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Definition Of X-acto Knife In Cake Decorating

Brand of cutting tools and office products

X-Acto
X-Acto logo.svg
Founded 1930; 91 years ago  (1930)
Founder Sundel Doniger
Headquarters

Westerville, Ohio, United States

Products Utility knives, office supplies
Parent Elmer's Products, Inc.
Website xacto.com

X-Acto is a brand name for a variety of cutting tools and office products owned by Elmer's Products, Inc. Cutting tools include hobby and utility knives, saws, carving tools and many small-scale precision knives used for crafts and other applications.

An X-Acto knife equipped with a "Number 2" blade.

X-Acto knife [edit]

Parts of the Exacto Knife from left to right: (1) Handle, (2) Collar, (3) Collet, (4) Blade

An X-Acto knife may be called an Exacto knife, utility knife, precision knife, or hobby knife. It is a blade mounted on a pen-like aluminum body, used for crafting and hobbies, such as modelmaking. Before the availability of digital image- and text-processing tools, preparing camera-ready art for use in printing (literal cut and paste or paste up) depended heavily on the use of knives like the X-Acto for trimming and manipulating slips of paper.

A knurled collar loosens and tightens an aluminum collet with one slot, which holds a replaceable blade.

There are numerous other knives on the market with very similar designs. Blades are typically interchangeable between different brands.

History [edit]

The original knife was invented in the 1930s by Sundel Doniger, a Jewish Polish immigrant to the United States. He started a medical supply company in 1917 producing medical syringes and scalpels with removable blades.[1] This would later be his inspiration for the X-Acto brand of knives.[2] [3] He had planned to sell it to surgeons as a scalpel but it was not acceptable, because it could not be cleaned. His brother-in-law, Daniel Glück (father of poet and 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate Louise Glück), suggested that it might be a good craft tool.

In 1930 a house designer asked Doniger if he could create something for him that would help him crop some advertisements, Doniger agreed and created what we now know as the X-Acto Knife.[2]

X-Acto office products [edit]

In addition to knives, blades and tools, X-Acto produces office supplies including pencil sharpeners, paper trimmers, staplers and hole punches. X-Acto sharpeners are electric, battery or manual. X-Acto has three types of trimmers: razor, rotary, and guillotine.

Boston brand [edit]

Through 2012, X-Acto sold ceramic and convection space heaters and fans under the Boston brand name.[4]

See also [edit]

  • Arts and crafts
  • Knife
  • Office supplies
  • Olfa
  • Scalpel
  • Wood carving

References [edit]

  1. ^ Busta, Hallie (25 February 2014). "A Slice of Design History: How X-Acto Built a Better Knife". Architect Magazine.
  2. ^ a b Stamp, Jimmy (11 March 2014). "For 80 Years, X-Acto Has Been on the Cutting Edge of Edge Cutting". Smithsonian Magazine . Retrieved 9 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Seder ritual" (PDF). beureihatefila.com. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  4. ^ "Ceramic Heaters | Heater with Fan | Convection Heater | X-ACTO". 24 May 2012. Archived from the original on 24 March 2012. Retrieved 9 October 2015.

External links [edit]

Look up x-acto in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Official website

Definition Of X-acto Knife In Cake Decorating

Source: https://wikizero.com/en/X-Acto

Posted by: edgertongrous1984.blogspot.com

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