Fold-out chart of awards in Piette's book
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This chart of awards in Piette's book shows that Berte & Grenevich as well as St.Leger Didot obtained medals for paper made by machines in 1819.

Chart of brevets or patents in Piette's book
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This chart of brevets or patents in Piette's work includes many early French patents that may be hardly known otherwise. 

Detail map of Paris, Île-de-France, France Overview map of Paris, Île-de-France, France

A: Paris, Île-de-France, France

Louis Piette Writes the First Effort at a History of Papermaking by Machine

1831
Title page of Piette's Traite de fabrication du papier (1831)
Creative Commons LicenseJeremy Norman Collection of Images - Creative Commons

In September 2018 I first obtained a copy of Louis Piette's Traite de la fabrication du papier. Contenant les procédés généralement en usage pour préparer ce produit, les diverse méthodes de collage par la disolution de gélatine et dans le cylindre ou la cuve de fabrication, le blanchiment complet des chiffons, la manière de fair les papiers de couleur, et ceux de diverse subtances, descriptions détailées des machines à fair le papier d'après les nouveaux procédés, etc. (Paris: F. G. Levrault, 1831). Among the features of this book, it appears to contain the first effort at a history of the development of papermaking by machine. The author refers to a number of papermaking machines developed in France after Robert as well as machines developed in England, including charts of significant patents awarded in England and France, and awards granted for contributions to papermaking. Strangely Piette pays little attention to Robert, presumably because Robert's work was primarily developed by others. Most of the early French machines to which Piette refers are hardly known except through Piette's book.

 

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