wove mould - vertaling naar Engels
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wove mould - vertaling naar Engels

WRITING PAPER WITH A UNIFORM SURFACE, NOT RIBBED OR WATERMARKED
Wove; Whatman paper
  • 1764 colonial currency on wove paper, printed by Franklin & Hall; Philadelphia, PA.
  • [[Mary Cassatt]], ''Young Woman in a Black and Green Bonnet'', 1890, [[pastel]] on tan wove paper, [[Princeton University Art Museum]]

wove mould      
(n.) = forma de papel vitela
Ex: In the case of a wove mould the mesh of the wire pattern is measured in wires per cm.
wove         
(adj.) = verjurado
Ex: The dandy was also a light-weight roller, but it was surfaced with wire mesh and it imposed its own watermark on the even wove texture that was made by the wove machine wire.
----
* wove dandy = rodillo en vitela
* wove mould = forma de papel vitela
* wove paper = papel vitela, papel avitelado
mouldy         
  • Spores from green mold growing on an orange, 1000× wet mount
DIVERSE GROUP OF FUNGI
Moldy; Filamentous fungus; Filamentous fungi; Mouldy; Mould; Bread mold; Mould Spores; Mould spores; Toxic mould; Mold (fungus)
mohoso
enmohecido

Definitie

mould
(moulds, moulding, moulded)
Note: in AM, use 'mold'
1.
A mould is a hollow container that you pour liquid into. When the liquid becomes solid, it takes the same shape as the mould.
Spoon the mixture carefully into the mould...
...jelly moulds.
N-COUNT
2.
If a person fits into or is cast in a mould of a particular kind, they have the characteristics, attitudes, behaviour, or lifestyle that are typical of that type of person.
He was from the same mould as the men she had gazed at worshipfully when a child: rich, handsome, of impeccable social standing.
N-COUNT: usu with supp
If you say that someone breaks the mould, you mean that they do completely different things from what has been done before or from what is usually done.
Memorial services have become tedious and expected. I would like to help break the mould...
PHRASE: V inflects
3.
If you mould a soft substance such as plastic or clay, you make it into a particular shape or into an object.
Using 2 spoons, mould the cheese mixture into small balls or ovals...
VERB: V n into n
4.
To mould someone or something means to change or influence them over a period of time so that they develop in a particular way.
She was only 17 at the time and the experience moulded her personality...
Too often we try to mold our children into something they do not wish to be.
= form, shape
VERB: V n, V n into n
5.
When something moulds to an object or when you mould it there, it fits round the object tightly so that the shape of the object can still be seen.
You need a malleable pillow that will mould to the curves of your neck...
She stood there, the wind moulding the dress around her.
VERB: V to/around/round n, V n around/round/to n
6.
Mould is a soft grey, green, or blue substance that sometimes forms in spots on old food or on damp walls or clothes.
N-MASS
see also leaf mould

Wikipedia

Wove paper

Wove paper is a type of paper first created centuries ago in the Orient, and subsequently introduced to England, Europe and the American colonies in the mid-eighteenth century. Hand-made wove paper was first produced by using a wooden mould that contained a finely woven brass vellum (wire cloth), upon which the paper pulp was applied and dried, creating a smooth, uniform surface. Prior to the mid-nineteenth century, paper pulp consisted of cotton and linen rags that were mixed with water and reduced to a fibrous material that was applied to the mould. The appearance of wove paper differs from that of laid paper, which produced a more textured surface due to the manner in which the wire mesh within the paper mould was constructed. The traditional laid pattern consisted of a series of wide-spaced lines (chain lines) parallel to the shorter sides of the sheet and more narrowly spaced lines (laid lines) at right angles to the chain lines.

While the technique of manufacturing wove paper in the Orient originated using natural materials such as fabric and bamboo to create mesh within the mould, eighteenth-century laid and wove paper modernized this process by using woven wire. The originator of the wove papermaking technique using wire appears to have been James Whatman (1702–1759) from Kent, England.

For approximately 500 years, European paper makers could only produce laid paper. In 1757, John Baskerville printed his famous edition of Virgil on a this new kind of smooth paper, later referred to as wove (known in Europe as Vélin). The wove paper used in Baskerville's special edition of Virgil is now known to have been made by the elder James Whatman.

America's introduction to wove paper came through the hands of Benjamin Franklin, who, during his tenure in England from 1757 to 1762, befriended John Baskerville, visiting his office in Birmingham on multiple occasions. Baskerville was revered for his continual improvements in typeface, press machinery, printing ink and wove paper in the mid-late 1750s. Franklin procured up to six copies of Baskerville's Virgil directly from the source, at which time paper historians believe Franklin was first acquainted with wove paper.

When Franklin returned to the American colonies in 1762, he decided to utilize this new type of paper first in printing colonial currency in Philadelphia. Examples of Franklin's use of wove paper in currency appear as early as 1764. This particular note, dated June 18, 1764, printed by Benjamin Franklin and David Hall was issued to the Province of Pennsylvania. Franklin became a great supporter of this superior paper type, and is credited for introducing wove paper to France in 1777.

The creation of wove paper in the American colonies originated through the paper mill of Thomas Willcox at his WIllcox Mill at Ivy Mills in Chester, Pennsylvania. Thomas Willcox and Benjamin Franklin maintained a collegial and personal relationship over decades of collaboration when Franklin ran the press of the Pennsylvania Gazette. Willcox supplied paper for the Gazette and was the exclusive provider of paper for the printing of colonial currency.

Franklin was aware of Whatman's new wove paper used in Baskerville's special edition of Virgil. As such, paper historians believe that Franklin potentially brought back wove wire moulds and samples of Whatman wove paper to the colonies upon returning in 1762, and, in turn, Franklin introduced this new papermaking technique to his close friend and colleague, Thomas WIllcox to use in the manufacture of currency paper. 1764 was a pivotal year for colonial currency printing, as British statesman, George Grenville introduced the Currency Act, which attempted to prohibit the American colonies from producing their own currency. Franklin returned to England in November, 1764, in part, to diplomatically resolve England's monopolization of currency.

In response to deteriorating currency printed on laid paper, Franklin was keenly aware of the need to produce currency on a durable paper such as wove, and to increase paper manufacture throughout the colonies through paper mills such as the WIllcox Mill.

Thomas Willcox employed the most skilled wire mould maker in the American colonies at this time, named Nathan Sellers. Nathan and his father, John Sellers were the first wove wire mould makers to produce wove paper through the Willcox Mill at Ivy Mills. Detailed account ledgers of the Sellers contain entries for the purchase of wove wire mould supplies as early as 1773.

During the 1770s in colonial America, wove paper was primarily created and used as a printing paper for currency, books, and bound account ledgers. Due to the paper crisis in 1776 resulting from the restriction of imported goods and paper supplies from England during the Revolutionary conflict, the production of laid and wove paper in the colonies was of utmost importance. Benjamin Franklin again led the charge for the collection of cotton and linen rags to make paper pulp, as well as the development of multiple paper mills in the colonies to ensure that essential paper production could flourish in America throughout the Revolution.

With the establishment of the paper machine (1807), the manufacture of paper on a wove wire base would become the predominant standard in the world, with laid paper being relegated to certain specialist uses, such as being used as a support for charcoal drawings. Today more than 99% of the world's paper is made in this manner.