The Simplest Thing
By Henry Petroski
The story of the humble toothpick provides a paradigm for nearly every manufactured thing
The story of the humble toothpick provides a paradigm for nearly every manufactured thing
DOI: 10.1511/2007.68.482
Many of the most common things that we encounter in everyday life are also among the most elegant solutions in fitting form to function. Thus the familiar paper clip has long been widely admired by architects and designers for being a graceful loop-within-a-loop spring that silently does its job. The sewing needle, with its sharp, elongated point balanced by its soft oval eye, is a classic example of yin and yang united in a manufactured product. But such things, being made of steel, are many times removed from the mineral ore from which they begin. These are not things easily made from scratch by a single person. Small things made of wood are more organic, closer to nature and formable by an individual with little more than a sharp knife and a patient hand.
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