Liquid Paper
Bette Nesmith Graham never set out to be an inventor, believing
her vocation in life was to be an artist. However, shortly after
the Second World War ended she found herself divorced and a single
parent (the child Michael Nesmith, later went on to become a
member of 60’s pop group, The
Monkees) living in Dallas and working as a secretary.
Being an artist and noticing that typing errors at work were
costly, she considered better ways to correct them. Using the
theory that if artists could paint over their mistakes, then
typists should be able to do something similar, she mixed up her
first batch of Liquid paper using a blender in her own kitchen.
Graham put some tempera water based paint, coloured to match
the stationery she used, in a bottle, took her watercolour brush
to the office and used this to correct her typing mistakes.
Soon
another secretary saw the new invention and asked for some of the
correcting fluid. Graham found a green bottle at home, wrote
"Mistake Out" on a label, and gave it to her friend.
Soon all the secretaries in the building were using the new
product.
By 1956 Graham started her own company to produce the new
product out of her Dallas home. The Mistake Out Company was formed
with young Michael and his friends helping to fill the orders. But
business wasn’t booming and it was only when her boss fired her
(ironically for making a typing error) that she devoted enough
time to the business to launch it properly.
The rest of course is history. By 1967 Graham was head of a
multi-million dollar business , moving the following year to her
own plant and corporate headquarters.
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