Educational in Nature
Educational in Nature

About GPEducation Station

Activities
SUBJECT:
Paper Recycling




Paper Recycling Throughout History
Paper recycling has been around as long as paper itself

Around 2,000 years ago, the Chinese discovered that they could use a thin paste of mulberry bark, hemp and rags to make the very first piece of paper. Take a look at some creative papermaking and recycling throughout history.
From Rags to Paper
From Rags To Paper
Recycling was important in colonial America. Back then, people did not know how to make paper from wood. They used cloth rags instead. Rags were so scarce that some mills advertised in the newspapers to urge the colonists to save rags for use in the paper mills.
From Rags to Paper
A Recycling Pioneer
Mathias Koops was among the first to investigate whether he could make paper from cheaper, more plentiful materials. He received three papermaking patents in 1800 and 1801. One was for the removal of printing and writing ink from wastepaper before it was reused. The other two patents were for the manufacture of paper from straw, hay, thistles, hemp, flax and different kinds of wood and bark.
Ask Your Mummy
Ask Your Mummy
During the Civil War, rags became scarce. To get an additional supply of cloth to make paper, Augustus Stanwick imported mummies from Egypt to the United States. The mills made paper out of their linen wrappings. (Don’t try this with your mummies at home.)
Lon Chaney, Jr. as the Mummy, TM Chaney Enterprises, Inc. 1997. Photograph courtesy FAMOUS MONSTERS OF FILMLAND magazine.
A Paperless School
A Paperless School
Until people learned how to make paper from wood, paper was so rare and expensive that students used chalk and slates in school to do their lessons.
Paper Fashions 
                        and Art
Paper Fashions and Art
Not all recycled paper comes back as paper or paper products:
Walk on old magazines. One company makes shoes from recycled materials, including fiber from old magazines.
News you can wear. Peruvian women make rolled paper necklaces out of coiled strips of paper cut from magazines.
Art or trash? Many artists use scrap material in their work. Henri Matisse used different types of found paper and printed material to make collages. Pablo Picasso sculpted three-dimensional heads from cardboard and collage materials.







 
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