n.
Paper made on a closely woven wire roller or mold and having a faint mesh pattern.
[Variant past participle of WEAVE .]
| Dictionary: wove paper |
[Variant past participle of WEAVE .]
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| Marketing Dictionary: wove paper |
Rough-textured uncoated paper finish created during the papermaking process by pressing a woven wire cloth, wrapped around the dandy roll, into the newly formed paper before the water content of the pulp has been removed. See also laid paper; watermark.
| WordNet: wove paper |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
writing paper having a very faint mesh pattern
| Wikipedia: Wove paper |
Wove paper is a writing paper with a uniform surface, not ribbed or watermarked. The papermaking mould's wires run parallel to each other to produce laid paper, but they are woven together into a fine wire mesh for wove paper. The originator of this new papermaking technique was James Whatman (1702-59) from Kent, England.
For 500 years European paper makers could only produce what came to be called laid paper. In 1757 John Baskerville printed his famous edition of Virgil on a new kind of paper, called Wove (known in Europe as Vélin). This paper is now known to have been made by the elder James Whatman. Twenty-five years later (1780's) the manufacture of wove paper spread quickly to other paper mills in England, and was also being developed in France and America. All this took place over a decade before a machine to replace making paper by hand was conceived. With the establishment of the papermachine (1807), the manufacture of paper on a wove wire base never looked back. Today more than 99% of the world's paper is made in this way.[1]
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