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  2. Tea bag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_bag

    Some bags have a heat-sealable thermoplastic such as PVC or polypropylene as a component fiber on the inner tea bag surface, making them not fully biodegradable. [9] [10] Some newer paper tea bags are made in a circular shape. Tetrahedral tea bags were introduced by the PG Tips brand in 1997. [11]

  3. PG Tips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PG_Tips

    The tetrahedral bag was designed to help the tea leaves move more freely, as loose tea moves in a teapot, and supposedly create a better infusion. One 2011 version of the product packaging made the claim: "The PG Tips pyramid tea bag gives the tea leaves 50% more room to move around than a flat conventional tea bag. So the tea bag works more ...

  4. Harney & Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harney_&_Sons

    A metal tea box of Harney & Sons's English Breakfast Tea Harney & Son Darjeeling Tea Bag. Harney & Sons is an American tea company founded in 1983 in Salisbury, Connecticut, and now located in Millerton, New York. [1] It specializes in high-quality loose teas and herbal teas, and offers several products that are organic and certified kosher.

  5. Your Tea Bag Could Be Releasing Billions Of Microplastics ...

    www.aol.com/tea-bag-could-releasing-billions...

    For the study, researchers tested tea bags that were made from common packagings like nylon-6, polypropylene, and cellulose. Using new scanning technology, the scientists discovered that pretty ...

  6. Tea bags and these 11 foods are likely exposing you to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/tea-bags-11-foods-likely...

    They found that tea bags made with the plastic substance polypropylene—used to heat-seal tea bags shut—released about 1.2 billion small pieces of plastic per milliliter of tea, while bags made ...

  7. Tea Forté - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_Forté

    Available as individual servings, the tea is sold in elongated pyramidal tea bags, or infusers, made and packaged in China out of recycled plastic. [1] The tall, square pyramid design of the infuser is trademarked, following the tradition of a tetrahedral Japanese design which permits loose tea to swell as it steeps.