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Weird Condom Facts and World Records

Condoms have a far stranger history than the chemist’s shelf suggests. They have been made from linen and animal gut, stretched over a Paris monument, issued to soldiers, hung in a national museum, and shipped by the hundred million. Here are the facts that hold up, and a few popular ones that do not.

History oddities

  • Long before latex, condoms were made from linen, animal intestine and bladder. The materials were reusable and a world away from anything modern.
  • Charles Goodyear’s rubber vulcanisation, patented in 1844, made durable rubber condoms possible, and the first rubber condoms followed in 1855.
  • Latex arrived in the 20th century and was far cheaper and easier to mass-produce than rubber, which is what turned condoms into a true mass-market product.
  • During the First World War, the British, French and German armies issued condoms to troops as disease prevention. The United States military was slower to adopt them, and only did so widely by the Second World War.
  • The first lubricated condom in Britain was produced by Durex in 1957.

Science and manufacturing

  • Modern condoms are quality-tested for holes and strength using electrical testing and inflation or burst testing under ISO standards.
  • The ISO 4074 standard includes stability testing to estimate shelf life before a new condom design is ever sold.
  • Latex gave condoms a far longer shelf life than the rubber versions before them. One historical source puts latex at roughly five years against about three months for early rubber.

Condom world records

Record Figure Holder / source Year
Largest condom 21.94 metres Funded by Benetton, fitted over the obelisk in the Place de la Concorde, Paris, for World AIDS Day (Guinness World Records) 1993
Largest collection of condoms 2,077 Amatore Bolzoni, Italy (Guinness World Records) 2004
Most condoms donated in one hour 13,312 DKT Health and PREMIERE Condoms (Guinness World Records)
Most condoms burst on the head in three minutes 3 Davide D’Amore, Rome (Guinness World Records) 2010
Thinnest latex condom 0.036 mm AONI (Guinness-recognised report) 2014

Unusual real-world uses

  • Outside the bedroom, condoms have been used for waterproofing, carrying water and keeping kit dry. These are common survival-style improvisations rather than anything official, so treat them as folklore, not advice.
  • Their best-documented non-contraceptive role is military: condoms were issued as part of disease-prevention policy across several armies in the 20th century.
  • A roughly 200-year-old condom, made from a sheep’s appendix and printed with an erotic etching of a nun and three clergymen captioned “Voila mon choix” (“This is my choice”), went on display at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam in June 2025. It is believed to be a brothel souvenir from around 1830, and only two such printed examples are known to survive.

Scale and economics

  • Condoms are a genuinely industrial product. UNFPA reported that in 2024 it and the Global Fund delivered more than 683 million male condoms across 37 countries.
  • The shift to latex manufacturing is what made condoms cheap and easy to produce at scale, moving them from a niche good to a mass-market one.

Popularly repeated, but unverified

Plenty of “condom facts” do the rounds without a solid source behind them. We would rather flag them than repeat them as gospel.

  • “Condoms appear in French cave paintings.” This pops up in low-quality trivia lists, but no strong primary source supports it.
  • “A condom can safely hold a gallon of liquid.” A publicity-style claim, not a meaningful safety measure, and not backed by any standards body.
  • “Every army issued condoms in the Second World War.” Some did, but policies varied by country and period, so the blanket version is too broad.
  • “Double-bagging is safer.” Commonly repeated and wrong: using two condoms at once increases friction and the risk of splitting.

From oddity to artwork

People have been turning condoms into jokes, souvenirs and statements for two centuries, that Rijksmuseum piece included. We’re firmly in that tradition.

Frequently asked questions

What is the largest condom ever made?
A 21.94-metre condom funded by Benetton, fitted over the obelisk in the Place de la Concorde in Paris for World AIDS Day in 1993.
When did modern condoms begin?
Durable condoms became possible after rubber vulcanisation in the 1800s, with the first rubber condoms in 1855 and latex versions taking over in the 20th century.
Why are condoms called “rubbers”?
Because the first mass-produced condoms were made of rubber, and the material’s name stuck as slang.
Are condoms really tested for holes?
Yes. ISO-based testing includes electrical and inflation or burst methods designed to detect defects before a condom is sold.
Did the military really issue condoms?
Yes. British, French, German and later American forces issued condoms for disease prevention during the world wars.
How big is the global condom supply?
Vast. UNFPA reported that it and the Global Fund delivered more than 683 million male condoms across 37 countries in 2024 alone.
Is there really a condom in a museum?
Yes. The Rijksmuseum displayed a roughly 200-year-old printed condom in 2025, believed to be a brothel souvenir from around 1830.
Is it true that two condoms are safer than one?
No. That is a persistent myth. Two condoms create friction that makes splitting and slipping more likely, not less.

Sources: Guinness World Records (largest condom; largest collection; thinnest latex condom; related records); “The story of the condom”, PMC / NIH; Rijksmuseum press release and CNN coverage of the 2025 display; UNFPA, condom programming updates (2024). Claims without a strong primary source are listed separately as unverified.