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toilet paper???

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Fatniss Evercream

Fashionable Sex Symbol

PostPosted: Mon Jan 01, 2007 10:10 am


I saw how they made it eek alot of trees eek
PostPosted: Mon Jan 01, 2007 3:31 pm


Well what's the process?

rikuHEART
Captain


Fatniss Evercream

Fashionable Sex Symbol

PostPosted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 10:08 am


i just saw that there is alot of paper in use since i see all that paper and it is a mass production mass! eek
PostPosted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 10:09 am


> When and where was toilet paper first invented? <<

*China…AD 1391 - The Bureau of Imperial Supplies began producing 720,000 sheets of toilet paper a year, each sheet measuring two feet by three feet. For use by the Emperors.
*USA…1857 - New Yorker Joseph C. Gayetty produced the first packaged bathroom tissue in the United States in 1857. The Gayetty Firm from New Jersey produced the first toilet paper named "The Therapeutic Paper". It contained an abundance of aloe, a curative addition. The company sold it in packs of 500 sheets for fifty cents, and Joseph Gayetty had his name printed on each sheet!
*USA…1890 - The Scott Paper Company is the first company to manufacture tissue on a roll, specifically for the use of toilet paper. Faced with the consumers' resistance toward the "unmentionable" product, Scott came up with the idea of customizing rolls for every merchant-customer they had. Under this private-label arrangement, Scott purchased large "jumbo" rolls of paper from various paper mills and converted them into packages of small rolls and stacked sheets.
*Great Britain…1880- British Perforated Paper Company

>> When was the first roll of toilet paper made and by whom? <<

Scott Paper Company marketed the first rolls of toilet paper. The Company was founded in 1879 by brothers E. Irvin and Clarence Scott in Philadelphia and specialized in producing toilet paper. At first they purchased paper and tissue from outside suppliers and cut, rolled and packaged the paper. They converted large parent rolls of tissue into small rolls and stacked sheets and began to market the product through drug and variety stores under private label names. Then, in 1896, Irvin's son Arthur joined the company at the age of 21. He convinced his father and uncle to phase out their private label business and concentrate on their own brand names. With this, Scott purchased the private label name Waldorf from a Philadelphian 'paper jobber' named Albert DeCernea in 1902 and began producing this as their first brand name. As sales grew, it became evident that production changes were necessary to guarantee consistency. In 1910, Scott bought an abandoned soap factory in Chester, 5 miles south of Philadelphia for $85,000 and began making their own parent rolls of tissue, 72" wide at 150-200 feet per minute instead of buying from others. Rolls were sold with either 650 or 1,000 perforated sheets. In 1915, Scott installed an advanced, high-speed Fourdrinier papermaking machine. It made paper 148" wide at 500 feet per minute. In 1921, their brand, Waldorf represented 64% of Scott's total case sales. By 1925 Scott became the leading toilet paper company in the world. (On July 17, 1995 Scott was acquired by Kimberly Clark)

>> Early Marketing <<

The roll did not easily fit into the consumer market at first. At the time, society did not speak of the subject frequently. It was quite 'unmentionable" to talk about this product in the conservative, Victorian era. However, during this time indoor plumbing was improving and the public had a desire for better hygiene.

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>> An early advertisement <<

Scott advertisements were suggesting that "over 65% of middle-aged men and women suffered from some sort of rectal disease". Inferior toilet paper was deemed to be responsible. It was printed in Scott advertisements that "harsh toilet tissue may cause serious injury". The ad said " ScotTissue, Sani-tissue and Waldorf are famous bathroom tissues specifically processed to satisfy the three requirements doctors say toilet tissue must have to be safe: absorbency-softness-chemical purity". Each sheet, it said was made of "thirsty fibers." Scott tissue was made from the finest ingredients and "they are neither acid nor alkaline in reaction. Each sheet is fully sterilized in manufacture" it read.

>> The first paper roll towel- the ScotTowel. <<

There is a story that in 1907, a teacher in Philadelphia blamed a mild cold epidemic on the fact that students used the same cloth towel. So she cut up paper into squares and used them as individual towels. Around that time Scott was experimenting with a new type of crepe tissue. It was so thick that it couldn't be cut and rolled into toilet paper. So Arthur Scott ordered it to be made into rolls of towels and perforated into individual 13" x 18" sheets. This was called the Sani-Towels. Advertisements said, " For use once by one user." Success was helped by states that outlawed the use of cloth-roll towels because of spreading disease.

>> What did people use before toilet paper was invented? <<

*Newsprint, paper catalogue pages in early US
*Hayballs, Scraper/gompf stick kept in container by the privy in the Middle Ages
*Discarded sheep's wool in the Viking Age, England
*Frayed end of an old anchor cable was used by sailing crews from Spain and Portugal *Medieval Europe- Straw, hay, grass, gompf stick
*Corn cobs, Sears Roebuck catalog, mussel shell, newspaper, leaves, sand- United States
*Water and your left hand, India
*Pages from a book, British Lords
*Coconut shells in early Hawaii
*Lace was used by French Royalty
*Public Restrooms in Ancient Rome- A sponge soaked in salt water, on the end of a stick
*The Wealthy in Ancient Rome-Wool and Rosewater
*French Royalty-lace, hemp
*Hemp & wool were used by the elite citizens of the world
*Defecating in the river was very common internationally
*Bidet, France
*Snow and Tundra Moss were used by early Eskimos

Fatniss Evercream

Fashionable Sex Symbol


rikuHEART
Captain

PostPosted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 9:20 pm


So what would be a better alternative??
PostPosted: Tue Jan 02, 2007 9:26 pm


You can buy environmentally friendly toilet paper. It's slightly more expensive (depending on the brand) but I think it's worth it considering the tree's you save. The brand name I know of best is Seventh Generation.

Quote:
Seventh Generation paper products are made from 100% recycled paper, with a minimum of 80% post-consumer materials.


-Indy

Indecisive Monkey


Fatniss Evercream

Fashionable Sex Symbol

PostPosted: Wed Jan 03, 2007 9:15 am


Indecisive Monkey
You can buy environmentally friendly toilet paper. It's slightly more expensive (depending on the brand) but I think it's worth it considering the tree's you save. The brand name I know of best is Seventh Generation.

Quote:
Seventh Generation paper products are made from 100% recycled paper, with a minimum of 80% post-consumer materials.


-Indy
cool


that could be the solution using recycled toilet paper
PostPosted: Wed Jan 03, 2007 5:34 pm


icecast
Indecisive Monkey
You can buy environmentally friendly toilet paper. It's slightly more expensive (depending on the brand) but I think it's worth it considering the tree's you save. The brand name I know of best is Seventh Generation.

Quote:
Seventh Generation paper products are made from 100% recycled paper, with a minimum of 80% post-consumer materials.


-Indy
cool


that could be the solution using recycled toilet paper
Yeah, but you wouldn't be able to recycle it. neutral It's definately better than normal toilet paper though, for sure.

rikuHEART
Captain


Prinsesse Maggie

PostPosted: Fri Jan 19, 2007 11:00 am


rikuHEART
So what would be a better alternative??
They still make bidets, even handheld portable ones you can use on the go. I also read about a number of parents who were using cloth diapers and wipes for their babies, and it occurred to them they could use cloth wipes for themselves too.
PostPosted: Sat Jan 20, 2007 6:40 pm


adabyron
rikuHEART
So what would be a better alternative??
They still make bidets, even handheld portable ones you can use on the go. I also read about a number of parents who were using cloth diapers and wipes for their babies, and it occurred to them they could use cloth wipes for themselves too.
Eh? What are bidets?

And on another rather...em...interesting idea...I've heard of cloth pads for women. eek Ew I say, though environmentally friendly. But carrying around dirty pads all day until I can get home to wash them? No thanks. gonk

rikuHEART
Captain


Prinsesse Maggie

PostPosted: Mon Jan 22, 2007 1:53 pm


rikuHEART
adabyron
rikuHEART
So what would be a better alternative??
They still make bidets, even handheld portable ones you can use on the go. I also read about a number of parents who were using cloth diapers and wipes for their babies, and it occurred to them they could use cloth wipes for themselves too.
Eh? What are bidets?

And on another rather...em...interesting idea...I've heard of cloth pads for women. eek Ew I say, though environmentally friendly. But carrying around dirty pads all day until I can get home to wash them? No thanks. gonk
Bidets are devices that basically shoot water at you to clean you off. I know nothing about this company or their products, but they give a good explanation about bidets. They're quite popular in some parts of the world.

I have used cloth pads before, when at home and I won't need to carry them around. I'm more of a fan of menstrual cups like the diva cup or the keeper.
PostPosted: Fri Jan 26, 2007 5:18 pm


adabyron
rikuHEART
adabyron
rikuHEART
So what would be a better alternative??
They still make bidets, even handheld portable ones you can use on the go. I also read about a number of parents who were using cloth diapers and wipes for their babies, and it occurred to them they could use cloth wipes for themselves too.
Eh? What are bidets?

And on another rather...em...interesting idea...I've heard of cloth pads for women. eek Ew I say, though environmentally friendly. But carrying around dirty pads all day until I can get home to wash them? No thanks. gonk
Bidets are devices that basically shoot water at you to clean you off. I know nothing about this company or their products, but they give a good explanation about bidets. They're quite popular in some parts of the world.

I have used cloth pads before, when at home and I won't need to carry them around. I'm more of a fan of menstrual cups like the diva cup or the keeper.
O.O Those actually sound pretty nice...

rikuHEART
Captain


Mouseheart_the_warrior

PostPosted: Sun Jan 28, 2007 6:45 pm


Wow, I want a couple! (divacups!)
PostPosted: Thu Apr 24, 2008 7:42 pm


I've always wanted to try a DivaCup, since I hear they're both better for your body (less risk of TSS!) and for the environment. I think I might go out and buy one tomorrow.

Nostalgie

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treeSHADOWS//guild of the environmentally conscious

 
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