
Melvin
Oh, yes. I'm a very occasional poster on hhplace so see you on your jaunts there. Keep it up, Jeff, and keep in touch here too. You have much to add. Oh, don't give up on the sheer hosiery - you rock the look, and you used to wear them a lot in the early days at work!JeffB1959 wrote:Thanks, guys! I didn't think anyone remembered me. I'm happy you did. I'll try to be more of a contributor here.
Well, thanks for the kind words. Oh, I haven't given up on sheer hosiery, even though I often go barelegged in spring and especially summer when it's usually too hot for pantyhose, but I might break it out for special occasions.Ray wrote:Oh, yes. I'm a very occasional poster on hhplace so see you on your jaunts there. Keep it up, Jeff, and keep in touch here too. You have much to add. Oh, don't give up on the sheer hosiery - you rock the look, and you used to wear them a lot in the early days at work!JeffB1959 wrote:Thanks, guys! I didn't think anyone remembered me. I'm happy you did. I'll try to be more of a contributor here.
Has anyone made such sturdy nylon hose recently?Mom wrote: That first nylon was like iron. It wouldn't run, it wouldn't snag. It lasted so long that the color faded out. We actually bought dye for nylons to put some color back in. Too soon, the manufacturers discovered they weren't making much money that way, so they made them much more fragile.
Although I can't (yet) attest to their durability...yet! https://sheerlygenius.com/ is doing something about it. Hopefully, I'll have an idea when my purchase from them through their indiegogo funding campaign comes through.Jim wrote:I found this in my mom's autobiography in the section of fashion from the early 1930s:Has anyone made such sturdy nylon hose recently?Mom wrote: That first nylon was like iron. It wouldn't run, it wouldn't snag. It lasted so long that the color faded out. We actually bought dye for nylons to put some color back in. Too soon, the manufacturers discovered they weren't making much money that way, so they made them much more fragile.
Wikipedia has a nice writeup on the substance which is a good starting point. It is used for many things other than filaments for making thread, it's also used for physical objects such as bolts, nuts, and washers. Being non-metallic, it's not subject to corrosion and is absolutely non-ferrous. It has surface-properties that make it useful also as a non-stick sliding surface and has good resistance to abrasion, especially if paired with itself as part of a sliding pair.weeladdie18 wrote:APerhaps Nylon is used as a trade name for stockings. ....
nylon is perhaps a thread as used in stockings and a material used in the engineering industry.