Author Topic: Paper  (Read 3471 times)

Offline T*O*F

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Paper
« on: May 31, 2017, 04:52:30 PM »
I don't know if paper classsifies as an accoutrement but I know that many of you like to keep period journals in your persona kit.  The latest issue of Mother Earth News has an excellent tutorial on how to make your own paper from various grasses and leaves.  The process seems to be fairly simple with no special tools required other than to make a simple screen press to roll the moisture from the paper.

Perhaps your library carries a copy if you're interested.  I would have been interested in days gone by, but no longer.
Dave Kanger

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Offline axelp

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Re: Paper
« Reply #1 on: May 31, 2017, 08:24:38 PM »
Interesting. is there any documentation of 18th C folks making paper out of leaves and grass in that manner?
Galations 2:20

Offline T*O*F

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Re: Paper
« Reply #2 on: May 31, 2017, 10:40:52 PM »
Ken,
Linen laid paper is made from hemp fibers.  Then you have papyrus from biblical times.  They mention beating milkweed stalks to loosen the fibers.  This is not leaves as in oak or maple, but rather broadleaf types like lilies and such.  Pampus grass and monkey grass would probably work.  The vegetable material is dried, then turned into pulp and laid in the screen.  I can only imagine that something similar was done on a small scale in the 18th or 19th centuries.
Dave Kanger

If religion is opium for the masses, the internet is a crack, pixel-huffing orgy that deafens the brain, numbs the senses and scrambles our peer list to include every anonymous loser, twisted deviant, and freak as well as people we normally wouldn't give the time of day.
-S.M. Tomlinson

Offline axelp

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Re: Paper
« Reply #3 on: June 02, 2017, 03:46:39 PM »
Yes. the interesting thing about history is that just because the egyptians did it a thousand years before, does not mean that the assyrians did.  A lot of variables come into play. Mayans of Central America had paper made of bark etc.

Since we are talking about 1740-1840 Americas on this forum, the home paper making questions we might check out in order to be relevant to this forum is, how accessible was paper at that time and place? Most of it seems to have been made of wrags. Was wrag paper made in the colonies? (wood paper mills come much later I think) or was all of the paper imported? The printing trade was in bloom at that time, so I assume there was plenty of paper available in towns. Was there ever a shortage that required folks to make it themselves?

What about the frontier? Was animal skin a more likely substitute? Skins seem more likely to be used in the native populations. Was there a need for anyone to home make paper at all?

As far as contemporary art goes, paper making is fun, and interesting.

K
Galations 2:20

Offline David R. Pennington

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Re: Paper
« Reply #4 on: June 03, 2017, 04:44:24 AM »
The original deed to my grandmother's homeplace was recorded on sheepskin. I tanned out a little button buck once and made a little journal out of it. It writes real nice with india ink and a quill.
VITA BREVIS- ARS LONGA

Offline WKevinD

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Re: Paper
« Reply #5 on: June 03, 2017, 06:44:46 AM »
Just a side note: Ben Franklin had the contract to supply special paper for currency. It had mica flakes in it to help differentiate and expose fake bills.

Kevin
PEACE is that glorious moment in history when everyone stands around reloading.  Thomas Jefferson

Offline axelp

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Re: Paper
« Reply #6 on: June 05, 2017, 04:03:26 PM »
I wonder where Franklin got this specialty paper. Was it imported or domestically produced?
Galations 2:20

Offline axelp

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Re: Paper
« Reply #7 on: June 05, 2017, 04:06:10 PM »
Here is what I found so far:

In the late 1680s William Rittenhouse immigrated to America from Holland. A papermaker by trade, his first stop was New York. Since there were no printers there, and thus no demand for his product, he moved to Philadelphia. He settled in Germantown, which was located outside of Philadelphia and, as its name suggests, was home to many German and Dutch immigrants. Rittenhouse, himself German by birth, had learned the papermaking trade in Amsterdam.

Soon after his arrival in Philadelphia, Rittenhouse went into partnership with a printer named William Bradford and two other men to construct a paper mill along the Wissahickon Creek. Although he owned one-fourth of the new company, Rittenhouse was clearly the most important member of the group; the others relied on his skill to build and operate the mill.

That a paper mill was built near Germantown was no coincidence. It made sense in terms of both the source of the raw materials as well as the location of potential customers for the finished paper. In that period, paper was made from the pulp of linen rags. The cloth scraps were pounded by a water-powered trip hammer in the paper mill. There was a steady supply of scrap linen in Germantown, since the Germans and Dutch of that settlement were known as skilled weavers of linen cloth. Linen is made from the fibers of the flax plant, and large quantities of flax were grown in the surrounding countryside. So from field to loom, and cloth to pulp, Germantown produced the necessary raw materials for the manufacture of paper. (The "brotherhood" of the cloth and paper making trades is related in first poem of Student Handout 1- Poems about Papermaking.)

Likewise Germantown's location just seven miles outside of Philadelphia made it convenient for getting the product to customers. Philadelphia was already a significant colonial city by the turn of the eighteenth century, and so it was a growing market for paper. One of the mill's most important customers was Bradford, a successful printer and one of the mill's founding members.

By 1696 Bradford had gotten into quarrels with some of his patrons and financial backers, and so he left Philadelphia for New York. He leased his interest in the paper mill to Rittenhouse and his son Klaus for ten years in exchange for a set number of reams of printing and writing paper annually. (Bradford's interest in the mill, along with his departure to New York, is referenced in the second poem of Student Handout 1- Poems about Papermaking.) Bradford's departure from Philadelphia served to expand the paper mill's market to New York as well. In fact, until around 1710 all the American paper used in Philadelphia and New York came from the Rittenhouse mill. By this time a second paper mill was constructed near the first by William DeWeese, a relative of the Rittenhouse family.

By 1704 Bradford had abandoned his claims, and by 1706 Rittenhouse had bought out the interests of the other two partners, thus making him sole owner of the prosperous mill. His family stayed in the papermaking business for the next four generations.
Galations 2:20

Offline WKevinD

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Re: Paper
« Reply #8 on: June 06, 2017, 04:10:24 AM »
I wonder where Franklin got this specialty paper. Was it imported or domestically produced?
" On Jan. 4 1776 Steven Crane of Milton MA sold to the Massachusetts Currency Committee 13 reams of Money Paper which was paid for by Paul Revere."
"The principale source for the thick coarse paper for the Pennsylvania, Delaware and Continental issues wasIvy Mills (Tom Wilcox proprietor) of Glen Mills PA where the paper with blue fibers and mica was produced.
"Ben Franklin also obtained two types of poly chromed or marbled paper for a 1775 $20. Continental Currency bill"
from Early Paper Money of America Eric P Newman

Kevin
PEACE is that glorious moment in history when everyone stands around reloading.  Thomas Jefferson

Online Robby

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Re: Paper
« Reply #9 on: June 06, 2017, 03:39:16 PM »
Lot of roads and place names around here dealing with mills. Triphammer, Powder Mill, the next road over is Paper mill.
Robin
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