Before nail clippers became a throwaway item buried in plastic drawers, they were precious tools that people needed to keep close. When indoor plumbing was rare and bathrooms were shared—or nonexistent—grooming had to travel with you. That tiny round hole wasn’t a design afterthought; it was a lifeline. It let people tether their clippers to keychains, watch chains, hooks, and travel kits, keeping them from vanishing into trunks, coat pockets, or crowded washrooms where anything small could simply disappear.
Engineers understood that a tool you can anchor is a tool you won’t lose, and a tool you don’t lose becomes part of your daily ritual. The hole turned a fragile, easily misplaced object into a dependable companion that followed its owner through moves, journeys, and generations. It worked so quietly and so well that no one dared replace it. In the end, a single, almost invisible circle helped a humble clipper outlast fashions, bathrooms, and even the people who first carried it.