John Howell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I saved the site below last time this question came up. Be aware
that in the U.S. there are two
different sets of weight names. 28-lb Bond, according to this
chart, equals 70-lb Offset.
http://www.paper-paper.com/weight.html
Thanks for the URL. It
On Sep 23, 2007, at 6:47 AM, Ken Moore wrote:
John Howell [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
http://www.paper-paper.com/weight.html
Thanks for the URL. It makes me realise how (relatively) simple
life is in the metric world, where if I am in any doubt as to
whether I am using 80 gm or 100 gm
On 18-Sep-07, at 9:08 PM, John Howell wrote:
At 8:44 PM -0400 9/18/07, Christopher Smith wrote:
On Sep 18, 2007, at 7:12 PM, Adam Taylor wrote:
I've seen discussions on this list about binding of score and
parts, as well as printing of parts. I was just wondering what
weight of paper
At 8:44 PM -0400 9/18/07, Christopher Smith wrote:
On Sep 18, 2007, at 7:12 PM, Adam Taylor wrote:
I've seen discussions on this list about binding of score and
parts, as well as printing of parts. I was just wondering what
weight of paper people here think is the best for printing score
and
I've seen discussions on this list about binding of score and
parts, as well as printing of parts. I was just wondering what
weight of paper people here think is the best for printing score
and parts for a concert band work. Regular paper just feels too
light for me.
You are right to think
On Sep 18, 2007, at 7:12 PM, Adam Taylor wrote:
I've seen discussions on this list about binding of score and
parts, as well as printing of parts. I was just wondering what
weight of paper people here think is the best for printing score
and parts for a concert band work. Regular paper
I've seen discussions on this list about binding of score and
parts, as well as printing of parts. I was just wondering what
weight of paper people here think is the best for printing score
and parts for a concert band work. Regular paper just feels too
light for me.
Thanks,
Adam
I use a