Louis nicholas Robert
She invented the square bottom paper bag machine.
He invented a machine to produce paper
The first 'Fourdrinier machine' (the World's first paper machine) was invented by Frenchman Nicholas Louis Robert. It was then perfected by engineers in England and installed at Frogmore Paper Mill in Hemel Hempstead, England in 1803. The machine was named after the wealthy brothers Henry and Sealy Fourdrinier who funded it's manufacture.
The mimeograph machine was invented in 1876 by Thomas Edison. It was used for creating multiple copies of documents by transferring ink through a stencil onto paper.
Margaret E. Knight invented a machine that could automatically fold and glue paper bags, which greatly improved the efficiency of bag production. The machine she patented in 1871 is still used in modern paper bag manufacturing.
Mechanical paper, often referred to as "machine-made paper," was developed in the early 19th century. The invention is attributed to the French engineer Nicolas-Louis Robert, who created a machine for continuous paper production in 1799. His design was later refined and commercialized by the Fourdrinier brothers in England, leading to the widespread use of the paper-making machine. This innovation revolutionized the paper industry by allowing for the mass production of paper.
None. Samuel Slocum invented a machine that stuck pins into paper for the purpose of selling the pins he manufactured. The stapler or paper fastener was not invented until many years later.
(1870) Margret Knight invents a device to cut, fold and paste paper bag bottoms
who invented the lasting machine
the milling machine was invented in 1818.
Karl Drais, a German inventor, created the first Stenotype which used a punched paper strip in 1830. The machine was then known as a shorthand machine, the word Stenotype was not used until around 1910.