten my belt, and tie my shoelaces. I then go to the kitchen to make my lunch. I put a sandwich and snacks in zipper bags, throw them in my canvas lunch bag, and close the zipper.
Before I head out the door, I put on a light jacket and zip it up. When I get to work, I go through security where I unzip my lunch bag, show the guard the contents, and then zipper it back up.
Some days, I get calls asking me to test a piece of equipment. I throw my tools in a backpack and close the zipper. When I get to the work location, I unzip the backpack to get to my tools.
Do you see a recurring theme? Devices such as buttons, belts, laces, and zippers are actually tools that are known as fasteners. They are very useful, and you probably use them more than you think!

If you want to know more about metal zipper and zipper puller, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com

Determining Your Zipper Size


For UZIP shiny sliver zipper you can determine the zipper size by looking on the "back" of the zipper slider.

Use
#1, #2, #3 and #4 zippers for children’s wear, pockets, light jackets and ultralight backpacking gear
#5 zippers for jackets, coats, lighter tents and standard backpacking gear, and light bags
#8 zippers for heavy jackets and coats, cases and medium bags, and heavier tents
#10 zippers for heavy bags and cases

If you want to know more about gold metal zipper and zipper puller, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com

How to Use the Zipper

Highly polished metal zipper fit into a class of mechanical devices called fasteners. A fastener is used to connect two or more things together; that is, to fasten them to one another. If you think about using a zipper, you usually think about an article of clothing such as pants or a coat, and rightly so. The heavy duty zippers fastens two pieces of cloth together. It also provides a simple way to unfasten the same two pieces. That is the beauty of the zipper. It is fast, efficient and can be used over and over again to repeatedly open and close things.

If you want to know more about metal zipper and zipper puller, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com

2017年4月24日星期一

Zipper Raw Materials

The basic elements of a zipper are: the stringer (the tape and teeth assembly that makes up one side of a zipper); the slider (opens and closes the zipper); a tab (pulled to move the slider); and stops (prevent the slider from leaving the chain). A separating zipper, instead of a bottom stop that connects the stringers, has two devices—a box and a pin—that function as stops when put together.

Metal zipper hardware can be made of stainless steel, aluminum, brass, zinc, or a nickel-silver alloy. Sometimes a steel zipper will be coated with brass or zinc, or it might be painted to match the color of the cloth tape or garment. Zippers with plastic hardware are made from polyester or nylon, while the slider and pull tab are usually made from steel or zinc. The cloth tapes are either made from cotton, polyester, or a blend of both. For zippers that open on both ends, the ends are not usually sewn into a garment, so that they are hidden as they are when a zipper is made to open at only one end. These zippers are strengthened using a strong cotton tape (that has been reinforced with nylon) applied to the ends to prevent fraying.

If you want to know more about metal zipper and zipper puller, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com

Zipper Source

Metal zipper two way have come a long way since the early bone or horn pins and bone splinters. Many devices were designed later that were more efficient; such fasteners included buckles, laces, safety pins, and buttons. Buttons with buttonholes, while still an important practical method of closure even today, had their difficulties. The shiny sliver zipper was first conceived to replace the irritating nineteenth century practice of having to button up to forty tiny buttons on each shoe of the time.

In 1851, Elias Howe, the inventor of the sewing machine, developed what he called an automatic continuous clothing closure. It consisted of a series of clasps united by a connecting cord running or sliding upon ribs. Despite the potential of this ingenious breakthrough, the invention was never marketed.

Another inventor, Whitcomb L. Judson, came up with the idea of a slide fastener, which he patented in 1893. Judson's mechanism was an arrangement of hooks and eyes with a slide clasp that would connect them. After Judson displayed the new clasp lockers at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, he obtained financial backing from Lewis Walker, and together they founded the Universal Fastener Company in 1894.

The first zippers were not much of an improvement over simpler buttons, and innovations came slowly over the next decade. Judson invented a zipper that would part completely (like the zippers found on today's jackets), and he discovered it was better to clamp the teeth directly onto a cloth tape that could be sewn into a garment, rather than have the teeth themselves sewn into the garment.

Heavy duty zippers were still subject to popping open and sticking as late as 1906, when Otto Frederick Gideon Sundback joined Judson's company, then called the Automatic Hook and Eye Company. His patent for Plako in 1913 is considered to be the beginning of the modern zipper. His "Hookless Number One," a device in which jaws clamped down on beads, was quickly replaced by "Hookless Number Two", which was very similar to modern zippers. Nested, cup-shaped teeth formed the best zipper to date, and a machine that could stamp out the metal in one process made marketing the new fastener feasible.

The first zippers were introduced for use in World War I as fasteners for soldiers' money belts, flying suits, and life-vests. Because of war shortages, Sundback developed a new machine that used only about 40 percent of the metal required by older machines.

Zippers for the general public were not produced until the 1920s, when B. F. Goodrich requested some for use in its company galoshes. It was Goodrich's president, Bertram G. Work, who came up with the word zipper, but he wanted it to refer to the boots themselves, and not the device that fastened them, which he felt was more properly called a slide fastener.

The next change zippers underwent was also precipitated by a war—World War II. Zipper factories in Germany had been destroyed, and metal was scarce. A West German company, Opti-Werk GmbH, began research into new plastics, and this research resulted in numerous patents. J. R. Ruhrman and his associates were granted a German patent for developing a plastic ladder chain. Alden W. Hanson, in 1940, devised a method.

A stringer consists of the tape (or cloth) and teeth that make up one side of the zipper. One method of making the stringer entails passing a flattened strip of wire between a heading punch and a pocket punch to form scoops. A blanking punch cuts around the scoops to form a Y shape. The legs of the Y are then clamped around the cloth tape that allowed a plastic coil to be sewn into the zipper's cloth. This was followed by a notched plastic wire, developed independently by A. Gerbach and the firm William Prym-Wencie, that could actually be woven into the cloth.

After a slow start, it was not long before zipper sales soared. In 1917, 24,000 zippers were sold; in 1934, the number had risen to 60 million. Today zippers are easily produced and sold in the billions, for everything from blue jeans to sleeping bags.


If you want to know more about metal zipper and zipper puller, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com

What are the Different Types of Zippers?

Metal zipper is used to create permanent and semi-permanent bonds between materials, as well as joints that can be opened and closed, and purely decorative additions. Zippers are an important and widely used type of fastener that were developed by Gideon Sundback in 1913 from an earlier invention for a fastener that used hooks and eyes. The invention was first referred to by the name zipper in 1923 by the B.F. Goodrich Company, who initially used them on rain boots. Gold zipper came into use for children's clothing and trouser flies, replacing buttons, in the 1930's. Today, zippers are used in clothing, outerwear, luggage, backpacks, automobiles, tents, and sleeping bags.

Zippers use two sets of interlocking teeth called chain zippers, or coils called coil zippers, each connected to a strip of fabric tape. The teeth or coils are formed of metal, plastic, or synthetic material. A zipper puller with a tab, which may be purely functional or serve a decorative function as well, is used to open and close the zipper. Besides the details of the mechanism, there are several otherways of categorizing zippers.

Conventional zippers, whether chain or coil, are those in which the zipper apparatus shows. Such zippers have the two strips of fabric connected at one end and stops at either end to prevent the slider from running off the zipper. The bottom stop keeps a little bit of the zipper always zipped, and when the slider is pulled, the rest of the zipper follows along, gliding into place. When using a conventional zipper, a flap may be used to cover the mechanism, as is commonly found in jeans.

Invisible zippers, like conventional zippers, have the two strips of fabric connected at one end, but the zipper tape itself covers the zipper mechanism. They, too, have top and bottom stops, visible only on the reverse side.

Separating zippers are designed with a unique type of bottom stop so that the fabric tapes come apart, allowing, for example, the two sides of the front of a winter jacket to be separated for ease of use. The user inserts the bottom stop at the bottom of one fabric tape into the slider, which is on the other tape, thereby joining the two sides of the base together. The user then pulls the slider up to close the zipper. Most zippers have a differentiated front and back, but two-sided zippers were developed for items that are reversible, and are designed to be equally workable from either side.

Zippers often come with a sewing guideline marked in the fabric, and sewing and craft directions characteristically give clear instructions about any parameters to consider in choosing an appropriate zipper for the project. Zippers come with a wide variety of tape colors and in various lengths and thicknesses so that they may be appropriately matched to the need. There are also special heavy-duty zippers for the most demanding use.
If you want to know more about metal zipper types, please contact with UZIP ZIPPER.

Jessica Kung
Skype: tdysho
Wechat: jessicakung1017
Whats: 8613631458295

Email: uzipga@hotmail.com