Is George de Mestral alive?

Is George de Mestral alive?

Deceased (1907–1990)
George de Mestral/Living or Deceased

How did they invent Velcro?

The VELCRO® brand of hook and loop was invented by a man named George de Mestral in the 1940’s while hunting in the Jura mountains in Switzerland. Mr. de Mestral, a Swiss engineer, realized that the tiny hooks of the cockle-burs were stuck on his pants and in his dog’s fur and wondered how they attached themselves.

How did George de Mestral invent VELCRO?

During a walk in the woods in 1948, Swiss engineer and outdoorsman de Mestral caught hundreds of burrs in his clothes and his dog’s fur. The common burr was a natural “hook and loop fastener.” De Mestral realized he could create a fabric fastener that acted like the burrs, and so the idea of Velcro® was born.

Who was George de Mestral and what did he invent?

George de Mestral. George de Mestral (June 19, 1907 – February 8, 1990) was a Swiss electrical engineer who invented the hook and loop fastener which he named Velcro.

How many times did George de Mestral get married?

Although the original patent expired in 1978, Velcro is still a trademarked term controlled by the Dutch Velcro company. George de Mestral married three times over the course of his life. He died in Commugny, Switzerland, on February 8, 1990. A street in Commugny was named in his honor after his death.

What did George de Mestral see in the burrs?

De Mestral observed the burrs under a microscope. He saw that each one was covered with hooks that looked like a monster’s mouthful of spiked fangs. These hooks grabbed onto anything that had a loop–clothing fiber, animal fur, or human hair.

Where did George de Mestral live in Switzerland?

On his father’s death in 1966, de Mestral inherited the family home in Saint Saphorin sur MOrges, château Saint-Saphorin-sur-Morges (Mestral Castle). De Mestral died in Commugny, Switzerland, where he is buried.