Dictionary Definition
sizing n : any glutinous material used to fill
pores in surfaces or to stiffen fabrics; "size gives body to a
fabric" [syn: size]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -aɪzɪŋ
Noun
- A gelatinous glue for glazing or sizing canvas, paper, plaster or wood; often made from animal skins.
- paste
Verb
sizing- present participle of size
See also
Extensive Definition
Sizing or size is a substance that is applied to
porous materials as a
glaze or filler. It is used to change
surface properties in papermaking, gilding, and the manufacture of
textiles.
Papermaking
Sizing is used on fibers during paper manufacture in order to curb their tendency to absorb liquids by capillary action. By doing so, sizing keeps the ink on the surface of the paper where it was intended to remain. In addition, sizing affects abrasiveness, creasibility, finish, printability, smoothness, and surface bond strength, and decreases surface porosity and fuzzing.There are two major types of sizing: engine
(rosin) and surface (tub).
Rosin sizing is applied to almost all papers and especially to all
those that are machine made, while tub sizing is added for the
highest grade bond, ledger, and writing
papers. Tub sizing consists of gelatin glue and / or starch and is generally only used
for handmade
papers. Rosin is an amphipathic molecule, having both hydrophilic (water-loving)
and hydrophobic
(water-repelling) ends. The rosin coats the paper fiber and forms a
film, with the hydrophilic
tail facing the fiber and
the hydrophobic tail
facing outwards. This creates a water-repellent situation, which
causes the water-based ink to remain outside on the paper
surface.
There are three categories of papers with respect
to sizing: unsized (water-leaf), weak sized (slack sized), and
strong sized (hard sized). Waterleaf has low water resistance and
includes absorbent papers for blotting.
Slack sized paper is somewhat absorbent and includes newsprint, while hard sized
papers have the highest water resistance.
Preservation Related Issues
As the process of sizing had and has the intent
of making the paper suitable for printing, it would seem slightly
ironic that some processes of sizing would make printing paper a
problem for the continued existence of that paper and those who
would preserve them. Sizing processes started early on in the paper
making processes, with historians citing that items, such as
starch, were early sizing agents used on paper. Dade Hunter in
Papermaking through Eighteen Centuries corroborates this by
writing, “The Chinese used starch as a size for paper as early as
A.D. 768 and its use continued until the fourteenth century when
animal glue was substituted.” The early modern paper mills Europe,
which produced paper for printing and other uses, the sizing agent
of choice was gelatin,
as Susan Swartzburg writes in Preserving Library Materials,
“Various substances have been used for sizing through the ages,
from gypsum to animal gelatin.” Hunter describes the process of
sizing in these paper mills in the following: The drying completed,
the old papermakers dipped their paper into an animal size that had
been made from the parings of hides, which they procured from the
parchment-makers. It was necessary to size that paper so that it
would be impervious to ink, but sizing was more needed in writing
that in printing papers. Many books of the fifteenth century were
printed upon paper that had not been sized, this extra treatment
not being essential for a type impression. The sizing was
accomplished by a worker holding a number of sheets by the aid of
two wooden sticks, and dipping the paper into the warm gelatinous
liquid. The sheets were then pressed to extract the superfluous
gelatine. This crude method of sizing the paper was extremely
wasteful as many sheets were torn and bruised beyond use. The
sizing room of the early paper mills, was, for this reason, known
as the ‘slaughter-house.’
With the advent of the mass production of paper,
the type of size used for paper production also changed. As
Swartzburg writes, “By 1850 rosin size had come into use.
Unfortunately, it produces a chemical action that hastens the
decomposition of even the finest papers.” In the field of library
preservation it is known “that acid hydrolysis of cellulose and
related carbo-hydrates [sic] is one of the key factors responsible
for the degradation of paper during ageing.” Some recent
professional work has focused on the specific in the degradation
involved in the deterioration of paper that has had a rosin sizing
process, and what amount of rosin affects the deterioration
process, in addition to work on developing permanent paper and
sizing agents that will not eventually destroy the paper. An issue
on the periphery to the preservation of paper and sizing, is
washing, which is described by V. Daniels and J. Kosek as, “The
removal of discolouration ... in water is principally effected by
the dissolution of water-soluble material; this is usually done by
immersing paper in water.” In such a process, surface level items
applied to the paper, such as size in early paper making processes
as seen above, have the possibility of being removed from the
paper, which might have some item specific interest in a special
collections library. With later processes in paper making being
more akin to “engine sizing,” as H. Hardman and E. J. Cole describe
it, “Engine sizing, with is part of the manufacturing process, has
the ingredients added to the furnish or stock prior to sheet
formation,” the concern for the removal of size is less, and as
such, most literature focuses on the more pressing issue of
preserving acidic papers and similar issues.
Gilding
Sizing is applied to surfaces before gilding in order to remove small surface imperfections that would otherwise be highlighted by the very thin metal used.Textile production
Sizing, sometimes in a spray-form, can be used like starch to add body and shape to clothing.External links
sizing in German: Schlichte
sizing in Swedish: Sizing
sizing in Vietnamese: Gia keo