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This is a duct tape band aid for the most hardcore people out there. No longer will people think you are a baby. I mean honestly, nothing says hardcore more than having duct tape wrapped around a ...
Earle Dickson invented the Band-Aid in 1921. A cotton buyer for Johnson & Johnson, he was inspired to create the new product to treat's wife household wounds.
If you have the right type of band-aid, it may emit visible blue light. The phenomenon can also be seen if you unfurl adhesive tape, crush a sugar cube in the dark, or when watching an avalanche ...
Johnson & Johnson employee Earle Dickson was a friend to the accident-prone–especially at home. The inventor of the Band-Aid, who was born on this day in 1892, originally came up with the idea ...
This surgical tape is like a "painless Band-Aid for internal organs." The ultimate goal: to use bioadhesive technologies to replace sutures.
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have improved upon a Band-Aid-like adhesive they created last year, adding the ability to painlessly remove it. This surgical tape is ...
Imagine a computer thinner than a piece of tape. ... from the University of Illinois have created a form of electronics that's so thin and flexible it can be worn like a Band-Aid.
In 2005, Band-Aid launched a line of "perfect blend" bandages to blend with multiple skin tones, company spokesperson Megan Koehler told NBC. That line was discontinued three years later.
Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have improved upon a Band-Aid-like adhesive they created last year, adding the ability to painlessly remove it. This surgical tape is ...