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Sort from: A–C D–M N-Z
Acid Free Paper
A paper which does not contain any free acid. Special precautions are taken during manufacture to eliminate acid in order to increase the longevity of the finished paper and to provide a sheet that is suitable for contact with metals.
Antique
A quality bulky paper, particularly opaque, with a rougher surface finish. It can be made in white or in colours, be deckle edged, and either laid or wove. A good printing surface is a feature of this grade which is often used for quality books.
Art Paper
This is a general term for higher quality woodfree coated papers which have a highly polished surface. Today the term is less used because of the introduction of more categories in the sector. However ‘real art’ is still used for those woodfree coated papers considered to be of the highest quality.
Base Paper
Name given to the base sheet which is intended to be off-machine coated or converted.
Blade Coated Paper
Paper coated by a process in which the freshly applied wet coating is smoothed and the excess removed by a thin flexible metal blade which bears on the coated surface.
Bleaching
A chemical treatment used to whiten, brighten and improve the performance of pulp.
Boards
Term applied to a paper above an accepted weight. The accepted cross-over point from paper to boards varies but in general would be around 180gsm. Below this weight are papers above this weight would be boards.
Broke
Paper, which during the paper making process becomes suitable only for repulping e.g. trimmings or paper that is out of specification. This re-used material which never left the mill is not regarded as recycled.
Bulk
A term applied to the substance, thickness and feel of paper.
Calendered
Paper subjected to smoothing and polishing between stacks of highly polished steam rollers (calenders), which can form part of the dry end of the paper machine.
Cast Coating
A method of drying coated paper by contact of the freshly coated surface with a highly polished chromium plated heated surface. Cast coated papers have an extremely high gloss finish for top quality printing. The finish is obtained by the coating mix solidifying while in contact with the polished surface resulting in a similar polished surface to the paper.
CBS1
Used in bank credit forms Clearing Banks Specification 1 must be 95gsm paper and of determined rigidity, surface smoothness, fold and strength characteristics. It's chemically treated to prevent tampering.
CBS2
Used in bank credit forms Clearing Banks Specification 2 must be an 80/85gsm paper and of determined rigidity, surface smoothness, fold and strength characteristics, with low background fluorescence for OCR readability.
Chemical Pulp
Pulp made by means of chemicals that dissolve the bonding agent, called lignin, within the wood to separate the fibres.
Constat
A contraction of the words 'continuous stationery'.
Cutting to Register
Operation of slitting and cutting watermarked paper so that the watermark design falls in a given position in every sheet.
Double Coating
Coating of paper or board twice on one or both sides.
ECF (Elemental Chlorine Free)
A common definition for pulp bleached without using elemental chlorine. Originally any of the bleaching techniques for chemical pulp, when no molecular (elemental) chlorine is used.
Fastness
Resistance to colour fading.
Gloss
Gloss can refer to the reflectivity of paper itself or of the printed result on it. Gloss of paper is measured by using a Gardner gloss meter, which measures reflected light at an angle of 75 degrees, and is expressed in Gardner gloss units - the higher the number the glossier the paper surface.
Grain Direction
During manufacture the fibres in a web of paper naturally take up an alignment roughly parallel to the direction of travel of the web on the papermaking machine and this becomes the grain direction.Once guillointed down to sheet form, papers are called 'long grain' if the fibres are parallel to the long edge of the sheet, or short grain if parallel to the short edge.Grain direction can affect stiffness, folding, creasing and printing characteristics.
Graphic Papers
Papers for printing and writing.
Gsm or gm2 or g/m2
These all mean 'grams per square metre' and are a measure of the weight of a paper. For example if an 80gsm paper was in a sheet size of 1000mm x 1000mm i.e. a square metre one sheet would weigh 80 grams.
Hickey
A spot on a printed sheet caused by dust, lint or ink imperfections; particularly noticeable on solids and half tones.
Integrated Mill
A mill which starts with logs or wood chips and produces wood pulp which it then processes to make paper without intermediate drying.
Ivory Board
High quality board made in white or colours with a bright clear appearance, particularly used for visiting cards and similar high quality printed work.
Lick Coating
A light form of mineral coating, achieved by supplying the surface sizing press of the papermaking machine with coating material instead of normal surface sizing solution.
Lightweight Coated (LWC)
Coated paper below approximately 60 gsm.
Matt Paper
A coated paper with a dull smooth finish.
Mechanical Pulp
Pulp produced using a non-chemical process and instead using a grinding process. Papers made from mechanical pulp often have good opacity and bulk but yellow more quickly than paper produced from chemically made pulp. Newspapers are often printed on papers having a proportion of mechanical pulp.
NCR
An acronym meaning 'no carbon required' referring to a non-carbonless paper originally introduced by the National Cash Register Company but which is now more commonly referred to as carbonless paper.
Neutral Sized Paper
Paper sized with neutral size i.e. neither acidic nor alkaline. Neutral sizing gives the paper enhanced longevity.
Opacity
The extent to which a paper is capable of obscuring matter printed on the other side or on an underlying page. A paper with good opacity is one on which the printing on one side cannot be seen from the other under normal conditions. Usually expressed as a percentage (%).
Papyrus
An ancient writing material made from stems of the papyrus plant. Although the word ‘paper’ is derived from papyrus, papyrus itself is not paper in the normal sense.
Part Mechanical
A paper containing up to 50% mechanical pulp, the remainder being chemical pulp.
RA Series
An agreed range of paper sizes.Examples:RA1 = 610 x 860mmRA2 = 430 x 610mmRA3 = 305 x 430mm
Reel
A continuous length of paper wound on a core, irrespective of diameter, width or weight. Reels can be rewound into smaller reels or slit into coils.
Reel to Reel
A machine on which the material is supplied in reel form and comes off the machine also in reel form.
Runnability
The ability of a paper and board to perform and run through a printing press or on converting machinery without problems.
Self Contained Carbonless
A carbonless type paper which can generate an image itself through the application of pressure. Self contained carbonless papers work without the need for other top, middle or bottom carbonless sheets.
SRA Series
An agreed range of paper sizes.Examples:SRA1 = 640 x 900mmSRA2 = 450 x 640mmSRA3 = 320 x 450mm
Substance
The weight of paper or board, shown by scales, taken from a sample. The weight is almost entirely defined by grammage per square metre of a single sheet (g/m2).
TCF (Totally Chlorine Free)
Pulp produced without any chlorine or chlorinated chemical compounds.
Woodfree
A pulp or paper which contains no mechanical wood pulp. In commercial practice a small percentage of mechanical fibre is usually acceptable. It does not denote paper or pulp made from materials other than wood.
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