|
||||||||||||||||||
| |
PaperPaper has many roles in everyday life, such as writing paper, packaging boxes and banknotes. Throughout history people have used paper to make a whole variety of products. The Economic Botany Collections at Kew house many examples of paper used to make less-than-ordinary objects, including hats, sandals, hair ornaments, umbrellas and even a waterproof raincoat. Today most paper is made from wood pulp, but many plant fibres can be used instead. The Economic Botany Collections at Kew Gardens have a vast array of paper specimens and products illustrating the wide range of plants that have been used to make paper products. The Collections house over 350 paper specimens representing nearly 50 plant families and over 100 genera. The dominant families in the Collections are Moraceae, Gramineae, Thymelaeaceae, and Cyperaceae. Other families represented with fewer samples are the Juncaecae, Palmae, Pandanaceae, and Zingiberaceae families. Specimens include paper from banana and palm leaves, rice paper, papyrus, paper mulberry, and Mitsumata paper from Edgeworthia gardeneri. The Collections represent a diverse range of paper specimens from all over the world, including part of the Sir Harry Parkes collection from Japan, and the Thomas Routledge collections gathered from Mexico, Australia, India, Trinidad and Tobago, the East Indies, and Sweden. From wasp’s nests, illustrating the peculiar way insects can make paper, to recent acquisitions of paper made from Dombeye madagarscariensis from Madagascar, the specimens in the Economic Botany Collections attest to the diverse nature of plants and their products. For further information on paper and paper making, please see "Papyrus, Paper and Paper Making" which is based on the Collections at Kew.
Parkes CollectionThe largest family in the Collections, the Moraceae family, is mainly covered by the Sir Harry Parkes collection. Sir Harry was serving as British Minister in Tokyo when trade networks with Japan opened. In 1869, Prime Minister William Gladstone requested a report on the paper-making industry in Japan . Parkes sent this report, along with over 400 specimens of paper and paper products, to England in 1871 where it was divided between the Royal Botanic Gardens and the Victoria and Albert Museum . The Economic Botany Collections house the Gardens’ share of this impressive collection. Specimens included in the Parkes
collection are dominated by paper made from the paper mulberry (Broussonetia),
a type of paper first used in China for both ornamental and functional
forms of paper, and later introduced to Japan in 610 AD. The Japanese
perfected the method, using this paper for everything from seats and pocket
books to delicate hair ornaments and oiled hats. Despite the large and
diverse nature of the Parkes collection, it contains no examples of the
main use for paper today – printing. Instead the objects attest to the
truly versatile use of paper.
See the Collections:Paper
|
|||||||||||||||||
\n