Background
Karl Nessler was the son of a shoemaker from Todtnau, a small town located high in the Black Forest, just beneath the Feldberg.
Karl Nessler was the son of a shoemaker from Todtnau, a small town located high in the Black Forest, just beneath the Feldberg.
He worked in Basle and Milan in different jobs, learned Italian and French and finally moved to Geneva. There he worked again as a barber and hairdresser and finished his apprenticeship.
He got the idea for the perm early in his youth. He began an apprenticeship which he dropped. Adapting to the French-speaking environment, he called himself Charles Nessler, and often spelt it "Nestle".
Later, he moved to Paris, where he tested his first perm on a certain Katharina Laible from Ulm.
When World War I broke out, he was interned and his assets confiscated as alien property. In 1915, he fled to the United States where he learned that counterfeited copies of his invention were already being sold.
In April 1919, his improved Hair Curler was filed at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. He was already an American citizen.
The holder of the patent was his Nestle Patent Holding Company
Incorporated. He developed a do-it-yourself kit for perms and opened a chain of hair salons. In 1927, his chain had 500 employees, with branches in New York, Chicago, Detroit, Palm Beach and Philadelphia.
The annual advertising budget was $300.000.
He amassed considerable wealth. During the hyperinflation in 1920s Germany, he donated the respectable sum of 20"000 Mark to the impoverished people of his hometown, but lost almost everything on Black Friday, 1929. His attempts to regain his losses were hindered by the breakout of World World War II and never really succeeded.
On 22 January 1951, Karl Nessler died at the age of 78 of a Heart attack at his home in Harrington Park, New Jersey.