On Tue, Jan 12, 2016 at 10:55 AM, Anna wrote:
>
> 2016-01-11 22:26 GMT+01:00 Rob Hudson :
> > Can someone explain how lbs associate to gsm?:
>
> Basically they don't. The gsm are grams per square meter and therefore
> give you the density of the paper.
>
Technically this is not exactly density, b
2016-01-11 22:26 GMT+01:00 Rob Hudson :
> Can someone explain how lbs associate to gsm?:
Basically they don't. The gsm are grams per square meter and therefore
give you the density of the paper.
The lbs are the pounds per ream. A ream is (most often but not always)
500 standard-sized sheets, and
> On Jan 11, 2016, at 3:26 PM, Rob Hudson wrote:
>
> Can someone explain how lbs associate to gsm?:
Personally I like to use 24 lb. text weight over 20 lb. especially for
modulars. I find the tension is a better with the very slightly thicker 24 lb.
I do not fold 60lb. I find that too thick.
In searching online, I find the metric (gsm) notation to be consistent, but
I'd like to be able to do a conversion to foldable paper in LBS units.
Can someone explain how lbs associate to gsm?: Thanks! Rob
Here is a link to a conversion calculator and the related formulas
http://okpaper.com/cal