The loop side of Velcro is smooth and soft. The hook side of Velcro is rough and scratchy. The hooks catch on the loops to stick them together.
Velcro is used to attach things together. Velcro has one strip that has a furry or loop style side and another side that has hooks. These two pieces adhere to one another to make things stick together.
No. Velcro is man made
velcro
The word velcro is a portmanteau of the words "velours" and "crochet".
The hook and loop on a hat is the velcro at the back, where it does up, the loop is the soft furry side of the velcro and the hook is the hard,scratchy side!
Rough, soft (depending on which side of the velcro).
The loop side of Velcro is smooth and soft. The hook side of Velcro is rough and scratchy. The hooks catch on the loops to stick them together.
Velcro sticks together by one side having small "loops" and the other side having small hooks.
It is called the "loop" side.
Velcro is used to attach things together. Velcro has one strip that has a furry or loop style side and another side that has hooks. These two pieces adhere to one another to make things stick together.
The "fluffy" side of velcro will retain some water and also the taped backing on which the "hooks" are mounted will also. Ive yet to discover if velcro still works when its wet though. (probably does, because wet suits have velcro)
Velcro works when one side of the fastener---a side full of tiny "hooks"---attaches to the other side of the fastener---a side full of tiny "loops." The hooks lock into the loops, and when they are pulled apart, they make that distinctive sound.
look at both pieces. you have a rough side and a softer side. the rougher side, if you look close, has little hooks that attach to the softer side. when you pull it apart the hooks are ripped apart, tis would be why velcro doesn't last forever.
Rough, soft (depending on which side of the velcro).
The term dirty fuzzy means that an items is unclean and furry. The word dirty is defined as unclean. The word fuzzy is defined as furry.
The word 'velcro' comes form the two French words "velours" or 'velvet' and "crochet", or 'hook'. Thus the side that hooks is the one that is rough rather than velvet to the touch.