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<UK centric>Cheap paperbacks, which constitute much holiday reading, are printed on fairly coarse, off-colour paper. And you can get almost all of the Penguin Popular Classics catalogue on such paper for about £1.50 ea. </UK centric> |
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I've been informed (by a librarian and an American) that the majority of books in the states are published on expensive, shiny white paper that is milled by hairless orphans. Perhaps it'd be better to use cheaper (or perhaps even recycled) paper. |
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Perhaps white printing on black paper? Fortunately, I'm one of the lucky ones who need reading glasses to read anything smaller than a billboard. So, sunreaders are great. |
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If you're sitting under a tree, the book is shaded. Duh. |
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...which is why he said, "OR I could just sit under a tree." |
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You could always have photo-reactive paper that 'tans' to an appropriate shade when exposed to sunlight, then fade back to normal in the shade. |
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Thinking about it, there are actually two issues here: |
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1) The brightness of the paper colourwise |
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2) The glossiness of the paper |
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So perhaps there could be some way of making super-mat paper that absorbed light such that even if it was quite white it wouldn't create glare? |
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