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The next piece of equipment is a Hollander Beater for making paper.
The uniforms are cut into pieces, cooked and macerated in a Hollander beater to make paper pulp.
In the early 1970s, Farnsworth began making paper on his own after purchasing a used laboratory Hollander beater.
There are three Hollander beaters.
Stamp mills were used in early paper making for preparing the paper-stuff (pulp), before the invention of the Hollander beater.
A Hollander beater is a machine developed by the Dutch in 1680 to produce paper pulp from cellulose containing plant fibers.
Prepared pulps: Mountboard and cotton linters beaten in our Hollander beater and ready to use.
A Hollander beater design consists of a circular or ovoid water raceway with a beater wheel at a single point along the raceway.
Another opportunity to learn to use the Hollander Beater to produce beautiful blue and pastel papers suitable for drawing, watercolours, printmaking artists' books or anything you want.
Watford Pulpers are used to prepare stuff, and a modified Hollander beater is used to mix additives and dyes.
This company was at the vanguard of industrial paper-making, with its steam engine by John Rennie the Elder, Hollander beaters and at least one hydraulic press for squeezing water from the paper.
The title refers to the Hollander beater in which the paper is made, but Mr. Madsen wittily turns it into a pun by incorporating the impressed shape of a Dutch windmill in a frieze at the bottom.
An internal sizing which is to be added in the last stage of beating (in either a Hollander beater or kitchen blender), it prevents bleeding and feathering hence the resulting paper is less absorbent and suitable to use with ink and watercolour.
The time-consuming operation is shown from start to finish: from the initial grading of rags for quality, through their maceration in a Hollander beater, a water-wheel-driven vat, to the final sizing of the sheets, varying from 14 by 21 inches to 3 by 4 feet.