People used to pin pages together. But the needle will damage the paper, and it will also stab the user's fingers. A Norwegian inventor named John E. Walker thought he could solve this problem.
190 1 year, he filed a patent application for steel wire paper clips (Waller applied for a patent in Germany because there was no patent application system in Norway). Almost at the same time, several inventors also proposed similar designs.
However, all these early paper clips have some problems. When the clip is pushed, the protruding end of the metal wire will pierce the paper, which may even damage the paper more easily than the needle. It is also difficult to make a machine for making clips. Obviously, the labor cost of producing paper clips by hand will make the product price too high.
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Manufacturing history
William Middlebrook, an engineer in Fort Worth, Connecticut, solved the problem of machine building. He invented a machine for bending wire paper clips in 1899. Middlebrook may also provide solutions to other problems. Because the paper clip made by his machine has double loops, which is very similar to the paper clip we use. These paper clips are famous "Gem" brand paper clips.
They usually don't damage paper. Paper clips are made of plastic coated with different colors. This not only makes paper clips more attractive, but also allows users to "code" pages with paper clips of different colors. It seems that no one mentioned the patent of "Gemstone" brand paper clip, so it is impossible to determine who is its inventor. But since it was adopted at the beginning of this century, it has become a standard design.
Baidu encyclopedia-paper clip