No. Xerox paper, like any other paper, is made up of wood pulp and additives and contains multiple elements.
Xerox Paper, that is, paper sold with the Xerox brand on it, is available in a wide variety of styles and sizes. Some are suited only for very special functions, but the majority is plain paper suitable for use in copiers, printers and other places you would want to use "regular" paper.
Xerox paper, and equivalent lower-priced paper of the same quality, can be purchased from office supply stores. Larger branches of stores such as Asda also sell this paper as it is now widely used in the home.
Xerox which at the time was called Haloid Xerox (note: name didn't change to Xerox until 1961)
No, it is not legal to photocopy paper money.
The suggested paper for a Xerox printer will be different depending on the particular machine. Check the Users manual. It will tell you what papers are preferred, and what papers are accepted in that machine.
Photocopy paper is a type of paper specifically designed for use with photocopiers and printers. It is typically lightweight and smooth to ensure optimal performance during printing and copying processes. Photocopy paper is commonly used in offices and businesses for creating duplicates of documents.
There are 10 reams of paper in a standard carton of letter-sized Xerox branded paper. However, there are also cartons that hold only 5 reams of letter paper, and larger paper sizes are also packed with a smaller number of reams per carton.
In 1963, Xerox introduced the Xerox 813, the first desktop plain-paper copier, bringing Carlson's vision of a copier that could fit on anyone's office desk into a reality.
The trademark, Xerox is derived from the word 'xerography", which describes the process used in the original Xerox plain paper copiers. Xerography is an invented term and comes from the root words "xero," Greek for "dry," and "graphos," Greek for "writing."
The word Xerox is not an acronym. It is derived from the invented word "xerography" which describes the process of plain paper copying invented in 1938 by Chester Carlson and means "dry writing."
The more common options for coloured copier paper are Xerox colour expression, Hammermill colour paper. These can be purchase from: Staples, Paper Cutz, Sam's Club, Amazon.
Paper is not a single element.