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ISO 216

ISO 216 is an international standard for paper sizes, used around the world except in North America and parts of Latin America. The standard defines the "A", "B" and "C" series of paper sizes, which includes the A4, the most commonly available paper size worldwide. Two supplementary standards, ISO 217 and ISO 269, define related paper sizes; the ISO 269 "C" series is commonly listed alongside the A and B sizes.

Visualization with paper sizes in formats A0 to A8, exhibited at the science museum CosmoCaixa Barcelona
An A4 paper sheet folded into two A5 size pages

All ISO 216, ISO 217 and ISO 269 paper sizes (except some envelopes) have the same aspect ratio, 2:1, within rounding to millimetres. This ratio has the unique property that when cut or folded in half widthways, the halves also have the same aspect ratio. Each ISO paper size is one half of the area of the next larger size in the same series.[1]

Dimensions of A, B and C series edit

ISO paper sizes in millimetres and in inches
Size A series formats B series formats C series formats
name mm inches name mm inches name mm inches
-2 4A0 1682 × 2378 66.2 × 93.6
-1 2A0 1189 × 1682 46.8 × 66.2
0 A0 0841 × 1189 33.1 × 46.8 B0 1000 × 1414 39.4 × 55.7 C0 0917 × 1297 36.1 × 51.1
1 A1 0594 × 0841 23.4 × 33.1 B1 0707 × 1000 27.8 × 39.4 C1 0648 × 0917 25.5 × 36.1
2 A2 0420 × 0594 16.5 × 23.4 B2 0500 × 0707 19.7 × 27.8 C2 0458 × 0648 18.0 × 25.5
3 A3 0297 × 0420 11.7 × 16.5 B3 0353 × 0500 13.9 × 19.7 C3 0324 × 0458 12.8 × 18.0
4 A4 0210 × 0297 08.3 × 11.7 B4 0250 × 0353 09.8 × 13.9 C4 0229 × 0324 09.0 × 12.8
5 A5 0148 × 0210 05.8 × 08.3 B5 0176 × 0250 06.9 × 09.8 C5 0162 × 0229 06.4 × 09.0
6 A6 0105 × 0148 04.1 × 05.8 B6 0125 × 0176 04.9 × 06.9 C6 0114 × 0162 04.5 × 06.4
7 A7 0074 × 0105 02.9 × 04.1 B7 0088 × 0125 03.5 × 04.9 C7 0081 × 0114 03.2 × 04.5
8 A8 0052 × 0074 02.0 × 02.9 B8 0062 × 0088 02.4 × 03.5 C8 0057 × 0081 02.2 × 03.2
9 A9 0037 × 0052 01.5 × 02.0 B9 0044 × 0062 01.7 × 02.4 C9 0040 × 0057 01.6 × 02.2
10 A10 0026 × 0037 01.0 × 01.5 B10 0031 × 0044 01.2 × 01.7 C10 0028 × 0040 01.1 × 01.6
     
 
Comparison of ISO 216 paper sizes between A4 and A3 and Swedish extension SIS 014711 sizes

History edit

The oldest known mention of the advantages of basing a paper size on an aspect ratio of   is found in a letter written on 25 October 1786 by the German scientist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg to Johann Beckmann, both at the University of Göttingen.[2] Early variants of the formats that would become ISO paper sizes A2, A3, B3, B4, and B5 then evolved in France, where they were listed in a 1798 French law on taxation of publications (French: Loi sur le timbre (Nº 2136)) that was based in part on page sizes.[3]

 
Comparison of A4 (shaded grey) and C4 sizes with some similar paper and photographic paper sizes

Searching for a standard system of paper formats on a scientific basis at the Bridge association (German: Die Brücke), as a replacement for the vast variety of other paper formats that had been used before, in order to make paper stocking and document reproduction cheaper and more efficient, in 1911 Wilhelm Ostwald proposed, over a hundred years after the 1798 French law,[3] a global standard – a world format (Weltformat) – for paper sizes based on the ratio  , referring to the argument advanced by Lichtenberg's 1786 letter, but linking this to the metric system using 1 centimetre (0.39 in) as the width of the base format. Walter Porstmann  [de] argued in a long article published in 1918, that a firm basis for the system of paper formats, which deal with surfaces, ought not be the length but the surface; that is, linking the system of paper formats to the metric system using the square metre rather than the centimetre, constrained by   and area   square metre, where   is the length of the shorter side and   is the length of the longer side, for the second equation both in metres. Porstmann also argued that formats for containers of paper, such as envelopes, should be 10% larger than the paper format itself.

In 1921, after a long discussion and another intervention by Porstmann, the Standardisation Committee of German Industry (Normenausschuß der deutschen Industrie, or NADI in short), which is the German Institute for Standardisation (Deutsches Institut für Normung, or DIN in short) today, published German standard DI Norm 476 the specification of four series of paper formats with ratio  , with series A as the always preferred formats and basis for the other series. All measures are rounded to the nearest millimetre. A0 has a surface area of 1 square metre (11 sq ft) up to a rounding error, with a width of 841 millimetres (33.1 in) and height of 1,189 millimetres (46.8 in), so an actual area of 0.999949 square metres (10.76336 sq ft); A4 is recommended as standard paper size for business, administrative and government correspondence; and A6 for postcards. Series B is based on B0 with width of 1 metre (3 ft 3 in), C0 is 917 by 1,297 millimetres (36.1 in × 51.1 in), and D0 771 by 1,090 millimetres (30.4 in × 42.9 in). Series C is the basis for envelope formats.

The DIN paper-format concept was soon introduced as a national standard in many other countries, for example, Belgium (1924), Netherlands (1925), Norway (1926), Switzerland (1929), Sweden (1930), Soviet Union (1934), Hungary (1938), Italy (1939), Finland (1942), Uruguay (1942), Argentina (1943), Brazil (1943), Spain (1947), Austria (1948), Romania (1949), Japan (1951), Denmark (1953), Czechoslovakia (1953), Israel (1954), Portugal (1954), Yugoslavia (1956), India (1957), Poland (1957), United Kingdom (1959), Venezuela (1962), New Zealand (1963), Iceland (1964), Mexico (1965), South Africa (1966), France (1967), Peru (1967), Turkey (1967), Chile (1968), Greece (1970), Zimbabwe (1970), Singapore (1970), Bangladesh (1972), Thailand (1973), Barbados (1973), Australia (1974), Ecuador (1974), Colombia (1975) and Kuwait (1975).

It finally became both an international standard (ISO 216) as well as the official United Nations document format in 1975, and it is today used in almost all countries in the world, with the exception of several countries in the Americas.

In 1977, a large German car manufacturer performed a study of the paper formats found in their incoming mail and concluded that out of 148 examined countries, 88 already used the A series formats.[4]

Advantages edit

The main advantage of this system is its scaling. Rectangular paper with an aspect ratio of   has the unique property that, when cut or folded in half midway between its longer sides, each half has the same   aspect ratio as the whole sheet before it was divided. Equivalently, if one lays two same-sized sheets of paper with an aspect ratio of   side by side along their longer side, they form a larger rectangle with the aspect ratio of   and double the area of each individual sheet.

The ISO system of paper sizes exploits these properties of the   aspect ratio. In each series of sizes (for example, series A), the largest size is numbered 0 (so in this case A0), and each successive size (A1, A2, etc.) has half the area of the preceding sheet and can be cut by halving the length of the preceding size sheet. The new measurement is rounded down[contradictory] to the nearest millimetre. A folded brochure can be made by using a sheet of the next larger size (for example, an A4 sheet is folded in half to make a brochure with size A5 pages). An office photocopier or printer can be designed to reduce a page from A4 to A5 or to enlarge a page from A4 to A3. Similarly, two sheets of A4 can be scaled down to fit one A4 sheet without excess empty paper.

This system also simplifies calculating the weight of paper. Under ISO 536, paper's grammage is defined as a sheet's mass in grams (g) per area in square metres (unit symbol g/m2; the nonstandard abbreviation "gsm" is also used).[5] One can derive the grammage of other sizes by arithmetic division. A standard A4 sheet made from 80 g/m2 paper weighs 5 grams (0.18 oz), as it is 116 (four halvings, ignoring rounding) of an A0 page. Thus the weight, and the associated postage rate, can be approximated easily by counting the number of sheets used.

ISO 216 and its related standards were first published between 1975 and 1995:

  • ISO 216:2007, defining the A and B series of paper sizes
  • ISO 269:1985, defining the C series for envelopes
  • ISO 217:2013, defining the RA and SRA series of raw ("untrimmed") paper sizes

Properties edit

A series edit

Paper in the A series format has an aspect ratio of 2 (≈ 1.414, when rounded). A0 is defined so that it has an area of 1 m2 (11 sq ft) before rounding to the nearest 1 millimetre (0.039 in). Successive paper sizes in the series (A1, A2, A3, etc.) are defined by halving the area of the preceding paper size and rounding down, so that the long side of A(n + 1) is the same length as the short side of An. Hence, each next size is nearly exactly half of the prior size. So, an A1 page can fit two A2 pages inside the same area.

The most used of this series is the size A4, which is 210 mm × 297 mm (8.27 in × 11.7 in) and thus almost exactly 116 square metre (0.0625 m2; 96.8752 sq in) in area. For comparison, the letter paper size commonly used in North America (8+12 in × 11 in; 216 mm × 279 mm) is about 6 mm (0.24 in) wider and 18 mm (0.71 in) shorter than A4. Then, the size of A5 paper is half of A4, i.e. 148 mm × 210 mm (5.8 in × 8.3 in).[6][7]

The geometric rationale for using the square root of 2 is to maintain the aspect ratio of each subsequent rectangle after cutting or folding an A-series sheet in half, perpendicular to the larger side. Given a rectangle with a longer side, x, and a shorter side, y, ensuring that its aspect ratio, x/y, will be the same as that of a rectangle half its size, y/x/2, which means that x/y = y/x/2, which reduces to x/y = 2; in other words, an aspect ratio of 1:2.

Any An paper can be defined as An = S × L, where (measuring in metres)

 

Therefore

 ,           Etc.

B series edit

The B series is defined in the standard as follows: "A subsidiary series of sizes is obtained by placing the geometrical means between adjacent sizes of the A series in sequence." The use of the geometric mean makes each step in size: B0, A0, B1, A1, B2 ... smaller than the previous one by the same factor. As with the A series, the lengths of the B series have the ratio 2, and folding one in half (and rounding down to the nearest millimetre) gives the next in the series. The shorter side of B0 is exactly 1 metre.

There is also an incompatible Japanese B series which the JIS defines to have 1.5 times the area of the corresponding JIS A series (which is identical to the ISO A series).[8] Thus, the lengths of JIS B series paper are 1.5 ≈ 1.22 times those of A-series paper. By comparison, the lengths of ISO B series paper are 42 ≈ 1.19 times those of A-series paper.

Any Bn paper can be defined as Bn = S × L, where (measuring in metres)

 

Therefore

 ,           Etc.

C series edit

The C series formats are geometric means between the B series and A series formats with the same number (e.g. C2 is the geometric mean between B2 and A2). The width to height ratio of C series formats is 2 as in the A and B series. A, B, and C series of paper fit together as part of a geometric progression, with ratio of successive side lengths of 82, though there is no size half-way between Bn and A(n − 1): A4, C4, B4, "D4", A3, ...; there is such a D-series in the Swedish extensions to the system. The lengths of ISO C series paper are therefore 82 ≈ 1.09 times those of A-series paper.

The C series formats are used mainly for envelopes. An unfolded A4 page will fit into a C4 envelope. Due to same width to height ratio, if an A4 page is folded in half so that it is A5 in size, it will fit into a C5 envelope (which will be the same size as a C4 envelope folded in half).

Any Cn paper can be defined as Cn = S × L, where (measuring in metres)

 

Therefore

 ,           Etc.

Tolerances edit

The tolerances specified in the standard are:

  • ±1.5 mm for dimensions up to 150 mm,
  • ±2.0 mm for dimensions in the range 150 to 600 mm, and
  • ±3.0 mm for dimensions above 600 mm.

These are related to comparison between series A, B and C.

Application edit

The ISO 216 formats are organized around the ratio 1:2; two sheets next to each other together have the same ratio, sideways. In scaled photocopying, for example, two A4 sheets reduced to A5 size fit exactly onto one A4 sheet, and an A4 sheet in magnified size onto an A3 sheet; in each case, there is neither waste nor want.

The principal countries not generally using the ISO paper sizes are the United States and Canada, which use North American paper sizes. Although they have also officially adopted the ISO 216 paper format, Mexico, Panama, Peru, Colombia, the Philippines, and Chile also use mostly U.S. paper sizes.

Rectangular sheets of paper with the ratio 1:2 are popular in paper folding, such as origami, where they are sometimes called "A4 rectangles" or "silver rectangles".[9] In other contexts, the term "silver rectangle" can also refer to a rectangle in the proportion 1:(1 + 2), known as the silver ratio.

Matching technical pen widths edit

 
Rotring Rapidographs in ISO nib sizes

An adjunct to the ISO paper sizes, particularly the A series, are the technical drawing line widths specified in ISO 128. For example, line type A ("Continuous - thick", used for "visible outlines") has a standard thickness of 0.7 mm on an A0-sized sheet, 0.5 mm on an A1 sheet, and 0.35 mm on A2, A3, or A4.[10]

The matching technical pen widths are 0.13, 0.18, 0.25, 0.35, 0.5, 0.7, 1.0, 1.40, and 2.0 mm, as specified in ISO 9175-1. Colour codes are assigned to each size to facilitate easy recognition by the drafter. These sizes again increase by a factor of 2, so that particular pens can be used on particular sizes of paper, and then the next smaller or larger size can be used to continue the drawing after it has been reduced or enlarged, respectively.[4][11]

Linewidth (mm) 0.10 0.13 0.18 0.25 0.35 0.50 0.70 1.0 1.4 2.0
Colour Maroon Violet Red White Yellow Brown Blue Orange Green Gray
 
Micronorm logo

The earlier DIN 6775 standard upon which ISO 9175-1 is based also specified a term and symbol for easy identification of pens and drawing templates compatible with the standard, called Micronorm, which may still be found on some technical drafting equipment.

Overformats edit

DIN 476 provides for formats larger than A0, denoted by a prefix factor. In particular, it lists the formats 2A0 and 4A0, which are twice and four times the size of A0 respectively:

DIN 476 overformats (with rounded inch values)
Name mm × mm inch × inch
4A0 1682 × 2378 66+524 × 93+58
2A0 1189 × 1682 46+1924 × 66+524

While not formally defined, ISO 216:2007 notes them in the table of Main series of trimmed sizes (ISO A series) as well: "The rarely used sizes [2A0 and 4A0] which follow also belong to this series." 2A0 is also known by other unofficial names like "A00".[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "International Paper Sizes & Formats". Paper Sizes. Retrieved 29 June 2020.
  2. ^ Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph (7 February 2006) [Written 25 October 1786]. "Lichtenberg's letter to Johann Beckmann" (in German and English). Translated by Kuhn, Markus. University of Cambridge. Retrieved 10 May 2016. Published in Lichtenberg, Georg Christoph (1990). Joost, Ulrich; Schöne, Albrecht (eds.). Briefwechsel [Correspondence] (in German). Vol. III (1785–1792). Munich: Beck. pp. 274–75. ISBN 3-406-30958-5. Retrieved 10 May 2016.
  3. ^ a b "Loi sur le timbre (Nº 2136)" [Stamp Act (No. 2136)]. Bulletin des Lois de la République (in French) (237). Paris: Republic of France: 1–2. 3 November 1798. from the original on 26 April 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2024 – via Markus Kuhn.
  4. ^ a b Kuhn, Markus. "International standard paper sizes". Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  5. ^ International Organization for Standardization (November 2019). "ISO 536:2019(en): Paper and board — Determination of grammage". ISO Browsing Platform (4 ed.). § 3.1 note 1. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  6. ^ "A Paper Sizes – A0, A1, A2, A3, A4, A5, A6, A7, A8, A9". papersizes.org. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  7. ^ "International Paper Sizes, Dimensions, Format & Standards". PaperSize. Retrieved 5 October 2018.
  8. ^ "Japanese B Series Paper Size". Retrieved 18 April 2010.
  9. ^ Lister, David. "The A4 rectangle". The Lister List. England: British Origami Society. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  10. ^ Bell, Steven. "Pen Sizes and Line Types". Metrication.com. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  11. ^ "Technical drawing pen sizes". Designing Buildings Wiki. Retrieved 30 August 2017.
  12. ^ "A00".

External links edit

  • International standard paper sizes: ISO 216 details and rationale
  • ISO 216 at iso.org
  • Articles by Wilhelm Ostwald referencing Lichtenberg's letter, and W. Porstmann specifying a metric system of norms for formats for lengths, surfaces (planes), and volumes, laying the ground for the DIN-Series, in German
  • Explanation of paper sizes

this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, june, 2023, international, standard, paper, sizes, used, around, world, except, north, america, p. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article June 2023 ISO 216 is an international standard for paper sizes used around the world except in North America and parts of Latin America The standard defines the A B and C series of paper sizes which includes the A4 the most commonly available paper size worldwide Two supplementary standards ISO 217 and ISO 269 define related paper sizes the ISO 269 C series is commonly listed alongside the A and B sizes Visualization with paper sizes in formats A0 to A8 exhibited at the science museum CosmoCaixa BarcelonaAn A4 paper sheet folded into two A5 size pagesAll ISO 216 ISO 217 and ISO 269 paper sizes except some envelopes have the same aspect ratio 2 1 within rounding to millimetres This ratio has the unique property that when cut or folded in half widthways the halves also have the same aspect ratio Each ISO paper size is one half of the area of the next larger size in the same series 1 Contents 1 Dimensions of A B and C series 2 History 3 Advantages 4 Properties 4 1 A series 4 2 B series 4 3 C series 5 Tolerances 6 Application 7 Matching technical pen widths 8 Overformats 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksDimensions of A B and C series editISO paper sizes in millimetres and in inches Size A series formats B series formats C series formatsname mm inches name mm inches name mm inches 2 4A0 1682 2378 66 2 93 6 1 2A0 1189 1682 46 8 66 20 A0 0 841 1189 33 1 46 8 B0 1000 1414 39 4 55 7 C0 0 917 1297 36 1 51 11 A1 0 594 0 841 23 4 33 1 B1 0 707 1000 27 8 39 4 C1 0 648 0 917 25 5 36 12 A2 0 420 0 594 16 5 23 4 B2 0 500 0 707 19 7 27 8 C2 0 458 0 648 18 0 25 53 A3 0 297 0 420 11 7 16 5 B3 0 353 0 500 13 9 19 7 C3 0 324 0 458 12 8 18 04 A4 0 210 0 297 0 8 3 11 7 B4 0 250 0 353 0 9 8 13 9 C4 0 229 0 324 0 9 0 12 85 A5 0 148 0 210 0 5 8 0 8 3 B5 0 176 0 250 0 6 9 0 9 8 C5 0 162 0 229 0 6 4 0 9 06 A6 0 105 0 148 0 4 1 0 5 8 B6 0 125 0 176 0 4 9 0 6 9 C6 0 114 0 162 0 4 5 0 6 47 A7 0 0 74 0 105 0 2 9 0 4 1 B7 0 0 88 0 125 0 3 5 0 4 9 C7 0 0 81 0 114 0 3 2 0 4 58 A8 0 0 52 0 0 74 0 2 0 0 2 9 B8 0 0 62 0 0 88 0 2 4 0 3 5 C8 0 0 57 0 0 81 0 2 2 0 3 29 A9 0 0 37 0 0 52 0 1 5 0 2 0 B9 0 0 44 0 0 62 0 1 7 0 2 4 C9 0 0 40 0 0 57 0 1 6 0 2 210 A10 0 0 26 0 0 37 0 1 0 0 1 5 B10 0 0 31 0 0 44 0 1 2 0 1 7 C10 0 0 28 0 0 40 0 1 1 0 1 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Comparison of ISO 216 paper sizes between A4 and A3 and Swedish extension SIS 014711 sizesHistory edit Lichtenberg ratio redirects here For 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp see Square root of 2 The oldest known mention of the advantages of basing a paper size on an aspect ratio of 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp is found in a letter written on 25 October 1786 by the German scientist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg to Johann Beckmann both at the University of Gottingen 2 Early variants of the formats that would become ISO paper sizes A2 A3 B3 B4 and B5 then evolved in France where they were listed in a 1798 French law on taxation of publications French Loi sur le timbre Nº 2136 that was based in part on page sizes 3 nbsp Comparison of A4 shaded grey and C4 sizes with some similar paper and photographic paper sizesSearching for a standard system of paper formats on a scientific basis at the Bridge association German Die Brucke as a replacement for the vast variety of other paper formats that had been used before in order to make paper stocking and document reproduction cheaper and more efficient in 1911 Wilhelm Ostwald proposed over a hundred years after the 1798 French law 3 a global standard a world format Weltformat for paper sizes based on the ratio 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp referring to the argument advanced by Lichtenberg s 1786 letter but linking this to the metric system using 1 centimetre 0 39 in as the width of the base format Walter Porstmann de argued in a long article published in 1918 that a firm basis for the system of paper formats which deal with surfaces ought not be the length but the surface that is linking the system of paper formats to the metric system using the square metre rather than the centimetre constrained by xy 2 textstyle tfrac x y sqrt 2 nbsp and area a x y 1 textstyle a x times y 1 nbsp square metre where x textstyle x nbsp is the length of the shorter side and y textstyle y nbsp is the length of the longer side for the second equation both in metres Porstmann also argued that formats for containers of paper such as envelopes should be 10 larger than the paper format itself In 1921 after a long discussion and another intervention by Porstmann the Standardisation Committee of German Industry Normenausschuss der deutschen Industrie or NADI in short which is the German Institute for Standardisation Deutsches Institut fur Normung or DIN in short today published German standard DI Norm 476 the specification of four series of paper formats with ratio 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp with series A as the always preferred formats and basis for the other series All measures are rounded to the nearest millimetre A0 has a surface area of 1 square metre 11 sq ft up to a rounding error with a width of 841 millimetres 33 1 in and height of 1 189 millimetres 46 8 in so an actual area of 0 999949 square metres 10 76336 sq ft A4 is recommended as standard paper size for business administrative and government correspondence and A6 for postcards Series B is based on B0 with width of 1 metre 3 ft 3 in C0 is 917 by 1 297 millimetres 36 1 in 51 1 in and D0 771 by 1 090 millimetres 30 4 in 42 9 in Series C is the basis for envelope formats The DIN paper format concept was soon introduced as a national standard in many other countries for example Belgium 1924 Netherlands 1925 Norway 1926 Switzerland 1929 Sweden 1930 Soviet Union 1934 Hungary 1938 Italy 1939 Finland 1942 Uruguay 1942 Argentina 1943 Brazil 1943 Spain 1947 Austria 1948 Romania 1949 Japan 1951 Denmark 1953 Czechoslovakia 1953 Israel 1954 Portugal 1954 Yugoslavia 1956 India 1957 Poland 1957 United Kingdom 1959 Venezuela 1962 New Zealand 1963 Iceland 1964 Mexico 1965 South Africa 1966 France 1967 Peru 1967 Turkey 1967 Chile 1968 Greece 1970 Zimbabwe 1970 Singapore 1970 Bangladesh 1972 Thailand 1973 Barbados 1973 Australia 1974 Ecuador 1974 Colombia 1975 and Kuwait 1975 It finally became both an international standard ISO 216 as well as the official United Nations document format in 1975 and it is today used in almost all countries in the world with the exception of several countries in the Americas In 1977 a large German car manufacturer performed a study of the paper formats found in their incoming mail and concluded that out of 148 examined countries 88 already used the A series formats 4 Advantages editThe main advantage of this system is its scaling Rectangular paper with an aspect ratio of 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp has the unique property that when cut or folded in half midway between its longer sides each half has the same 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp aspect ratio as the whole sheet before it was divided Equivalently if one lays two same sized sheets of paper with an aspect ratio of 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp side by side along their longer side they form a larger rectangle with the aspect ratio of 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp and double the area of each individual sheet The ISO system of paper sizes exploits these properties of the 2 textstyle sqrt 2 nbsp aspect ratio In each series of sizes for example series A the largest size is numbered 0 so in this case A0 and each successive size A1 A2 etc has half the area of the preceding sheet and can be cut by halving the length of the preceding size sheet The new measurement is rounded down contradictory to the nearest millimetre A folded brochure can be made by using a sheet of the next larger size for example an A4 sheet is folded in half to make a brochure with size A5 pages An office photocopier or printer can be designed to reduce a page from A4 to A5 or to enlarge a page from A4 to A3 Similarly two sheets of A4 can be scaled down to fit one A4 sheet without excess empty paper This system also simplifies calculating the weight of paper Under ISO 536 paper s grammage is defined as a sheet s mass in grams g per area in square metres unit symbol g m2 the nonstandard abbreviation gsm is also used 5 One can derive the grammage of other sizes by arithmetic division A standard A4 sheet made from 80 g m2 paper weighs 5 grams 0 18 oz as it is 1 16 four halvings ignoring rounding of an A0 page Thus the weight and the associated postage rate can be approximated easily by counting the number of sheets used ISO 216 and its related standards were first published between 1975 and 1995 ISO 216 2007 defining the A and B series of paper sizes ISO 269 1985 defining the C series for envelopes ISO 217 2013 defining the RA and SRA series of raw untrimmed paper sizesProperties editA series edit Paper in the A series format has an aspect ratio of 2 1 414 when rounded A0 is defined so that it has an area of 1 m2 11 sq ft before rounding to the nearest 1 millimetre 0 039 in Successive paper sizes in the series A1 A2 A3 etc are defined by halving the area of the preceding paper size and rounding down so that the long side of A n 1 is the same length as the short side of An Hence each next size is nearly exactly half of the prior size So an A1 page can fit two A2 pages inside the same area The most used of this series is the size A4 which is 210 mm 297 mm 8 27 in 11 7 in and thus almost exactly 1 16 square metre 0 0625 m2 96 8752 sq in in area For comparison the letter paper size commonly used in North America 8 1 2 in 11 in 216 mm 279 mm is about 6 mm 0 24 in wider and 18 mm 0 71 in shorter than A4 Then the size of A5 paper is half of A4 i e 148 mm 210 mm 5 8 in 8 3 in 6 7 The geometric rationale for using the square root of 2 is to maintain the aspect ratio of each subsequent rectangle after cutting or folding an A series sheet in half perpendicular to the larger side Given a rectangle with a longer side x and a shorter side y ensuring that its aspect ratio x y will be the same as that of a rectangle half its size y x 2 which means that x y y x 2 which reduces to x y 2 in other words an aspect ratio of 1 2 Any An paper can be defined as An S L where measuring in metres An S 12 n 12L 12 n 12 displaystyle text A n begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right n frac 1 2 L left sqrt frac 1 2 right n frac 1 2 end cases nbsp Therefore A0 S 12 0 12 0 841mL 12 0 12 1 189m displaystyle text A0 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 frac 1 2 approx 0 841 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 frac 1 2 approx 1 189 text m end cases nbsp A1 S 12 1 12 0 595mL 12 1 12 0 841m displaystyle text A1 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 frac 1 2 approx 0 595 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 frac 1 2 approx 0 841 text m end cases nbsp A2 S 12 2 12 0 420mL 12 2 12 0 595m displaystyle text A2 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 frac 1 2 approx 0 420 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 frac 1 2 approx 0 595 text m end cases nbsp Etc B series edit The B series is defined in the standard as follows A subsidiary series of sizes is obtained by placing the geometrical means between adjacent sizes of the A series in sequence The use of the geometric mean makes each step in size B0 A0 B1 A1 B2 smaller than the previous one by the same factor As with the A series the lengths of the B series have the ratio 2 and folding one in half and rounding down to the nearest millimetre gives the next in the series The shorter side of B0 is exactly 1 metre There is also an incompatible Japanese B series which the JIS defines to have 1 5 times the area of the corresponding JIS A series which is identical to the ISO A series 8 Thus the lengths of JIS B series paper are 1 5 1 22 times those of A series paper By comparison the lengths of ISO B series paper are 4 2 1 19 times those of A series paper Any Bn paper can be defined as Bn S L where measuring in metres Bn S 12 nL 12 n 1 displaystyle text B n begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right n L left sqrt frac 1 2 right n 1 end cases nbsp Therefore B0 S 12 0 1mL 12 0 1 1 414m displaystyle text B0 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 1 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 1 approx 1 414 text m end cases nbsp B1 S 12 1 0 707mL 12 1 1 1m displaystyle text B1 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 approx 0 707 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 1 1 text m end cases nbsp B2 S 12 2 0 5mL 12 2 1 0 707m displaystyle text B2 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 0 5 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 1 approx 0 707 text m end cases nbsp Etc C series edit The C series formats are geometric means between the B series and A series formats with the same number e g C2 is the geometric mean between B2 and A2 The width to height ratio of C series formats is 2 as in the A and B series A B and C series of paper fit together as part of a geometric progression with ratio of successive side lengths of 8 2 though there is no size half way between Bn and A n 1 A4 C4 B4 D4 A3 there is such a D series in the Swedish extensions to the system The lengths of ISO C series paper are therefore 8 2 1 09 times those of A series paper The C series formats are used mainly for envelopes An unfolded A4 page will fit into a C4 envelope Due to same width to height ratio if an A4 page is folded in half so that it is A5 in size it will fit into a C5 envelope which will be the same size as a C4 envelope folded in half Any Cn paper can be defined as Cn S L where measuring in metres Cn S 12 n 14L 12 n 34 displaystyle text C n begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right n frac 1 4 L left sqrt frac 1 2 right n frac 3 4 end cases nbsp Therefore C0 S 12 0 14 0 917mL 12 0 34 1 297m displaystyle text C0 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 frac 1 4 approx 0 917 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 0 frac 3 4 approx 1 297 text m end cases nbsp C1 S 12 1 14 0 648mL 12 1 34 0 917m displaystyle text C1 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 frac 1 4 approx 0 648 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 1 frac 3 4 approx 0 917 text m end cases nbsp C2 S 12 2 14 0 458mL 12 2 34 0 648m displaystyle text C2 begin cases S left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 frac 1 4 approx 0 458 text m L left sqrt frac 1 2 right 2 frac 3 4 approx 0 648 text m end cases nbsp Etc Tolerances editThe tolerances specified in the standard are 1 5 mm for dimensions up to 150 mm 2 0 mm for dimensions in the range 150 to 600 mm and 3 0 mm for dimensions above 600 mm These are related to comparison between series A B and C Application editThe ISO 216 formats are organized around the ratio 1 2 two sheets next to each other together have the same ratio sideways In scaled photocopying for example two A4 sheets reduced to A5 size fit exactly onto one A4 sheet and an A4 sheet in magnified size onto an A3 sheet in each case there is neither waste nor want The principal countries not generally using the ISO paper sizes are the United States and Canada which use North American paper sizes Although they have also officially adopted the ISO 216 paper format Mexico Panama Peru Colombia the Philippines and Chile also use mostly U S paper sizes Rectangular sheets of paper with the ratio 1 2 are popular in paper folding such as origami where they are sometimes called A4 rectangles or silver rectangles 9 In other contexts the term silver rectangle can also refer to a rectangle in the proportion 1 1 2 known as the silver ratio Matching technical pen widths edit nbsp Rotring Rapidographs in ISO nib sizesAn adjunct to the ISO paper sizes particularly the A series are the technical drawing line widths specified in ISO 128 For example line type A Continuous thick used for visible outlines has a standard thickness of 0 7 mm on an A0 sized sheet 0 5 mm on an A1 sheet and 0 35 mm on A2 A3 or A4 10 The matching technical pen widths are 0 13 0 18 0 25 0 35 0 5 0 7 1 0 1 40 and 2 0 mm as specified in ISO 9175 1 Colour codes are assigned to each size to facilitate easy recognition by the drafter These sizes again increase by a factor of 2 so that particular pens can be used on particular sizes of paper and then the next smaller or larger size can be used to continue the drawing after it has been reduced or enlarged respectively 4 11 Linewidth mm 0 10 0 13 0 18 0 25 0 35 0 50 0 70 1 0 1 4 2 0Colour Maroon Violet Red White Yellow Brown Blue Orange Green Gray nbsp Micronorm logoThe earlier DIN 6775 standard upon which ISO 9175 1 is based also specified a term and symbol for easy identification of pens and drawing templates compatible with the standard called Micronorm which may still be found on some technical drafting equipment Overformats editDIN 476 provides for formats larger than A0 denoted by a prefix factor In particular it lists the formats 2A0 and 4A0 which are twice and four times the size of A0 respectively DIN 476 overformats with rounded inch values Name mm mm inch inch4A0 1682 2378 66 5 24 93 5 82A0 1189 1682 46 19 24 66 5 24While not formally defined ISO 216 2007 notes them in the table of Main series of trimmed sizes ISO A series as well The rarely used sizes 2A0 and 4A0 which follow also belong to this series 2A0 is also known by other unofficial names like A00 12 See also editANSI ASME Y14 1 International standard envelope sizes Paper densityReferences edit International Paper Sizes amp Formats Paper Sizes Retrieved 29 June 2020 Lichtenberg Georg Christoph 7 February 2006 Written 25 October 1786 Lichtenberg s letter to Johann Beckmann in German and English Translated by Kuhn Markus University of Cambridge Retrieved 10 May 2016 Published in Lichtenberg Georg Christoph 1990 Joost Ulrich Schone Albrecht eds Briefwechsel Correspondence in German Vol III 1785 1792 Munich Beck pp 274 75 ISBN 3 406 30958 5 Retrieved 10 May 2016 a b Loi sur le timbre Nº 2136 Stamp Act No 2136 Bulletin des Lois de la Republique in French 237 Paris Republic of France 1 2 3 November 1798 Archived from the original on 26 April 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2024 via Markus Kuhn a b Kuhn Markus International standard paper sizes Retrieved 30 August 2017 International Organization for Standardization November 2019 ISO 536 2019 en Paper and board Determination of grammage ISO Browsing Platform 4 ed 3 1 note 1 Retrieved 8 June 2021 A Paper Sizes A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 papersizes org Retrieved 2 August 2018 International Paper Sizes Dimensions Format amp Standards PaperSize Retrieved 5 October 2018 Japanese B Series Paper Size Retrieved 18 April 2010 Lister David The A4 rectangle The Lister List England British Origami Society Retrieved 6 May 2009 Bell Steven Pen Sizes and Line Types Metrication com Retrieved 30 August 2017 Technical drawing pen sizes Designing Buildings Wiki Retrieved 30 August 2017 A00 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to DIN EN ISO 216 International standard paper sizes ISO 216 details and rationale ISO 216 at iso org Articles by Wilhelm Ostwald referencing Lichtenberg s letter and W Porstmann specifying a metric system of norms for formats for lengths surfaces planes and volumes laying the ground for the DIN Series in German Explanation of paper sizes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ISO 216 amp oldid 1218952889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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