the fibers satrt to get shorter and thin very thin and they get purple like a grape
Recycled paperboard, which is manufactured from a combination of recycled fibers from various grades of paper stock, with the larger portion of the pulp being recycled fibers and the lesser amount being virgin fibers.
Yes, paper can be made of many different fibers, wood, cotton, hemp, cloth, and recycled paper. So paper made from hemp can be recycled.
Rag bond paper is stronger than recycled paper because its fibers are longer.
recycled paper, plant material (stem fibers, leaf fibers, bast fibers), and plain gelatin (for "sizing")
Paper fibers shorten and break down each time paper is recycled, reducing its quality. After being recycled multiple times, the fibers become too short to make high-quality paper products. Additionally, contamination and the need for fresh fiber to maintain paper strength limit the number of times paper can be recycled.
Because water makes the decomposing bacteria
it gets made into paper again!
Paper(s) made from recycled fibers are as good as paper made from virgin (non-recycled or secondary) fiber. One is not better than the other.
It is re-used
The most common fibers used to make paper are cellulose fibers from wood pulp, which can be obtained from softwood or hardwood trees. Other fibers, such as cotton, hemp, and bamboo, can also be used to make paper. Recycling paper also involves using recycled paper fibers as a source for making new paper.
Pulp is the softened wood fibers used to make paper. These fibers are derived from either wood or recycled paper products through a process of breaking them down and mixing them with water.
I don't see why not. Even though the paper has already been recycled, the paper still contains wood pulp and possibly other materials that is recyclable once the ink is removed; however, everytime the paper is recycled the fibers become shorter and weaker, and therefore paper can only be recycled so many times. Hope this makes sense.