Tuesday, November 5, 2019
James Wright and the Invention of Silly Putty
James Wright and the Invention of Silly Putty The plastic putty known as Silly Puttyà ®Ã has been entertaining youngsters and providing them with innovative playtime since the 1940s. Its had an interesting history since then.à The Origins of Silly Puttyà ® James Wright, an engineer, discovered Silly Puttyà ®.à Just as with many awesome inventions, the discovery happened by accident.à Wright was working for the U.S. War Production Board at the time. He was charged with finding a substitute for synthetic rubber that wouldnââ¬â¢t cost the government an arm and a leg to produce. He mixed silicone oil with boric acid and found that the compound acted very much like rubber. It could rebound almost 25 percent higher than a normal rubber ball, and it was impervious to rot. Soft and malleable, it could stretch to many times its original length without tearing. Another of Silly Puttyââ¬â¢sà ® unique qualities was its ability to copy the image of any printed material it was pressed upon. Wright initiallyà called his discoveryà ââ¬Å"Nutty Putty.â⬠à The material was sold under the trade name Silly Puttyà ® in 1949 and it sold faster than any other toy in history, registering over $6 million in sales in the first year.à The Government Wasnââ¬â¢t Impressed Wrightââ¬â¢s amazing Silly Puttyà ® never found a home with the U.S. government as a substitute for synthetic rubber. The government said it wasnââ¬â¢t a superior product. Tell that to millions of kids pressing globs of the stuff onto comicà pages,à lifting images of their favorite action heroes. Marketing consultantà Peter Hodgson didnââ¬â¢t agree with the government, either. Hodgson bought the production rights to Wrights bouncing putty andà is credited with changing the name of Nutty Putty to Silly Puttyà ®, introducing it to theà public at Easter, selling it inside plastic eggs. Silly Puttyââ¬â¢sà ® Practical Uses Silly Puttyà ® wasnââ¬â¢t initially marketed as a toy. In fact, it pretty much bombed at the 1950 International Toy Fair. Hodgson first intendedà Silly Puttyà ® for an adult audience, billing it for its practical purposes.à But despiteà its ignoble beginnings, Neiman-Marcus and Doubleday decided to go ahead and sell Silly Puttyà ® as a toy and it began to take off. When theà New Yorkerà mentioned the stuff, sales bloomed ââ¬â more than a quarter million orders were received within three days. Hodgson then reached his adult audience almost by accident. Parents soon discovered that not only could Silly Puttyà ® lift perfect images off comic pages, but it was pretty handy for pulling lint off ofà fabric as well. It went to space with the Apollo 8 crew in 1968, where it proved effective at keeping objects in place in zero gravity. Binney Smith, Inc., creator of Crayola,à purchased Silly Puttyà ® after Hodgsonââ¬â¢s death. The company claims that more than 300 million Silly Puttyà ® eggs have sold since 1950. The Composition of Silly Putty Although you probably donââ¬â¢t want to go to the trouble of whipping up a batch at home when you can simply buy some, the basic ingredients ofà Silly Puttyà ®Ã include: Dimethyl Siloxane: 65 percentSilica: 17 percentThixotrol ST: 9 percentPolydimethylsiloxane: 4 percentDecamethylcyclopentasiloxane: 1 percentà Glycerine: 1 percentTitanium Dioxide: 1 percent Itââ¬â¢s a safe guess that Binney Smith arenââ¬â¢t divulging all their proprietary secrets, including the introduction of a wide array ofà Silly Puttyà ®Ã colors, some that even glow in the dark.
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