*Edit* M2 can print a box of paper in 3x plus 20 hours.
10000 boxes to get 10000 boxes!
3.5
The 'mathematical' term for 144 is 'a gross'. There are a dozen paper clips in a dozen boxes.... which is very few. Most paper clip suppliers put more than that in a box.... perhaps you mean twelve boxes - each containing 144 paper clips. I don't think there is a word for that number - 1728, except that it is 12 'cubed' - the product of multiplying 12 by 12 by 12.
A drawing on squared paper that illustrates a concept simply.
a squared dozen?? the printers measure is a ream
i think it is printed on optik white paper.
Paper Boxes - 2012 is rated/received certificates of: Singapore:PG
It is printed on gopher fur
US paper money is not printed on standard paper. It is printed on a specialized cotton blend and contains no paper.
No, state names are not printed on U.S. paper currency.
10000 boxes to get 10000 boxes!
Boxes are white to show they are clean and new. Brown boxes don't look as appetizing as the white ones. The boxes aren't dyed though. They use a bleached wood pulp to make the white paper to go over the corrugated interior. The white exterior paper allows for full color printing with true representation of the desired color. Red is the most common color printed on a pizza box. It is difficult to print red on a brown box.
Yes, Pop-Tarts boxes are recyclable. Drop them in your paper recycling bin, along with cereal boxes, tissue boxes, and pretty much all other kitchen and food products with paper and cardboard boxes like Pop-Tarts.
Made of thick paper, printed with brand enhancing graphics, and cut/folded into unique structures, paperboard packaging engages consumers like nothing else on the store shelf. Paperboard packaging is inherently sustainable, renewable, and recyclable and today's environmentally conscious consumer knows this.
Most corrugated boxes are made using a combination of paper, adhesive (glue), heat and pressure. Boxes made from recycles paper usually indicate this on the bottom of the box.
yes they do
The first paper for the Swindon Advertiser was printed on March 4, 1854.