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  2. Coffee bag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffee_bag

    Large bulk bags, burlap bags or gunny sacks are traditionally used for storage and transport of coffee beans. Often, it is made of jute and has a content of 60 kilograms (130 pounds); this type of bag originated in Brazil and became a worldwide standard. [2]

  3. Gunny sack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunny_sack

    Sack made from hemp burlap Stacks of coffee bags, Ethiopia Potato sacks transported by horses in Colorado, 1890s. A gunny sack, also known as a gunny shoe, burlap sack, hessian sack or tow sack, is a large sack, traditionally made of burlap (Hessian fabric) formed from jute, hemp, sisal, or other natural fibres, usually in the crude spun form of tow.

  4. Hessian fabric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hessian_fabric

    Hessian jute bags (commonly known as gunnysacks) are used to ship wool, tobacco, and cotton, as well as foodstuffs such as coffee, flour, vegetables, and grains. Hessian jute's ability to allow the contents of bags to breathe makes it excellent for preventing or minimizing rotting due to trapped moisture.

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  6. Jute trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jute_trade

    Jute coffee bags are perhaps the most famous product, known as hessian or burlap. These sacks found a military use starting in the Crimean War, and then in World War I the British War Office awarded their entire 1916 contract for sandbags to a Greek-Indian firm in Calcutta. [6] It has been used in the fishing, construction, art and in the arms ...

  7. Sackcloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sackcloth

    Hessian sackcloth or burlap is not the intended biblical meaning, according to a number of scholarly sources: but the identification represents a common misconception based on phonetic association. "Sackcloth, usually made of black goat hair, was used by the Israelites and their neighbors in times of mourning or social protest."