A paper made essentially from wood pulp produced by a modified sulfate pulping process It is a comparatively coarse paper particularly noted for its strength, and in unbleached grades is primarily used as a wrapper or packaging material It can be watermarked, striped, or calendered, and it has an acceptable surface for printing Its natural unbleached color is brown but by the use of semibleached or fully bleached sulfate pulps it can be produced in lighter shades of brown, cream tints, and white In addition to its use as a wrapping paper, it is converted into such products as: grocery bags, envelopes, gummed sealing tape, asphalted papers, multiwall sacks, tire wraps, butcher wraps, waxed paper, coated paper, as well as specialty bags and sacks
Meaning "strength" in German, is an other name for unbleached sulphate pulp It is used in combination with other fibers, such as jute, to produce paper etc
A high strength paper (SUS Solid Unbleached Sulphate and SBS -Solid Bleached Sulphate) made of sulphate fiber pulp It is produced form an alkaline process of pulp manufacture and is made on a fourdrinier paper machine form virgin fibers
A paper of high strength made from sulfate pulp Kraft papers vary from unbleached Kraft used for wrapping purposes to fully bleached Kraft used for strong Bond and Ledger papers
Strong brown paper made with unbleached wood pulp and used for grocery bags, envelopes and wrapping paper L back to top Lacquer - A clear resin/solvent coating, usually glossy, applied to a printed sheet for protection or appearance
Paper made from a type of chemical wood pulp; it may be bleached or unbleached and produces a strong paper which is used for wrapping and packaging; the term comes from the German word for strong
Chemical method for producing wood pulp using caustic soda and sodium sulfide as the liquor in which the pulpwood is cooked to loosen the fibres. The process (from German kraft, "strong") produces particularly strong and durable paper; another advantage is its capability of digesting pine chips; resins dissolve in the alkaline liquor and are recovered as tall oil, a valuable by-product. Recovery of sodium compounds is important in the economy of the process. In modern kraft mills, operations are completely contained; waste streams are recycled and reused, eliminating water pollution
U.S. manufacturer and marketer of food products. It grew out of a wholesale cheese delivery business established in Chicago in 1903 by James L. Kraft. Incorporated as J.L. Kraft Bros. & Co. in 1909, it prospered by selling processed cheese to the U.S. Army during World War I. Held by various owners since 1930, Kraft was acquired in 1988 by Philip Morris Cos. (renamed Altria Group, Inc., in 2003), which also purchased Nabisco Holdings in 2000. Nabisco's business was integrated into Kraft's operations