All Object Lessons
Everyday Objects

Scissors: Two Blades, One Pivot, Three and a Half Thousand Years

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, science, art, languages, citizenship
Core question How do two ordinary blades joined at a single pivot — the same basic design used by Roman tailors two thousand years ago, and almost unchanged since — quietly become one of the most successful tool designs in human history, used billions of times every day for tasks ranging from haircuts to surgery to opening packets of crisps, and what does the success of such a simple piece of engineering teach us about good design?
A pair of ordinary household scissors. Two blades, one pivot, two handles. The basic design is over two thousand years old, but the ancestor — spring shears used in ancient Egypt — goes back about 3,500 years. Photo: BGN-WMCO / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.5
Introduction

Pick up a pair of scissors. Squeeze the handles. Two blades cross over each other and shear through whatever is between them. It is one of the most ordinary actions in the world. People do it billions of times every day. They cut hair. They cut paper. They cut cloth. They cut cardboard packaging. They cut their fingernails. They open packets of crisps. They do surgery. They prune roses. They cut ribbons at the opening of new shops. They cut their children's craft projects. Scissors are everywhere. Almost everyone owns several pairs. Most households have at least one pair in the kitchen, one in a desk drawer, one in a sewing kit, and possibly more. Despite this overwhelming presence, scissors are rarely thought about. The design seems obvious — two blades, a pivot, two handles. Of course it works. What else would scissors look like? But the design is not obvious. It took thousands of years to develop. The earliest known scissors-like tools are spring shears from ancient Egypt, around 1500 BCE — over 3,500 years ago. Two blades were joined at one end by a curved bronze strip that springs them open. The user squeezed them shut to cut. They worked, but the design was clumsy compared to what came later. The pivot scissors design — the modern design, with two blades crossing each other and joined at a central pivot — was invented by the Romans around 100 CE, about 2,000 years ago. This was a major engineering improvement: it gave more leverage, more precision, and a more comfortable cutting motion. The Roman design was so good that it has not really changed in 2,000 years. The scissors in your kitchen drawer right now are using essentially the same engineering principles as Roman tailors used in the time of the emperor Trajan. After the fall of Rome, the pivot scissors design was largely forgotten in Western Europe, and the cruder spring shears continued to be used for many centuries. The pivot design was reintroduced or independently rediscovered in the medieval period, gradually returning to common use. By the 18th century, Sheffield in England had become the dominant European centre of mass-produced scissors, and Sheffield-made scissors became famous for their quality. In Japan, the city of Sakai developed its own famous tradition of hasami — Japanese scissors that are still considered among the finest in the world. Modern stainless steel scissors became available in the 20th century and made high-quality scissors cheap enough to put in every household. Today, scissors come in dozens of specialised forms. Tailor's shears for cloth. Kitchen scissors for food. Hairdressing scissors. Surgical scissors with very fine points. Gardening shears for plants. Pinking shears that cut zigzag edges. Embroidery scissors that look like tiny works of art. Child-safe scissors with rounded tips. Pruning shears for thick branches. Each variation is fitted to its specific task. The basic design — two blades, a pivot, two handles — adapts to all of them. This lesson asks where scissors came from, how the basic design was developed, why the Roman pivot design is so good, and what the success of such a simple tool teaches us about good engineering and good design.

The object
Origin
The earliest known scissors-like tools are spring shears (sometimes called Egyptian shears) from ancient Egypt, dating from around 1500 BCE. These had two blades joined at one end by a curved bronze strip that springs them open; the user squeezes them shut. Pivot scissors — the modern design with two crossing blades joined at a central point by a screw or rivet — were invented by the Romans around 100 CE. The pivot design was largely forgotten in Western Europe and was reintroduced or independently rediscovered in the medieval period. From the 18th century onwards, Sheffield in England became the dominant European centre of mass-produced scissors; Sakai in Japan developed its own famous tradition (hasami).
Period
Continuous use for around 3,500 years (since the earliest spring shears in Egypt) and around 2,000 years (since Roman pivot scissors). The basic pivot design has not changed in 2,000 years. Materials have changed dramatically: bronze, iron, steel, stainless steel, plastic-handled stainless steel. Specialised types have multiplied: tailor's shears, kitchen scissors, hairdressing scissors, surgical scissors, gardening shears, embroidery scissors, paper scissors, nail scissors, pinking shears, left-handed scissors, child-safe scissors with rounded tips. Today, scissors are used worldwide.
Made of
Originally bronze (Egyptian spring shears). Later iron and steel (Roman pivot scissors and onwards). Modern household scissors are typically stainless steel blades with plastic-coated handles. Higher-quality scissors use carbon steel or specialised stainless steel for sharper, longer-lasting edges. Surgical scissors use medical-grade stainless steel. Some scissors use ceramic blades (very hard, brittle). Handle materials vary widely: wood, bone, ivory (in old or decorative scissors), metal, plastic, rubber-coated for grip.
Size
A typical pair of household scissors is about 18-21 cm long, with blades of 8-10 cm. Smaller types: embroidery scissors (8-10 cm), nail scissors (8-9 cm), child-safe scissors (12-14 cm). Larger types: kitchen scissors (20-25 cm), tailor's shears (25-30 cm), gardening shears (large pruning shears can be 40-60 cm), industrial shears (much larger). Some specialised scissors are very small (cuticle scissors, miniature scissors for craft work) and others are very large (hedging shears, sheep shears, industrial paper scissors).
Number of objects
Tens of billions of pairs of scissors in current circulation worldwide. The cutlery and small-tools industry centres on China (largest producer overall), Solingen in Germany (high-quality kitchen and tailoring scissors), Sheffield in England (traditional centre of British scissors-making), Sakai and Seki in Japan (traditional Japanese hasami and modern industrial scissors), Italy (high-end fashion and hairdressing scissors), and the United States (industrial and surgical scissors). Sheffield-made scissors carried the Sheffield mark as a quality stamp from the 18th century onwards.
Where it is now
In every household, school classroom, hospital, hairdressing salon, tailor's shop, kitchen, garden shed, surgical theatre, manufacturing facility, and craft studio in the world. Major historical scissors collections include the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, the Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust in Sheffield, the Sakai Hamono Museum in Japan, and the Museum of London. Many regional museums hold local scissors-making traditions. Scissors are also part of countless cultural rituals worldwide, from the Japanese hair-cutting ceremonies marking life transitions to the ribbon-cutting at the opening of new buildings worldwide.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Scissors are so familiar that students may have never noticed how cleverly they are engineered. How will you make the design feel surprising rather than obvious?
  2. The history of scissors involves multiple cultures (ancient Egypt, Rome, medieval Europe, Sheffield, Sakai). How will you give each tradition fair weight without privileging any one as the 'true' origin?
  3. Most students are right-handed and have used scissors all their lives without thinking about handedness. How will you make space for the small but real population of left-handed students who experience standard scissors very differently?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
The earliest known scissors-like tools are spring shears from ancient Egypt, dating from around 1500 BCE. They are over 3,500 years old. Examples have been found in archaeological sites and in burial chambers, sometimes preserved in remarkably good condition because of Egypt's dry climate. The design is very different from modern scissors. Two blades are joined at one end by a curved bronze strip — sometimes called the spring or the bow — that holds the blades apart. The user squeezes the blades together to cut, and the springy bronze opens them again when released. There is no pivot, no central screw, no crossing blades. The whole tool is shaped like a long U, with the cutting edges on the inside. This design has its own name: spring shears, or sometimes Egyptian shears. It is used for cutting cloth, hair, fleece (for shearing sheep), and papyrus. Spring shears are still made today for some specialised purposes, especially traditional sheep-shearing in some parts of the world. Egyptian spring shears were not the only ancient tool of their kind. Similar designs appear in many ancient cultures: Greek shears, Roman shears (alongside the pivot scissors that came later), early Chinese shears, ancient Indian shears, ancient Persian shears. The design seems to have spread or been independently invented in many places. Why might so many cultures have developed this same basic spring-shear design?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the design solves a real problem. Cutting cloth or hair or fleece with a single knife is awkward — the material slides away from the blade. Two blades that come together from opposite sides hold the material in place and shear through it cleanly. Some sort of double-bladed cutter is needed for these tasks. The spring-shear design is one solution: join two blades at one end by something that springs them open, then squeeze to cut. It is not the most elegant solution, but it works. It also requires only basic metalworking — a single piece of bronze can be shaped into the whole tool, with the blade ends sharpened. There is no need for a precision-fitting screw or rivet. This makes spring shears easier to manufacture than pivot scissors. For cultures with limited metalworking capacity, spring shears were the natural choice. The Egyptian, Greek, early Roman, Chinese, and Indian shears all worked. They were used for thousands of years. They were not the best possible design, but they were good enough — and they could be made with the technology available. Students should see that 'good enough' is sometimes the right answer in technology. A perfect design that cannot be manufactured is useless. A workable design that can be made with available skills will dominate, even if a better design exists in principle. The spring shear was the workable design for thousands of years. Then the Romans invented something better.

2
Around 100 CE, the Romans invented a major improvement: pivot scissors. Two blades cross each other and are joined at a central point by a screw or rivet. The blades meet along their length, with the cutting edges on the inside of the X shape. When the handles are squeezed together, the blades close on whatever is between them. This is the modern scissors design. It has barely changed in 2,000 years. The scissors in your kitchen drawer right now are using essentially the same engineering principles as Roman tailors used in the time of the emperor Trajan. The pivot design is better than spring shears in several important ways: Leverage. The handles act as levers. A small force on the handles produces a much larger force at the blades. This makes pivot scissors capable of cutting through tough material with relatively little effort. Precision. The pivot keeps the blades aligned exactly. They meet along their length in a precise shearing action. This produces clean cuts even on delicate material. Comfort. The handles can be shaped to fit the human hand. The cutting motion is comfortable and natural — squeezing the fingers together, like making a fist. Control. The pivot design allows fine control of where and how the cut is made. Tailors and surgeons need this kind of control. Spring shears do not provide it as well. Range of force. The pivot design works for tasks requiring very gentle cuts (embroidery scissors) all the way to tasks requiring great force (heavy gardening shears). The same basic design scales to many different uses. The Romans used pivot scissors widely. Roman tailors, hairdressers, gardeners, and surgeons all had specialised scissors. Pictures of Roman scissors-makers and scissors-users appear in mosaics and in surviving illustrated texts. Roman scissors of various sizes have been found in archaeological sites across the Roman empire. Roman scissors-making technology spread to many parts of the empire and beyond. Variations of the pivot scissors appeared in China (where the design was independently developed in some respects), in India, in Persia, and in the Byzantine empire after Rome's fall. But after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century CE, the pivot scissors design was largely forgotten in Western Europe. The cruder spring shears continued to be used for many centuries. Why this happened is not entirely clear — possibly the breakdown of trade and craft networks meant that the more sophisticated design did not survive. The simpler spring shears could be made by any village blacksmith; the precision-fitting pivot scissors required more skill. Why might a better design be lost when the culture that produced it falls?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several reasons. First, complex designs depend on accumulated craft knowledge. A village blacksmith in 6th century Western Europe knew how to make spring shears (forge a piece of bronze or iron into a U shape, sharpen the inside edges). He may not have known how to make pivot scissors (forge two separate blades, drill or punch a hole through both, fit a precision pivot, ensure the blades meet along their length). When the trained craftsmen who knew the more complex technique died and were not replaced, the technique died with them. Second, sophisticated designs depend on demand. Roman cities had specialised tailors, hairdressers, and surgeons who needed quality scissors. After the fall of Rome, much of Western Europe became more rural, with less specialisation. Spring shears were good enough for most rural needs. There was less demand for the better design, so fewer people were trained to make it. Third, sophisticated designs depend on materials and trade. Pivot scissors require harder metal that can hold a precise edge — good iron or steel. Spring shears can be made of softer bronze. After the fall of Rome, metal trade networks broke down, and good iron became less available. The simpler design dominated because of material constraints. Students should see that progress in technology is not always one-way. Sometimes good designs are lost. The pivot scissors are a clear example — invented by the Romans, used by them widely, then largely forgotten in Western Europe for centuries, then rediscovered in the medieval period. Many other Roman technologies were also lost and rediscovered, including concrete, glass-making techniques, and certain agricultural practices. The pivot scissors are a small reminder that history is not always a steady upward climb.

3
The pivot scissors design was rediscovered or reintroduced in Western Europe during the medieval period, probably from contact with the Byzantine empire and the Islamic world (where the design had been preserved). By the 14th-15th centuries, pivot scissors were common in European workshops again. From the late medieval period onwards, scissors-making became a significant craft in many European cities. Different regions developed their own traditions. Toledo in Spain was famous for its scissors and small blades alongside its swords. Solingen in Germany became known for high-quality scissors and other small cutlery. Birmingham in England developed its own scissors industry. But the place that came to dominate British scissors-making was Sheffield, in Yorkshire. Sheffield had been making knives and small tools since at least the 14th century — Geoffrey Chaucer mentions a 'Sheffeld thwitel' (a Sheffield small knife) in The Canterbury Tales (around 1390). By the 18th century, Sheffield had become the centre of British cutlery and scissors-making. Sheffield's combination of local iron, abundant water power for forge hammers, and accumulated craft skills made it ideal for the work. In the 18th century, Sheffield scissors were exported across the British Empire and beyond. The 'Sheffield' mark on a pair of scissors was a guarantee of quality. Sheffield scissors-makers developed many specialised types: tailor's shears, hairdressing scissors, surgical scissors, paper scissors, embroidery scissors, and many others. The skill of making each type was a separate craft. Sheffield scissors-makers were organised in guilds and trades, with apprenticeship systems that lasted seven or more years. Master scissors-makers (called 'scissorsmiths' or simply 'cutlers') were respected craftsmen. The work involved forging the blades, fitting the pivot precisely, sharpening the edges to perfect contact, and finishing the handles. In the 19th century, Sheffield scissors-making was transformed by industrial production. Steam-powered factories replaced individual workshops. New steels — including the special 'cast steel' developed by Benjamin Huntsman in Sheffield in 1740 — produced scissors that held an edge longer than ever before. By the late 19th century, Sheffield was producing millions of pairs of scissors per year and exporting them worldwide. The 20th century brought stainless steel (developed by Harry Brearley in Sheffield in 1913) and mass-production techniques. Cheap scissors became universally available. Sheffield faced increasing competition from German Solingen and from cheaper Chinese, Pakistani, and Indian production. By the late 20th century, Sheffield's scissors industry had shrunk dramatically, but high-end Sheffield scissors and shears were still made and sold worldwide. Meanwhile, Japan developed its own famous tradition. Sakai, a city near Osaka, has been a centre of traditional Japanese knife-making for over 600 years (the same Sakai mentioned in the knife lesson). Sakai also became a major centre of scissors-making, producing hasami of remarkable quality. Modern Sakai hasami are considered among the finest scissors in the world, especially for hairdressing and tailoring. Why might one city become a world centre of scissors-making?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several factors come together. Resources. Sheffield had local iron ore, abundant water power, and good coal for forging. Sakai had access to high-quality Japanese steels and traditional metalworking expertise. The right materials are necessary for high-quality scissors. Skills. Once a city has many skilled scissors-makers, it attracts more. Apprentices come to learn from masters. Workshops cluster together for shared knowledge and shared customers. The skill base grows. This is sometimes called 'agglomeration' — clusters of related craftspeople who reinforce each other. Sheffield and Sakai both have this pattern. Trade networks. Sheffield was well-connected to British trade routes and the British Empire. Sakai was well-connected to Japanese internal trade and later to international trade. Scissors travel light, so they could be exported widely. Trade networks rewarded quality producers. Tradition and reputation. Once a city becomes known for high-quality work, the reputation itself becomes valuable. Customers are willing to pay more for Sheffield-marked scissors or Sakai-made hasami than for unmarked equivalents. The reputation supports the price, which supports the skilled labour, which supports the quality. The cycle reinforces itself. Students should see that craft excellence is rarely an individual achievement. It is a network effect — many skilled people working together over many generations, supported by the right resources and trade networks. Sheffield and Sakai are not the only such places. Solingen in Germany, Toledo in Spain, the Aichi region of Japan, and many other craft centres have similar histories. The pattern is general. Where master craftsmen cluster, they reinforce each other, and the city becomes a world centre of its specialisation.

4
Modern scissors come in dozens of specialised forms. Each is fitted to its specific task. The basic design — two blades, a pivot, two handles — adapts to all of them. Walking through a typical household, school, or workshop, you can see many varieties: Kitchen scissors. Heavy-duty stainless steel, often with serrated edges for grip on slippery food. Used for cutting open packets, snipping herbs, cutting raw chicken, cutting twine, opening jars (with the special grip on the handle). Usually 20-25 cm long. Tailor's shears. Long, heavy blades for cutting fabric. Often 25-30 cm long. The design includes a flat lower blade so the fabric stays on the table while being cut. Specialised types include pinking shears (which cut zigzag edges to prevent fraying) and dressmaker's shears. Hairdressing scissors. Short, sharp, finely engineered. Often 14-18 cm long. The blades meet with great precision. Professional hairdressers' scissors can cost hundreds of pounds. Japanese Sakai hasami are particularly famous in this category. Surgical scissors. Very fine, very precise. Many specialised types: blunt-tipped for delicate dissection, fine-tipped for precision work, curved for working in body cavities. Used in operating theatres worldwide. Made of medical-grade stainless steel that can be sterilised at high temperatures. Embroidery scissors. Small, often only 8-10 cm long. Sharp, pointed, finely engineered. The handles are often decorated, making embroidery scissors a kind of small jewellery. Some Victorian embroidery scissors are remarkable works of decorative art. Nail scissors. Small, curved blades for cutting fingernails and toenails. The curve fits the shape of the nail. Gardening shears. Heavy-duty for cutting plants. Pruning shears (for small branches) are about 20 cm; loppers (for larger branches) are 30-60 cm; hedge shears (for trimming hedges) have very long blades. Industrial shears. Used in factories for cutting metal sheet, plastic, leather, paper, cardboard, and many other materials. Some industrial shears are powered by electric motors or hydraulics. Left-handed scissors. The vast majority of scissors are designed for right-handed users. The blades are arranged so that a right-handed user, looking down at the cut, can see the cutting line clearly. For a left-handed user, the same scissors are awkward — the blade arrangement obscures the cutting line, and the cutting motion feels backwards. Specialised left-handed scissors exist, with reversed blades, but they are less common and often more expensive. Left-handed students often have difficulty using ordinary scissors, especially in their early school years. Child-safe scissors. Small scissors with rounded tips and dulled edges. Safe for young children to use for craft projects. These are the scissors that most students first remember from primary school. Medical and surgical specialised types. Bandage scissors (with one rounded tip that slides under the bandage). Suture scissors (very fine for cutting medical thread). Trauma shears (heavy-duty for cutting through clothing in emergencies, with rounded tips so the patient is not cut). These are not all the types of scissors. Specialised industries have many more — fish scissors, poultry shears, kitchen herb scissors, ribbon-cutting ceremonial scissors, magazine scissors, magazine paper-cutters, fingernail clippers (which are a type of pivot cutter related to scissors), and many more. The basic design adapts to all of them. Two blades. A pivot. Two handles. The design is so flexible that it has been customised for at least dozens, possibly hundreds, of different specific tasks. What does the variety of specialised scissors teach us about good design?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Several things. First, that good design is often a basic principle that can be adapted, not a specific finished product. The pivot scissors are a principle: two blades joined at a pivot, moved by handles. From this principle, dozens of specific tools can be made. The principle is more important than any one finished tool. Second, that specialisation matters. A hairdresser cannot use kitchen scissors well; a kitchen cook cannot use surgical scissors well. Each specialised tool fits its specific task better than a general tool. The market for scissors is therefore segmented into many sub-markets, each with its own design. Third, that engineering is a continuous process of refinement. The basic Roman design has been improved many times in 2,000 years. New materials (stainless steel, ceramic). New manufacturing techniques (precision machining, mass production). New specific applications (surgical scissors, child-safe scissors). Each improvement keeps the basic principle but adapts it. Fourth, that minor differences matter to users. A right-handed person can pick up almost any pair of scissors and use them. A left-handed person experiences the same scissors very differently. The arrangement of blades, the shape of the handles, the angle of the pivot — all small details affect the user experience. Good design pays attention to these details. Students should see that the success of scissors as a tool design depends on the underlying principle being sound and the specific implementations being thoughtful. Both matter. A poor principle cannot be saved by clever implementation; a good principle can still be ruined by careless implementation. The pivot scissors are a good principle (well demonstrated by Roman and modern engineering), and most modern scissors are also thoughtfully implemented. End the discovery here. There is a pair of scissors in your house right now. It has been carefully designed for its specific job. It is using a 2,000-year-old principle. The hand that uses it is doing what hands have done since Roman tailors. The design is so good that we have not really improved on it.

What this object teaches

Scissors are one of the most successful tool designs in human history. The earliest known scissors-like tools are spring shears (Egyptian shears) from ancient Egypt around 1500 BCE — two blades joined at one end by a curved bronze strip that springs them open, with the user squeezing them shut to cut. This basic design appears across many ancient cultures (Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Chinese, Indian, Persian) and has been used for over 3,500 years. Pivot scissors — the modern design with two crossing blades joined at a central pivot — were invented by the Romans around 100 CE. The pivot design is much better than spring shears. It provides leverage (handles act as levers, multiplying force), precision (blades stay aligned through the pivot), comfort (handles fit the hand naturally), control (fine cuts are possible), and a wide range of force (the same design works for tiny embroidery scissors and large gardening shears). The pivot design has barely changed in 2,000 years. The pivot scissors design was largely forgotten in Western Europe after the fall of Rome and was rediscovered or reintroduced in the medieval period, probably through Byzantine and Islamic influence. By the 14th-15th centuries, pivot scissors were common again in European workshops. From the late medieval period, several European cities developed scissors-making traditions: Toledo in Spain, Solingen in Germany, Birmingham in England, and especially Sheffield in Yorkshire, which became the dominant British centre from the 18th century. Sheffield-made scissors carrying the Sheffield mark were exported worldwide as a guarantee of quality. The 19th century saw industrial production transform scissors-making. Benjamin Huntsman's cast steel (developed in Sheffield in 1740) produced scissors that held an edge longer than ever before. The 20th century brought stainless steel (Harry Brearley, Sheffield, 1913) and mass-production techniques, making high-quality scissors universally affordable. Japanese Sakai developed its own famous tradition of hasami — Japanese scissors made by traditional craftsmen, considered among the finest in the world today. Modern scissors come in dozens of specialised forms: kitchen scissors, tailor's shears, hairdressing scissors, surgical scissors, embroidery scissors, nail scissors, gardening shears, industrial shears, and many more. Each is fitted to its specific task. The basic pivot design adapts to all of them. Most scissors are designed for right-handed users; specialised left-handed scissors exist but are less common, and left-handed users often experience standard scissors as awkward and difficult. Scissors are now used billions of times every day across the world for tasks ranging from haircuts to surgery to opening packets of crisps. The 2,000-year-old Roman design is still essentially the design we use today.

DateEventWhat changed
c. 1500 BCEEarliest known spring shears in ancient EgyptTwo blades joined at one end by a curved bronze strip; the basic design that lasted over 3,000 years
c. 100 CERomans invent pivot scissorsTwo crossing blades joined at a central pivot; the modern design; almost unchanged since
5th-12th centuries CEPivot scissors largely forgotten in Western EuropeAfter the fall of Rome, the more advanced design is lost in Western Europe; spring shears continue to be used
14th-15th centuriesPivot scissors rediscovered in Western EuropeProbably through Byzantine and Islamic influence; pivot scissors return to common use
18th century onwardsSheffield becomes major British scissors centreSheffield-made scissors become a quality benchmark; industrial production transforms the craft
1740Benjamin Huntsman invents cast steel in SheffieldBetter steel produces scissors that hold an edge longer; Sheffield's reputation grows further
1913Stainless steel developed in Sheffield by Harry BrearleyRust-resistant scissors become possible; mass-production techniques make them universally affordable
20th centuryMass production and global tradeCheap stainless steel scissors become universally available; specialised types multiply
TodayScissors everywhere, in dozens of specialised typesTens of billions in circulation; the basic Roman design still essentially unchanged after 2,000 years
Key words
Spring shears (Egyptian shears)
The earliest known scissors-like tool, dating from ancient Egypt around 1500 BCE. Two blades are joined at one end by a curved bronze strip (the spring) that holds them apart. The user squeezes the blades together to cut, and the spring opens them again when released. Used across many ancient cultures (Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Chinese, Indian) and still used today for some specialised purposes, especially traditional sheep-shearing.
Example: A pair of traditional sheep shears used by hand-shearers in Australia, New Zealand, or rural Britain still uses essentially the spring-shear design. The user holds the spring open with their hand and squeezes to make each cut, working through the fleece systematically. The same design that ancient Egyptians used 3,500 years ago is still useful today for this specific task.
Pivot scissors (Roman scissors)
The modern scissors design, with two crossing blades joined at a central point by a screw or rivet. Invented by the Romans around 100 CE. Provides leverage (handles act as levers), precision (blades stay aligned through the pivot), comfort (handles fit the hand naturally), and control (fine cuts are possible). The basic design has barely changed in 2,000 years.
Example: Pick up any modern pair of scissors. The design — two blades crossing at a pivot, with handles for the fingers — is essentially what Roman tailors used 2,000 years ago. The materials have improved enormously (stainless steel rather than iron) and specialised types have proliferated, but the basic engineering principle is unchanged.
Sheffield scissors-making
Sheffield, in Yorkshire, England, is one of the world's most famous centres of scissors and cutlery production. Knife and scissors making in Sheffield dates back to at least the 14th century (Chaucer mentioned a 'Sheffeld thwitel' in The Canterbury Tales around 1390). From the 18th century onwards, Sheffield became the dominant British centre for scissors and cutlery. Sheffield-made scissors carrying the Sheffield mark were exported worldwide as a quality benchmark.
Example: Sheffield's craft heritage lives on today in companies like Ernest Wright (founded 1902, making scissors by hand), Paul Jewson (specialist scissors-makers), and others. A handmade pair of Ernest Wright scissors in 2024 might cost £100-200 — much more than mass-produced scissors, but using techniques that go back centuries. The Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust preserves the city's craft heritage.
Sakai hasami (Japanese scissors)
Sakai is a city near Osaka in Japan that has been a major centre of traditional knife and scissors making for over 600 years. Sakai hasami are considered among the finest scissors in the world, especially for hairdressing and tailoring. Made by traditional craftsmen using techniques passed down through generations. The Japanese government has designated Sakai blade-making as a Traditional Craft (Dentōteki Kōgeihin).
Example: A pair of professional Sakai hairdressing hasami can cost £500-2,000 or more. Master hairdressers consider Sakai-made scissors to give a precision of cut that mass-produced scissors cannot match. The Sakai Hamono Museum in Sakai showcases the city's craft tradition. Japanese tailors, hairdressers, and gardeners often use Sakai-made tools as professional standard.
Stainless steel (in scissors)
An alloy of iron, chromium (typically 18%), and sometimes nickel (typically 8% or 10%) that resists rust and corrosion. Developed by Harry Brearley in Sheffield, England, in 1913. Became the standard material for affordable household scissors from the mid-20th century. Stainless steel scissors do not rust, can be sterilised at high temperatures (important for surgical and kitchen use), and last for decades. Higher-quality scissors use specialised stainless steels with better edge retention.
Example: A typical modern pair of household scissors might be made from '420 stainless steel' or similar grade — rust-resistant, easy to sharpen, and cheap to manufacture. Surgical scissors use medical-grade stainless steel (often '440 series') that can withstand repeated sterilisation. Premium hairdressing scissors use higher-grade stainless steels (sometimes V-10 or similar) for better edge retention. The same basic material in different grades adapts to many different scissors purposes.
Handedness in tool design
Most tools are designed for right-handed users (around 90% of the population). For some tools, this does not matter much; for others, it matters a great deal. Scissors are particularly affected because the blade arrangement determines which user can see the cutting line clearly. Standard scissors are arranged for right-handed users; left-handed scissors have reversed blades. Left-handed scissors are less common, often more expensive, and may not be available in all settings (especially schools and shared workplaces).
Example: A left-handed student using a pair of standard right-handed scissors at primary school might struggle to cut accurately because the upper blade obscures the cutting line. The same student using proper left-handed scissors would have no difficulty. Around 10% of the population is left-handed, but it is usually difficult to find left-handed scissors in shared classroom supplies. This is a small but real example of how tool design embeds assumptions about users.
Use this in other subjects
  • History: Build a class timeline of scissors: Egyptian spring shears (1500 BCE); Roman pivot scissors (100 CE); medieval rediscovery (14th-15th century); Sheffield emergence (18th century onwards); Benjamin Huntsman's cast steel (1740); Harry Brearley's stainless steel (1913); modern global mass production. The history of scissors covers most of recorded history.
  • Geography: On a world map, mark the major scissors-making traditions: Sheffield, England; Solingen, Germany; Toledo, Spain; Sakai, Japan; Aichi, Japan; modern China (largest producer); Pakistan and India (large producers). Discuss what each region offers — local materials, trade networks, accumulated craft skills, market access. Strong answers will see how craft centres develop through agglomeration of skilled workers.
  • Science: Discuss the engineering of scissors. Two blades acting as levers around a pivot. The mechanical advantage produced by the lever system. The shearing action where two blades pass each other under a small force at the cutting line. The precision required for the blades to meet exactly along their length. The materials science of steel — the right hardness for edge retention, the right toughness to avoid breaking. Strong answers will see how scissors combine mechanical, geometrical, and materials engineering.
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'How do tools embed assumptions about their users?' Scissors are a perfect example — most are designed for right-handed users, with the assumption that left-handers can adapt or use specialised tools. Other examples: door handles (assume average height and grip strength); car driving controls (assume right-handed shifting in the UK and most countries); computer mice (originally designed for right-handed users); musical instruments (most are right-handed). Strong answers will see that 'universal design' is rarely fully universal.
  • Languages: The English word 'scissors' comes from the Latin 'cisorium', a cutting tool. The same Latin root gives Italian 'forbici' (related), Spanish 'tijeras' (related), French 'ciseaux'. Other languages have unrelated words: German 'Schere' (from Old High German 'scāra', shear); Russian 'nozhnitsy' (related to 'nozh', knife); Japanese 'hasami' (a native word). Discuss how words for ancient universal objects often differ between language families. Note that 'scissors' is plural in English but typically singular in many other languages — 'a pair of scissors' in English, 'une paire de ciseaux' in French (also plural), 'eine Schere' in German (singular).
  • Art: Look at images of beautiful scissors from different traditions: Victorian English embroidery scissors with intricately decorated handles; ornate Persian and Ottoman scissors with calligraphic engraving; Sheffield-made tailor's shears with classic English styling; Sakai hairdressing scissors with elegant Japanese minimalism; modern Italian designer scissors. Discuss how each tradition takes the same basic shape and makes it artistic in different ways. Industrial design is a real art form.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Scissors were invented in modern times.

Right

Spring shears (the ancestor of scissors) go back to ancient Egypt around 1500 BCE — over 3,500 years ago. Pivot scissors — the modern design — were invented by the Romans around 100 CE. The basic Roman design has barely changed in 2,000 years. The scissors in your kitchen drawer are using ancient engineering.

Why

Familiar everyday tools often feel modern when they are actually very old.

Wrong

All cultures use the same kind of scissors.

Right

Different cultures have developed distinct scissors traditions. Sheffield in England, Solingen in Germany, Toledo in Spain, Sakai and Aichi in Japan, modern China, Pakistan, and India all have their own scissors-making traditions with different shapes, materials, and craft methods. Japanese Sakai hasami are noticeably different from Sheffield English shears, and both are different from Italian designer scissors.

Why

Mass-produced cheap scissors look similar everywhere, but specialised and high-quality scissors reveal real cultural and craft differences.

Wrong

Scissors work the same for everyone.

Right

Most scissors are designed for right-handed users. The blade arrangement determines which user can see the cutting line clearly. Left-handed users (around 10% of the population) often struggle with standard scissors and need specialised left-handed scissors with reversed blades. This is a real and important difference, especially for left-handed children learning to use scissors.

Why

People often assume their own experience is universal; tool design embeds assumptions about users that may not apply to everyone.

Wrong

The pivot scissors design has been continuously improved over the centuries.

Right

The basic pivot design has barely changed in 2,000 years. The Romans invented it around 100 CE, and we still use essentially the same engineering. What has changed is the materials (bronze, then iron, then steel, then stainless steel), the manufacturing techniques (handcraft, then industrial production), and the specialised types (kitchen, surgical, hairdressing, etc.). The core design has been essentially perfect from the start.

Why

People assume that old technology must have been improved many times; sometimes the original design is so good that it cannot really be improved.

Teaching this with care

Treat scissors as the everyday tool they are while making the engineering achievement feel real. The lesson should bring out the cleverness of the design without becoming obsessive about it. Use precise language. Spring shears go back to around 1500 BCE in Egypt. Pivot scissors were invented by the Romans around 100 CE. The basic Roman design has barely changed in 2,000 years. These are facts. Be respectful of different scissors-making traditions. Sheffield, Solingen, Toledo, Sakai, and other centres are each treated with dignity in the lesson. None should be presented as superior to another. Each has its own history and craft. Sheffield was first to industrialise. Sakai has the longest continuous craft tradition. Solingen has the longest continuous European tradition. Italian, Pakistani, Indian, and Chinese scissors-making each have their own histories and qualities. Be careful with the left-handed dimension. About 10% of students will be left-handed, and they have likely had real difficulty with standard scissors at school. The lesson should treat this with care — acknowledging that left-handed users have real difficulty without making them feel singled out, and acknowledging that the right-handed bias of standard scissors is a real design issue without lecturing students who do not control the design. Be aware of disability. Some people have difficulty using scissors due to motor coordination challenges, arthritis, prosthetic hands, or other conditions. Adaptive scissors exist (spring-loaded, electric, mounted in workstations). The lesson should not imply that hand-use of scissors is the only correct way. Be aware of class. High-quality scissors (Sheffield, Sakai, Solingen) can be expensive. Most students' families have only cheap scissors. The lesson should not imply that any particular scissors are inadequate. Most household scissors are perfectly functional. Be careful with the idea that scissors can be dangerous. Scissors can cause injury, especially in children. The lesson does not need to dwell on this but should acknowledge that scissors are sharp tools that should be used carefully. Most schools teach scissor safety to young children. Be aware that scissors are used in many cultural rituals worldwide. The lesson briefly mentions Japanese hair-cutting ceremonies (which mark life transitions) and ribbon-cutting at openings. These are real cultural practices and the lesson treats them respectfully. Many other ritual uses exist (Sikh kesh-related practices that specifically forbid scissors, Christian Catholic tonsure, Jewish customs around hair, Hindu and Buddhist temple practices, Indigenous American traditions). The lesson does not need to cover all of these but should not imply that scissors are simply utilitarian. Be careful with the British colonial context of Sheffield's success. Sheffield's scissors were exported across the British Empire, partly because British goods had preferential access to colonial markets. The lesson mentions this without making it a major theme. Avoid making any one tradition the 'real' or 'authentic' scissors. The Egyptians, Romans, Sheffield, Sakai, Solingen, and modern manufacturers have all made real contributions. None is more authentic than another. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Scissors are everywhere right now. Almost every household has several pairs. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about scissors.

  1. What is the difference between spring shears and pivot scissors?

    Spring shears (the older design, going back to ancient Egypt around 1500 BCE) have two blades joined at one end by a curved bronze strip that springs them open; the user squeezes them shut to cut. Pivot scissors (invented by the Romans around 100 CE) have two crossing blades joined at a central pivot, with handles that act as levers; the user squeezes the handles to bring the blades together. The pivot design provides better leverage, precision, comfort, and control.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that describes both designs. Strong answers will note the practical advantages of the pivot design.
  2. When were pivot scissors (the modern design) invented, and how much have they changed since?

    Pivot scissors were invented by the Romans around 100 CE — about 2,000 years ago. The basic design has barely changed since. The materials have changed enormously (bronze, then iron, then steel, then stainless steel) and specialised types have proliferated (kitchen, surgical, hairdressing, embroidery, etc.), but the core engineering principle — two blades crossing at a pivot, moved by handles — is essentially unchanged. The scissors in your kitchen drawer use the same engineering as Roman tailors.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the 2,000-year continuity and note that the design has barely changed.
  3. Why did the pivot scissors design largely disappear from Western Europe after the fall of Rome?

    Several reasons. The pivot design requires more skill to make than spring shears (forging two separate blades, fitting a precision pivot, ensuring blades meet exactly). After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the trained craftsmen who knew the technique were not always replaced. Trade networks broke down, making good metal harder to obtain. Demand for high-quality scissors dropped as Western Europe became more rural and less specialised. The simpler spring shears were good enough for most rural needs. The pivot design was rediscovered in the medieval period.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains the loss in terms of craft skills, demand, or materials.
  4. Why has Sheffield, England, been a major centre of scissors-making for centuries?

    Several reasons. Sheffield had local resources for forging — iron ore, water power, and good coal. Skills accumulated over generations as scissors-makers clustered in the city. Trade networks (especially the British Empire from the 18th century) supported export of Sheffield-made scissors worldwide. Major innovations happened in Sheffield: Benjamin Huntsman's cast steel (1740), Harry Brearley's stainless steel (1913). The 'Sheffield' mark became a quality benchmark exported around the world.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention multiple factors (resources, skills, trade, innovations).
  5. Why do left-handed users often have difficulty with standard scissors?

    Standard scissors are designed for right-handed users. The blade arrangement is set so that a right-handed user, looking down at the cut, can see the cutting line clearly. For a left-handed user holding the same scissors, the upper blade obscures the cutting line and the cutting motion feels backwards. Specialised left-handed scissors exist with reversed blades, but they are less common and often more expensive. About 10% of the population is left-handed.
    Marking note: Strong answers will explain both the visual issue (cutting line obscured) and the existence of specialised left-handed scissors.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. The pivot scissors design has barely changed in 2,000 years. What other tool designs might also be 'mature' — so well-fitted to their problem that further change adds little?

    Several examples worth discussing. The hammer (a heavy weight on a handle) has barely changed in thousands of years. The wheel and the simple wheelbarrow. The spoon and the bowl. The basic chair. The ladder. The simple knife (covered in another lesson). The needle. The hand axe. The basic plough (modern versions are much bigger, but the basic principle is ancient). The rope. Strong answers will see that 'mature design' is a real category — designs so well-fitted to their problem that further change adds nothing useful. These designs often persist for thousands of years with only material upgrades. Other designs change rapidly (computers, cars, fashion) because they are not yet mature, or because the problem they solve is changing. The pivot scissors are a clear example of a mature design.
  2. Standard scissors are designed for right-handed users, leaving about 10% of users (left-handers) with a tool that does not work well for them. What other examples of design embedding assumptions about users can you think of? How might society address this?

    Many examples to discuss. Door handles (assume average height and grip strength — children, short adults, and people with grip issues struggle). Computer mice (originally designed for right-handed users, though many are now ambidextrous). Cars (controls are arranged for the typical driver — different countries have left-hand or right-hand drive). Most musical instruments (mostly designed for right-handed players). Cameras (most controls assume right-handed use). Credit card readers and ATM keypads (often awkward for left-handers). School desks (chair-arm desks usually have the writing surface on the right, awkward for lefties). Strong answers will see that 'universal design' is a real engineering goal — design that works for the widest possible range of users. Some products are now designed with universal design in mind: ambidextrous scissors, flat keyboards, adjustable car seats and steering wheels, accessibility-first software. The shift takes effort and sometimes increases costs, but produces tools that work for more people. The deeper point is that design embeds assumptions, and questioning those assumptions can produce better designs for everyone.
  3. Sheffield and Sakai are world centres of scissors-making partly because of clustering — many skilled people working together over many generations. Can clustering of skilled people happen anywhere, or only in specific places? What allows craft excellence to develop?

    Clustering of skilled people requires several conditions. Initial seed — at least one or two excellent practitioners to teach others. Apprenticeship system — a way for new craftsmen to learn from masters. Demand — customers willing to pay for quality work. Resources — local materials suited to the craft. Connections — trade networks that bring customers and supplies. Stability — political and economic stability over generations so traditions can continue. Reputation — the city's name becomes a quality mark, which supports prices, which supports the skilled labour. Sheffield, Sakai, Solingen, Toledo, and other craft centres have all had these conditions over many generations. Some places have had them and lost them — Birmingham was once a major scissors-maker but lost the position to Sheffield. Some places have developed them recently — Korea is now a major producer of high-quality knives. Strong answers will see that craft excellence is not random. It develops where conditions allow. Modern Silicon Valley follows the same pattern for software (initial seed of skilled people, apprenticeship via job-hopping, demand, reputation, supportive infrastructure). Clustering is a general phenomenon. The deeper point is that craft excellence is a network effect, not an individual achievement. Society can deliberately encourage clustering through policy (skilled apprenticeships, education, infrastructure, reputation marks like 'Sheffield' protected names) or accidentally undermine it through neglect.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Hold up a pair of scissors. Squeeze them. Ask: 'How old is this design?' Take guesses. Then say: 'The design you are holding was invented by the Romans around 100 CE. About 2,000 years ago. It has barely changed since. We are going to find out why such a simple design has lasted so long.'
  2. DEEP HISTORY (10 min)
    Walk through the history. Egyptian spring shears (1500 BCE). Roman pivot scissors (100 CE). The fall of Rome and the loss of pivot design in Western Europe. Medieval rediscovery (14th-15th century). Sheffield, Solingen, Toledo as major scissors centres. Sakai in Japan. Benjamin Huntsman's cast steel (1740). Harry Brearley's stainless steel (1913). Modern global production.
  3. THE ENGINEERING (10 min)
    Discuss why pivot scissors are so good. Leverage (handles act as levers). Precision (blades stay aligned through pivot). Comfort (handles fit hand). Control (fine cuts possible). Range (from tiny embroidery scissors to large gardening shears). The basic engineering principle scales to many sizes and tasks.
  4. SPECIALISED TYPES (10 min)
    Look at specialised scissors. Kitchen, tailor's shears, hairdressing, surgical, embroidery, nail, gardening, industrial, child-safe, left-handed. Each fits its specific task. The basic design adapts to all of them. Discuss: what does this teach us about good design?
  5. CLOSING (10 min)
    End by noting the left-handed issue (most scissors designed for right-handed users; left-handers often struggle). Then say: 'There is a pair of scissors in your house right now. It uses a 2,000-year-old Roman engineering principle. It is one of dozens of specialised types. It is so familiar that you have probably never thought about it. But it is one of the great quietly successful tool designs in human history. Sometimes the best tools are the ones we do not notice.'
Classroom materials
Scissors Inventory
Instructions: Each student lists every kind of scissors they have at home (or remembers seeing). Examples: kitchen scissors, paper scissors, nail scissors, hairdressing scissors at the salon, gardening shears, child-safe school scissors, pinking shears in a sewing kit, embroidery scissors. The class compiles a list. Discuss: how many different scissors does a typical household or environment have? What does the variety tell us about the design's flexibility?
Example: In Mr Khan's class, students named over 12 different kinds of scissors (kitchen, nail, paper, child-safe, gardening, pinking, embroidery, surgical, hairdressing, and more). The teacher said: 'You have just shown how flexible the basic scissors design is. The same engineering — two blades, a pivot, two handles — adapts to dozens of specific tasks. This is one of the great tests of good design: can the basic principle scale up and scale down, work for fine work and heavy work, fit small hands and large hands? Pivot scissors pass this test brilliantly.'
Right-Handed and Left-Handed
Instructions: If possible, bring in or acquire a pair of left-handed scissors. Ask all students — both right-handed and left-handed — to try cutting paper with both standard right-handed scissors and the left-handed pair. Discuss: what feels different? Strong answers will compare the visibility of the cutting line and the comfort of the cutting motion. If you cannot acquire left-handed scissors, ask left-handed students in the class to describe their experience with standard scissors at school. (Be sensitive — do not single anyone out.)
Example: In Mrs Williams's class, three left-handed students described struggling with standard scissors throughout primary school. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered something that engineers call universal design — design that works for as many users as possible. Standard scissors are not universal design; they are right-handed design. About 10% of people experience the world differently with these tools. Better engineering would acknowledge both kinds of users from the start. This is true for many tools and technologies. The principle of universal design is becoming more important in modern engineering.'
Design Your Own Specialised Scissors
Instructions: In small groups, students design a new specialised pair of scissors for a specific task they care about: opening crisp packets without spilling; cutting hair while seeing exactly where the cut will be; pruning rose bushes without thorn injuries; cutting blanket-thickness fabric for quilting; trimming nails of small dogs; or any other task they identify. Each group sketches their design and explains how it adapts the basic pivot scissors principle to fit the specific task. Discuss: what specific features does each task require?
Example: In Mrs Lange's class, groups designed scissors for opening Tetra Pak juice cartons, for cutting raw chicken without contaminating other surfaces, for trimming fingernails of a person with arthritis, and for trimming the long ears of a Cocker Spaniel. The teacher said: 'You have just done what professional designers do. Take a basic principle that works (pivot scissors) and adapt it to a specific task with specific requirements. This is the core of industrial design. Each variation keeps the basic principle but adds specific features (size, blade shape, handle shape, materials, safety features) for the specific use. The pivot scissors are a perfect platform for specialisation because the basic design is so flexible.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the spoon for another universal everyday tool with deep history (already delivered).
  • Try a lesson on the fork for the cutlery thread (already delivered).
  • Try a lesson on the knife for another deep cutting tool (already delivered).
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on Roman engineering — Roman concrete, Roman roads, Roman water systems, Roman scissors, and many other Roman inventions that have shaped the modern world.
  • Connect this lesson to engineering class with a longer study of mechanical advantage and lever systems — scissors, pliers, bolt cutters, nutcrackers, and many other tools use the same basic lever principle.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of universal design — how to design tools and environments that work for the widest range of users, including left-handed people, people with disabilities, children, and older adults.
Key takeaways
  • Scissors are one of the most successful tool designs in human history. Spring shears (the ancestor) go back to ancient Egypt around 1500 BCE — over 3,500 years ago. Pivot scissors (the modern design) were invented by the Romans around 100 CE.
  • The pivot design is much better than spring shears. It provides leverage (handles act as levers), precision (blades stay aligned through the pivot), comfort (handles fit the hand naturally), control (fine cuts are possible), and a wide range of force (the same design works for tiny embroidery scissors and large gardening shears). The basic design has barely changed in 2,000 years.
  • The pivot scissors design was largely forgotten in Western Europe after the fall of Rome and was rediscovered or reintroduced in the medieval period. Several European cities developed scissors-making traditions: Toledo, Solingen, Birmingham, and especially Sheffield in Yorkshire, which became the dominant British centre from the 18th century.
  • Major innovations in scissors-making happened in Sheffield: Benjamin Huntsman's cast steel (1740) and Harry Brearley's stainless steel (1913). Both transformed the materials available for scissors and other cutlery. Japan developed its own famous tradition of hasami in Sakai, considered among the finest in the world.
  • Modern scissors come in dozens of specialised forms: kitchen scissors, tailor's shears, hairdressing scissors, surgical scissors, embroidery scissors, nail scissors, gardening shears, industrial shears, child-safe scissors, left-handed scissors, and many more. Each is fitted to its specific task. The basic pivot design adapts to all of them.
  • Most scissors are designed for right-handed users. Left-handed users (about 10% of the population) often struggle with standard scissors and need specialised left-handed scissors with reversed blades. This is a small but real example of how tool design embeds assumptions about users — and how 'universal design' is still a goal rather than a reality.
Sources
  • The History of Scissors (Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust) — Sheffield Industrial Museums Trust (2024) [institution]
  • The History of Cutlery (Victoria and Albert Museum) — Victoria and Albert Museum (2024) [institution]
  • Sakai City Traditional Crafts: Hamono (Blade-making) — Sakai City Tourism Office (2024) [institution]
  • Roman Tools and Technology — Strong, Donald & Brown, David (Royal Archaeological Institute) (1976) [academic]
  • Scissors — Wikipedia (citing multiple peer-reviewed sources) (2024) [academic]