homehome Home chatchat Notifications


After two thousand years, somebody finally revamped scissors

One amateur inventor turned upside down the design of scissors which had been unchanged for two thousand years.

Tibi Puiu
June 30, 2016 @ 2:09 pm

share Share

Scissors shear

Credit: YouTube

The design of scissors has been essentially the same since these were invented in the 3rd century B.C. in Egypt. Two handles for your thumb and index finger lock two blades together that cut material in the direction facing your two fingers. For more than two thousand years this has been the norm, with some minor upgrades and downgrades like better blades or fragile plastic handles, respectively. Frustrated by the lack of versatility, an amateur inventor took matters into his own hands.

When creativity meets simplicity

His revamped pair of scissors, called the Right Shears, uses handles at a 90 degrees angle from the cutting direction.  Shane Vermette, the man who invented the new scissors, says the improvement in ergonomics is incredible. The grip is better and cutting is a lot more comfortable.

When asked by the Daily Dot to explain the motivation behind the new design, Vermette said he was first and foremost trying to solve a problem he was dealing with.

“Honestly I was just trying to solve a problem I was facing with a tool that I wanted to use.” In an effort to cut metal mesh to create a vent cover, it took Vermette and his father-in-law to cut through the material. “It did seem ridiculous,” he said, “and it was one of those moments where once the solution occurred to me I was like, ‘I have to build this.'”

Since he posted videos online of his contraptions, Vermette says many people have expressed interest in owning one. For now, Vermette is in talks with a manufacturer to bring his Righ Shears to the market, though no information about pricing has been given yet. Vermette says these should cost more than a pair of high-grade scissors currently on the market.

The first model will also be for right-handers only, even though Vermette is left-handed himself. “Since we are greatly outnumbered, I need to cater to all the righties out there for now,” he explained.

Look for a crowdfunding campaign by Vermette which is scheduled to launch soon, and you could be among the first to buy a pair.

share Share

A Popular Artificial Sweetener Could Be Making Cancer Treatments Less Effective

Sucralose may weaken immunotherapy by altering gut microbes and starving immune cells

AI Designs Computer Chips We Can't Understand — But They Work Really Well

Can we trust systems we don’t fully understand?

Strength Training Unlocks Anti-Aging Molecules in Your Muscles

Here’s how resistance training can trigger your body’s built-in anti-aging switch.

"Self-termination is most likely." This expert believes our civilization is on a crash course led by narcissistic leaders

Our civilization may be facing a “single gargantuan crash,” but collapse isn’t destiny. It’s a choice.

New DNA Evidence Reveals What Actually Killed Napoleon’s Grand Army in 1812

Napoleon's army was the largest Europe had ever seen, but in just a few months it was obliterated.

Breathing This Common Air Pollution May Raise Your Dementia Risk by 17 Percent

Long-term exposure to common air pollutants like soot and traffic fumes may significantly raise your risk of dementia.

This mRNA HIV Vaccine Produces the Virus-Fighting Antibodies That Have Eluded Researchers for 40 Years

New mRNA-based HIV vaccines spark hope with potent immune responses in first human trial

Aging Might Travel Through Your Blood and This Protein Is Behind It

Researchers identify a molecular “messenger” that spreads cellular aging between organs.

Older Adults Keep Their Brains up to Two Years 'Younger' Thanks to This Cognitive Health Program

Structured programs showed greater cognitive gains, but even modest lifestyle changes helped.

Ancient Human Ancestors Showed Extreme Size Differences Between Males and Females

Early human ancestors may have lived in societies more combative than anything today.