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・ Folder redirection
・ Foldereid
・ Foldereid Church
・ Folderism
・ Folderol
・ FolderSize
・ Foldex Cat
・ Folding
・ Folding (chemistry)
・ Folding (DSP implementation)
・ Folding bicycle
・ Folding boat
・ Folding boxboard
・ Folding bridge
・ Folding camera
Folding carton
・ Folding chair
・ Folding Circle
・ Folding door
・ Folding editor
・ Folding endurance
・ Folding funnel
・ Folding Furniture Works Building
・ Folding harpsichord
・ Folding kayak
・ Folding Legs
・ Folding machine
・ Folding propeller
・ Folding screen
・ Folding seat


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Folding carton : ウィキペディア英語版
Folding carton

The folding carton created the packaging industry as it is known today, beginning in the late 19th century. Basically, a folding carton is made of paperboard, and is cut, folded, laminated and printed for transport to packagers. The cartons are shipped flat to a packager, which has its own machinery to fold the carton into its final shape as a container for a product. The classic example of such a carton is a cereal box.
==Invention and development==
In the 1840s, cartons were made by hand and held together with tacks and string, and used only for expensive items (such as jewelry). Although Charles Henry Foyle is described by some as the "inventor" of the paper carton, mass production of the cartons was invented, partly by accident, at the Robert Gair Company in Brooklyn, New York. Machinery at the end of the press had been set up carelessly by a pressman, and machinery cut through the material. This ruined the press but gave them an idea: printing and cutting could be done with one machine. Previously, cutting of printed cardboard had been done manually. From the mistake in 1879, Gair developed a process for mass production of boxes. In 1897, the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco) became the first large company to adopt the new cartons, for Uneeda Biscuits. Other manufacturers soon followed. With inexpensive packaging now even common items could be placed in a showy carton and each carton became its own advertisement. The product was also protected, and the contents had a longer shelf life. This trend was to continue with force, through the 20th century. This could be seen as a contributing factor in the so-called 'throwaway' culture of America. The environmental impact of product packaging has gained attention from consumers and businesses alike, and this awareness has created a steady trend since the mid to late 1990s, on the part of manufacturers, to use recycled material and/or reduce overall materials usage.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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