Mar 5, 2007

How to make hand made paper from rice straw


Materials:

* rice straw
* alum
* sodium hydroxide
* cheese cloth
* sodium hypochloride
* rosin size

Equipment:

mould -- sieve or fine screen, strains the pulp
deckle -- wooden frame, confines the pulp during sheet forming
caldron or drum -- should be alkali or acid-resistant
double-decked screen box:
upper deck: 20 mesh screen bottom box
lower deck: 100 mesh screen bottom box
wooden mallet -- press

Preparation of raw materials:

Separate rice stalk from the leaves and panicles. Out these into 5-7 cm. pieces and then wash with water. Pulping Boil stalks in 2.0% sodium hydroxide solution using liquor to material ratio of 10:1 for 2-3 hours or until stalks become soft. Immediately after boiling, drain the stalks and transfer these into the screened bottom box. Wash stalks thoroughly with water. Pound stalks with a wooden mallet. The screen the pulp on double-decked screen-bottom box by running pulp under high water pressure.

Bleaching:

Bleach the pulp either by single- or multi-stage bleaching process. The bleaching conditions are as follows:

Bleach solution (sodium hypochlorite)- 2%
Consistency - 10%
Duration - 15 min.
Temperature - 35-45 C
Thoroughly wash the pulp with water after each stage.

Papermaking:

1. Prior to sheet forming, allow the pulp to swell in water at 2% consistency for 30 minutes.

2. Drain the pulp and form this into balls.

3. Beat the pulp with a wooden mallet until it is free of lumps when suspended in water.

4. Transfer the beaten pulp into the paper vat.

5. Add water to the desired consistency of the slurry. If you desire thin paper, add more water; if thick paper, put less water.

6. Add paper additives: rosin size (1%) and alum (2%)

7. Dip the mould fitted in the deckle into the paper vat at an angle, straighten out and lift it to catch an amount of the solution on top of the screen.

8. Tilt the mould and deckle back and forth to the maker side and throw excess slurry back to the paper vat.

9. Shake the mould and deckle.

10. Tilt the mould again back and forth until most of the water comes out through the screen.

11. Then separate the mould from the deckle and lay it on the pieces of blotting material like cheesecloth.

12. Cover this with another piece of blotting material.

13. Pressed with a roller, slowly separate the screen from the street.

14. Lay the sheet on a plan galvanized iron, cover it with blotters and press it four times with a roller.

15. Remove the blotters and hang the sheet to dry. The handmade paper produced is creamy white, 0.43 mm. thick. It is suitable for special paper products like greeting cards, calling cards, and other novelty paper items.

Source: Technology, Vol. IX, No. 4, 1987, photo courtesy of www.ratantextiles.com