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A fastener, usually on a clothesline, used to hang clothes to dry. There are usually many different designs for clothes clips.
Don't hang clothes on hooks with a piece of wooden clothes invented by the shaker community in the 1700s. In the 1700s, laundries were hung on bushes, limbs or dry clothes, but there were no clothes clips in any paintings or prints of that era. Hanging wet clothes only occurred in the early 19th century when J é R é mievictor opdebec applied for a patent. This design does not use a spring, but is integrally formed, and the distance between the two pin parts of the pin chassis is very small - the form of the pin is that the two pins are wedged together and thus squeezed to produce the grip. The pin needs to return to its original static state. Nails in this form are usually made of plastic or original wood. In England, the making of clothes clips used to be a process related to the Romani people. The people known as the "Gypsies" were the romos. They made clothes clips out of small, separated willow leaves or ash wood.
Today, by making two interlocking plastic or wooden pins, many clothes hangers (also known as clothes clips) can be made very cheaply, usually with a small spring between the two pins. This design was invented in 1853 by David M. Smith of Springfield, Vermont. By means of leverage, when two pins are pinched at the top of the nail, the pins are opened, and when released, the spring will pull the two pins. Close to create the action required for the grip. Smith is also known as an excellent violinist. This is one of his hobbies. In the past, every time he played the violin, he would think clearly and think about every day's problems. That's the idea that he invented the clip.
Smith's design was improved by Solon E. Moore in 1887. He added what he called a "coil fulcrum" made of a single wire rod, which is a spring that holds pieces of wood together, acts as a spring that forces them to close, and serves as a fulcrum that can swing two halves, thus eliminating the need for separate components and reducing manufacturing costs. It became the first successful spring driven clothes dryer, manufactured and sold in large quantities throughout the United States. Vermont and its Montpellier Capitol in particular quickly became what the New York Times called "Silicon Valley for clothes dryer manufacturing". The American clothes dryer company was founded in 1887 and began to produce Moore's improved design. Vermont Stephen Thomas, the Civil War Medal of Honor winner, served as president of the company, which has achieved considerable success despite the rapid rise of competitors in Waterbury and elsewhere. The most important was in 1909, when it was one of the United States, Allan Moore. Co. employees designed a way to make clothes clips cheaper by eliminating a coil in the "spring pivot.". He left the company and opened a competitive factory with loans from local entrepreneurs, literally across the street from the United States. Company building. The new national clothespin company is rapidly outpacing the 500, 000 foot wood used by American companies during peak production. After the first World War, despite Vermont's repeated calls for protective tariffs, cheap imports from Europe began to flood the market, while state-owned industries fell into recession. In 1920, it cost 58 cents to make a hairpin in Vermont and 48 cents to import a Swedish hairpin. The situation deteriorated further after the Second World War, and the introduction of electric dryers reduced the demand for clothes jackets, further harming the industry. U. S.c. before the late 1940s, Co. Forced to close. However, the national clotherspin company was previously moved from its original location across the road, then sold to a new owner, and entered into a contract with the F.W. Woolworths department store chain to continue its business. In spite of the disastrous fire in 1978, they continued in this way for the next few decades. The increase in the number of cheap Chinese imports has further eroded profit margins. Familiar requests for protection tariffs continue, but they have no results. The company has discontinued its line of wooden clothes dryers and diversified into plastic products, including plastic clothes dryers, which account for only a small part of the total production. However, due to the concern and regret of some media, the national clothes dryer company of the United States finally stopped the production of clothes dryer, which is the last clothes dryer made in the United States in 2009.
The invention of the stainless steel clothes clip further enhances the clothes clip, which will not rust or rot when used outdoors. Instead of using torsion springs that often twist and cause clothing clips to fall, they rely on solid, restrained compression springs to increase grip.