Why Your Scissors Glide (or Don't) When You're Wrapping Presents
Why Your Scissors Glide (or Don't) When You're Wrapping Presents
In the hustle and bustle of the holidays, a moment of transcendence can happen as you wrap presents: scissors in hand, cutting a piece of wrapping paper from the roll, the blades hit their stride and slide from end to end.
Why is it sometimes the scissors glide, and other times the paper tears a dozen times? Christopher Luettgen says it all has to do with paper quality.
鈥淕ood wrapping paper is going to have a prettier surface. It may even have a textured surface, maybe embossed or more three dimensional,鈥 said , a professor of the practice with the and an expert on paper.
High-quality wrapping paper is made from softwood pulp 鈥 in particular, the strongest pulp you could make is southern pine softwood.
鈥淭he really good paper starts with softwood fiber,鈥 he said. 鈥淪oftwood kraft in particular 鈥 鈥榢raft鈥 being an old German word for 鈥榮trong.鈥 It鈥檚 going to be stiffer and stronger in multiple directions. Then it gets coated so you get a nice clay coating on the surface, which will smooth the surface to get it beautifully printed. When you come across weak paper that wants to tear very easily, it is often made with mechanical fibers.鈥
So, if you want the glide, you want good paper. When might it be worth skimping on quality?
鈥淚f you鈥檝e got a big job, like you want to wrap a TV or a large game or something like that, you don鈥檛 want to spend a lot of money on the high-end wrapping papers. It鈥檚 going to get torn up pretty fast. That鈥檚 when you might go with a cheaper, thinner brand.鈥
Of course, as Luettgen notes, you can鈥檛 tear the paper in the store, but looking for a thicker paper is a good start. The thicker paper will also give your presents a more refined look under the tree.
鈥淟et鈥檚 say you鈥檙e giving a book to somebody. You want nice tight corners. You want good creasing. You really want to make it showy.鈥
Why, then, does Santa sometimes not wrap his presents? Luettgen believes it鈥檚 all a matter of resources leading up to Christmas Eve.
鈥淚f he has enough help at his studio, I would think that he鈥檚 going to get all of your presents wrapped. But if he鈥檚 rushed, with bad weather for instance, he may have to come down the chimney with the presents unwrapped, but they鈥檒l be under the tree.鈥