Drawing pin

A drawing pin (British English) or thumb tack (North American English) is a short nail or pin used to fasten items to a wall or board for display and intended to be inserted by hand, usually using the thumb. A variety of names are used to refer to different designs intended for various purposes.

Push-pin or map pin

Drawing pin

Thumb tacks made of brass, tin or iron may be referred to as brass tacks, brass pins, tin tacks or iron tacks, respectively.[1] These terms are particularly used in the idiomatic expression to come (or get) down to brass (or otherwise) tacks, meaning to consider basic facts of a situation.[2]

History

The drawing pin was invented in name and as a mass-produced item in what is now the United States in the mid/late 1750s. It was first mentioned in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1759. It was said that the use of the newly invented drawing pin to attach notices to school house doors was making significant contribution to the whittling away of their gothic doors. Modern drawing pins were also found as standard in architects’ drawing boxes in the late 18th century.[3]

Edwin Moore patented the "push-pin" in the US in 1900 and founded the Moore Push-Pin Company. Moore described them as a pin with a handle. Later, in 1903, in Lychen, German clockmaker Johann Kirsten invented flat-headed pins for use with drawings.[4][5]

Design

Design with pin formed from a cutout from the head

A drawing pin has two basic components: the head, often made of plastic, metal or wood, and the body, usually made of steel or brass. The head is wide to distribute the force of pushing the pin in, allowing only the hands to be used. Many head designs exist: flat, domed, spherical, cylindrical and a variety of novelty heads such as hearts or stars. Drawing pin heads also come in a variety of colours. These can be particularly useful to mark different locations on a map. Some drawing pin designs have a portion cut out of the head and bent downward to produce a pin.

FEMA Logistics specialists use a map of Tennessee and coloured pins to create a visual reference of the location and status of Disaster Recovery Centers

Domed or gripped heads are sometimes preferred over flat heads as dropped flat-headed pins will point upward, posing a hazard.[6] Drawing pins also pose a hazard of ingestion and choking, where they may do serious harm.[7]

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References

  1. "tack, n. 1.a." Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.
  2. "brass, n. P2". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.
  3. "Parish and Belonging: Community, Identity and Welfare in England and Wales – 1700-1950", K.D.M Snell, Professor of Rural and Cultural History at Leicester University; Cambridge Press, 2006.
  4. Rubino, Anthony (2011). Essential Shit: Bollocks! Why Didn't I think of That?. David & Charles. p. 56. ISBN 9781446354834.
  5. Katrin Bischoff, Jürgen Schwenkenbecher. Die Reißzwecke von Lychen In: Berliner Zeitung, 11. November 2003; Retrieved on 4 October 2013.
  6. Teelucksingh, S; V Naraynsingh (July 1997). "Injury to Diabetic Feet by Thumb Tacks". The Lancet. 350 (9070): 74. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(05)66286-1. PMID 9217749.
  7. Robert, Rea (August 1949). "Perforation of the Esophagus by a Thumb Tack and Subsequent removal by an electromagnet". Journal of the American Medical Society: OtolaryngologyHead and Neck Surgery. 50 (2).
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