Next in the Classic Gear series that first appeared in The Great Outdoors last year: boot wax!
Forty years ago a young hillwalker from Kent changed the way
we treat walking boots forever. Until then the products available were designed
to soften as well as waterproof leather. This was fine for heavy stiff mountaineering
boots but made lighter walking boots too soft so they no longer supported the
feet. Unhappy with this and being the inventive type Nick Brown came up with
his own far superior product, the first non-softening waterproofing wax for
leather boots. Others were soon interested and Nick began producing his wax
commercially. Nick’s wax became Nikwax. Back then in 1977 there was no factory
or production unit. The first Nikwax was made in a flat using a tea urn, Primus
stove and materials from a hardware store. There was no sales team or marketing
department either. Nick sold his wax directly, driving round Britain in a van
and then round Europe via Inter Rail.
The wax was poured into tins with lids silkscreened by Nick.
To persuade retailers to stock this new wax he offered to put the shops name on
the tin. Back then I was working in the YHA Adventure shop in Manchester and I
remember those tins with YHA in big letters on the front. Whilst Nikwax in tins
was around for decades this began to change in 2001 when Nick Brown developed a
sponge applicator that fitted on the end of a tube. This meant Nikwax in a
cream form could be applied from a tube, which was less messy and more
efficient. Soon this was became the norm and the tins disappeared. No more rubbing
the wax in with your fingers – the sponge did that for you.
Nick Brown with the first sponge applicator in 2001 |
Nikwax quickly became a big international success and Nick
Brown turned his attention to outdoor clothing. Concerned about ozone depletion
and aerosol use he wanted to find an environmentally-friendly way to make
garments waterproof rather than spraying them with environmentally-damaging
chemicals. Nikwax has maintained this green approach ever since, never using
aerosols or PFCs, and has always campaigned for others to do the same. What Nick
came up with was another first, a water-based product with no harmful solvents
called Texnik. With this clothing could be reproofed in a washing machine.
Teknik became TX.10 then TX.Direct and a whole range of wash-in products for
different types of clothing. There was a spin-off too, called Paramo, but
that’s another story.
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Today there is a wide range of Nikwax products, all based on
the original wax and on Texnik. The company has won many awards over the years,
becoming, in 2014, the first and so far only outdoor company to win the Queen’s
Award for Sustainable Development. Nikwax received a Special TGO Award for
Sustainability in the 2016 TGO Awards.
Forty years on from Nick Brown mixing wax in his flat Nikwax
is still helping walkers keep dry, prolonging the life of their footwear and
clothing, and working to protect the environment.
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