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Why Door Handles Are Brass: Hygiene Before UX
Before “user experience” became a product discipline, buildings made quiet design decisions in the name of public health. The humble brass door handle is one of them. Hospitals, schools, and civic buildings installed copper‑alloy hardware not for prestige but for a simple promise: it might stay cleaner, longer, between cleanings. That logic traveled from 19th‑century germ theory debates to 20th‑century building codes, and eventually into the ordinary places where we spend our days. The gold tone is a side effect of a material that balances machinability, durability, and a reputation for hygiene. (more…)
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carton design
cleanability
cutting mechanics
daily items secrets
domestic artifacts
door handle design
electrical outlets
electrical sockets
everyday object
food packaging
forgotten inventions
graphite
hand tools
hidden history of objects
hinge design
history-of-science
industrial design
kitchen design
ladder safety
measuring cups
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mechanical hardware
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objectales
object psychology
ordinary objects mystery
packaging ergonomics
paper ticket
pencil design
phlogiston
QR codes
safety standards
scientific method
scissors design
security printing
shopping cart
standardization
stapler design
tape measure
ticket design
toothbrush design
usability
validation
vitalism
wood casing