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  • Period writing paper

    I am considering the impression of a attorney, who because of the war, has become a battle field journalist.


    My qeustion is this, I have viewed quite a few original letters and they all or the majority seem to have wiritng lines, very similiar to notebook paper of today.

    I know that i can buy paper on legal pads and after removing it from the carboard and triming the edge, i will have something that is very close in appearance.

    However, if there is paper that is offered that is correct in both construction and layout, please let me know where it can be found.
    Richard Schimenti
    2nd Kentucky Cav. Co. D. Morgan's Raiders

  • #2
    Re: Period writing paper

    Originally posted by Morgan's raider View Post
    I am considering the impression of a attorney, who because of the war, has become a battle field journalist.


    My qeustion is this, I have viewed quite a few original letters and they all or the majority seem to have wiritng lines, very similiar to notebook paper of today.

    I know that i can buy paper on legal pads and after removing it from the carboard and triming the edge, i will have something that is very close in appearance.

    However, if there is paper that is offered that is correct in both construction and layout, please let me know where it can be found.
    Below is some information on the different types of paper and sizes.

    Keep in mind that all paper in the time period was made from cotton and linen rags so if you are after paper that has the correct content you need to look for 100% cotton rag paper (there is 25% cotton paper but I prefer the 100% cotton paper). It is usually available in letter size. I haven't found any lined paper that is cotton paper so you might be stuck with using the pad paper and trimming the top if you want to use lined paper. I have seen original notes on both white and blue lined paper.

    The sizes of paper and terms that I have found in period sources were:

    Commercial cuts of paper

    Pot - 12 ½ x 15 inches
    Cap or small cap, writing - 13 x 16 inches
    Double cap, writing - 17 x 28 inches
    Flat cap, writing - 14 x 17 inches
    Fools cap, writing - 12 ½ x 16 inches
    Double foolscap - 27 x 17 inches
    Post - 18 3/4 x 15 1/4 inches
    Folio post, writing - 17 x 22 inches (came in blue and white)
    Ledger paper (not ledger books) - 7 x 14 inches
    Imperial - 27 x 21 1/4 inches
    Super Royal - 27 x 19 inches
    Royal - 24 x 19 inches
    Demy - 19 x 15 ½ inches
    * I found reference to many more terms and sizes of commercial paper, but
    these seemed to be the most common.

    As for letter and note paper, they were prepared from the above commercial
    sizes by the stationers in various sizes and packaged.

    The terms foolscap, cap hand, post, pot, and Imperial papers originally
    denoted particular types of watermarks, but eventually came to note the
    size of the paper.

    It seems as if modern terminology for paper sizes differs from the period
    terms. Modern sizes and terminology are below.
    Foolscap - 13 ½ x 17 inches
    Double foolscap - 17 x 27 inches
    Folio - 13 ½ x 8 ½ inches (foolscap paper folded in half)
    Quarto 6 3/4 x 8 ½ inches (foolscap paper folded to make four leaves)
    Octavo 6 3/4 x 4 1/4 inches (foolscap paper fooled to make eight leaves)
    Large post - 16 1/5 x 21 inches
    Demy - 17 ½ x 22 ½ inches
    Royal - 20 x 25 inches


    There were 3 classes of paper; writing/drawing, printing and wrapping.
    There were 5 subclasses of writing/drawing paper; cream wove, yellow wove,
    blue wove, cream laid, and blue laid. Included in writing paper was
    drawing paper and drawing paper was cream wove and writing paper was laid.
    There were 2 subclasses of printing paper; laid and wove. There were 4
    subclasses of wrapping paper; blue, purple, brown and whited brown.


    Laid paper were named for the dim narrow lines water-marked on the paper.
    Plain wove paper had no water mark on the paper.

    A quire of paper was 24 sheets and a ream of paper consisted of twenty
    quires.

    The information above came from:

    ****'s Encyclopedi_a of Practical Receipts and Processes by William ****
    (185
    A Supplement to Ure's Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures, and Mines_by
    Robert Hunt (1864)
    Cole's Dictionary of Dry Goods by George S. Cole (1892)

    I hope this helps some.
    Virginia Mescher
    vmescher@vt.edu
    http://www.raggedsoldier.com

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Period writing paper

      Sir, you may try to contact Mr. Sullivan of Sullivan press. http://www.sullivanpress.com/ I am sure He would be able to possibly help you out.
      Sean M. Lamb

      [I]"Our Reg't is composed of Germans, Dutch-Americans, and Irish they being the majority and very hard set. Our company is composed of the same stock, we can not agree very well with the Irish."[/I]
      James A. Peifer
      Co. C 46th Penna. Vol. Inf.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Period writing paper

        Also try contacting Troy Groves (AZReenactor), he has recently being performing a lot of ephemera research.

        Good luck.
        - Pvt. S. Martin Aksentowitz
        1st California Co. F
        Carleton's Cannibals

        [CENTER][COLOR="Red"]Angst kommt; da werden sie Heil suchen, aber es wird nicht zu finden sein.- HESEKIEL 7.25[/COLOR][/CENTER]

        [CENTER]"To day we. . . stopped a few minutes to examine the crumbling ruins the walls were defaced with Texians traitors names and Texican Braggodocia but nary a Texican thare to answer to his name or make good his writing on the wall."
        -Eli W. Hazen, 1st California Vol. Inf.[/CENTER]

        [RIGHT][COLOR="Silver"]"Credo Quio Absurdum" - ECV[/COLOR][/RIGHT]

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Period writing paper

          Virginia,

          You wrote:

          'Laid paper were named for the dim narrow lines water-marked on the paper.
          Plain wove paper had no water mark on the paper.'

          Laid paper is made with fine wires held in a frame (the woof) with small 'cables' (warp) holding them in place resulting in the grid pattern apparent when held up to the light. A water mark is added to the wire to put the manufacturers name into the paper.

          Wove paper is made using a frame with woven screen, so the grid pattern isn't there and when held up to the light no real visible grid pattern lines are in the paper. Wove paper can have a watermark.

          Before the introduction of paper making equipment from Gavin in Philadelphia in 1860, especially a hollander, the paper out here in the State of Deseret was made using a beet grinder (similar to a hollander) and the paper was said to be as 'crude, still retaining button holes.'


          Stephen Shepherd

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Period writing paper

            Sir,
            Heres a good link and reference on period sketchbooks:

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Period writing paper

              Originally posted by Stephen Shepherd View Post
              Virginia,

              You wrote:

              'Laid paper were named for the dim narrow lines water-marked on the paper.
              Plain wove paper had no water mark on the paper.'

              Laid paper is made with fine wires held in a frame (the woof) with small 'cables' (warp) holding them in place resulting in the grid pattern apparent when held up to the light. A water mark is added to the wire to put the manufacturers name into the paper.

              Wove paper is made using a frame with woven screen, so the grid pattern isn't there and when held up to the light no real visible grid pattern lines are in the paper. Wove paper can have a watermark.

              Before the introduction of paper making equipment from Gavin in Philadelphia in 1860, especially a hollander, the paper out here in the State of Deseret was made using a beet grinder (similar to a hollander) and the paper was said to be as 'crude, still retaining button holes.'

              Stephen Shepherd
              I was only quoting only period sources in the information I presented and did not add my interpretation to the primary sources.

              For my own information and on a different subject, you mentioned using a beet grinder as a hollander. Do you know when they started making beet sugar in UT? (I assume you were referring to making beet sugar when you mentioned a beet grinder.) I've been studying sugar history in the US and am always interested in adding new information to my files.
              Virginia Mescher
              vmescher@vt.edu
              http://www.raggedsoldier.com

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Period writing paper

                Im trying to upload pics of my ggfather's letters now, but dont know if I can since theire on ROXIO anyhow they are on a wide variety of paper some exactly like the small size blue "legal pads" except these period indigo pages do not have the red margin line, some are on what seems to be pages from a journel since they have embossed edges, some are on pages from a ledger ( he was a company sargent) and a few are even in red ink! I may have tried to upload too many at once , I'll see if I cant display some
                Gary Mitchell
                2nd Va. Cavalry Co. C
                Stuart's horse artillery

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Period writing paper

                  Ok lets see if these showup!



                  [/IMG]


                  Gary Mitchell
                  2nd Va. Cavalry Co. C
                  Stuart's horse artillery

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Period writing paper

                    notice the embossed edges



                    [/IMG]
                    Gary Mitchell
                    2nd Va. Cavalry Co. C
                    Stuart's horse artillery

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Period writing paper

                      OR NOT! lets see if this on[/IMG]e posts
                      Gary Mitchell
                      2nd Va. Cavalry Co. C
                      Stuart's horse artillery

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Period writing paper

                        I have used a product called "Big Chief" or "Son of Big Chief", a retail market writing tablet. (No longer being manufactured as of January 2001, but I still have one) It has a coarser surface than newsprint, and comes with blue lines . If you leave it exposed to the air, humidity, and sunlight, it ages quite well. (At least in my experience).
                        William Lee Vanderburg
                        26th NCT

                        Robert S. Bowers / 4th NC
                        Calvin Spry / 57th NC

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Period writing paper

                          Originally posted by Army30th View Post
                          I have used a product called "Big Chief" or "Son of Big Chief", a retail market writing tablet. (No longer being manufactured as of January 2001, but I still have one) It has a coarser surface than newsprint, and comes with blue lines . If you leave it exposed to the air, humidity, and sunlight, it ages quite well. (At least in my experience).
                          If you are using the paper in an impression, do you really wanted it aged? They probably wouldn't have used aged paper since white paper was readily available. Their paper was rag paper and didn't yellow like our wood pulp paper does. I have a few original letters and notes written on white paper and it is not exactly bright white now but it is not as yellow as some paper from my school days.

                          I would only used "aged" paper if I was going to replicate an original document and wanted it to look 145 years old.
                          Virginia Mescher
                          vmescher@vt.edu
                          http://www.raggedsoldier.com

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Period writing paper

                            I have also seen references to this as 'logwood paper'.

                            Stephen Shepherd

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Period writing paper

                              BEET SEEDS!
                              THE UNDERSIGNED has on hand and for sale, One Thousand pounds of the best French Sugar Beet Seeds, arrived this fall from France by order of Elder John Taylor, at his residence in the 14th Ward, and at the Public Store.
                              A.HOAGLAND, Bishop

                              12/27/1851 Deseret News newspaper

                              Stephen Shepherd

                              Comment

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