The authorship of the zip has an equally complex story. Gideon Sundback, a Swedish-American inventor, filed a patent for the Hookless Fastener No. 2 with the US Patent Office in 1914. His work was a refinement of an idea for a fastener based on interlocking teeth that had been circulating among engineers for decades. Whitcomb Judson patented a design for a metal-clasp fastener in 1893, but it was difficult to make, and didn’t work very well. Before Sundback, no one had managed to get the zip quite right. The hooks were either too weak to hold two surfaces together, or they wore out too soon to be useful.
Sundback designed a needle-like projection on the top of each nib, and put a dent in the corresponding position on the underside of the tooth, which held them all firmly in place. Even if one of the row of teeth came apart, the rest were still locked in. It was different enough from Judson’s design for Sundback to get a patent.
The first customer for the new product, manufactured by the Hookless Fastener Company, was B. F. Goodrich, which started manufacturing rubber overshoes with a zip fastener in 1923. The zip turned putting the overshoes on and taking them off into a quick, single movement. Goodrich called it the Zip-er-Up, eventually contracting it to the Zipper, which in turn became the name of the fastener. And the Hookless Fastener Company renamed itself Talon at the same time.
In its first decade Hookless depended on Goodrich for most of its business. The zip was a relatively humble artefact, confined to footwear in its initial use. But by the 1930s, the zip had become an essential sign of modernity and it started to find customers everywhere. The zip was adopted by anyone in too much of a hurry to put up with the archaic customs of buttons. The distinctions of class and gender that buttons inevitably smuggle into almost any garment dependent on whether they are to the left or the right, precious metal, simple bone or cloth-covered, were made redundant by the zip. The workmanlike, no-nonsense, unfussy zip became the sign of the organized proletariat or those who wanted to be identified with it. Military uniforms started to adopt zips. The parka and the flying suit depended on them, as did the leather biker’s jacket. The zip could be positioned diagonally like a lightening flash across the chest, as it appeared on Dan Dare’s spacesuit, and added as a decorative flourish in entirely unnecessary places, such as the cuff in a belt-and-braces duplication.