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  2. Cotton paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cotton_paper

    High-quality cotton fiber paper is known to last hundreds of years without appreciable fading, discoloration, or deterioration, [1] so it is often used for important documents, such as the archival copies of dissertations or theses. As a rule of thumb, for each percentage point of cotton fiber, a user may expect one year of resisting ...

  3. Ingres paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingres_paper

    The toothiness allows the paper to take charcoal easily and evenly. Ingres paper is favored in book arts for its antique appearance and pH neutrality. Prominent manufactures include Canson, Hahnemühle (sometimes called "German Ingres"), and Fabriano. Ingres paper has a high rag content (around 65%) and is gelatin sized. It is available in a ...

  4. Etilmon J. Stark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etilmon_J._Stark

    Etilmon Justus Stark (May, 1867 – January 1, 1962) was an American ragtime composer and arranger, the eldest son of ragtime publisher John Stark.His best-known works include the pieces "Trombone Johnsen" (1902), "Billiken Rag" (1913), and "Gum Shoe" (1917), and the arrangements for the collection "Fifteen Standard High Class Rags" (1912), popularly known as "The Red Back Book".

  5. India paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India_paper

    India paper is a type of paper which from 1875 has been based on bleached hemp and rag fibres, that produced a very thin, tough opaque white paper. It has a basis weight of 20 pounds (30 g/m 2 ; typical office paper is 80 g/m 2 ), yet bulks 1,000 pages to the inch (390 per centimetre).

  6. Manila paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manila_paper

    The Guggenheim claims that this creation of manila paper was a way "of recycling manila rope, previously used on ships." [8] The resulting paper was strong, water-resistant, and flexible. [8] Manila paper was originally made out of old Manila hemp ropes which were extensively used on ships, having replaced true hemp.

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  8. Rag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rag

    The Rag, an underground paper in Austin, Texas, 1966–1977; Rag (student society), a student-run charitable fundraising group; Rag (typography), the ragged edge of a block of text; Recombination-activating gene, encoding enzymes RAG-1 and RAG-2; RAG rating (Red, Amber, Green), a traffic light rating system

  9. Sanders portrait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanders_portrait

    A sample of the rag paper label was sent to Roelf Beukens at the IsoTrace Laboratory associated with the University of Toronto. The radiocarbon dating concluded that the rag paper could date between 1475 and 1640. [14] Dr. Marie Claude Corbeil suggests that the label was probably affixed within a few decades of Shakespeare's death in 1616. [2]