NEPALESE LOKTA PAPER
This handmade paper is made from the bark of the Lokta,
or Daphne Papyracea, and is a shrub that grows in the forests,
under the shade of the larger plants, in the foothills
of the Himalayas. It is a self regenerating native bast
fibre and abundant in supply, thus preserving the fragile
ecology of Nepal as well as giving continued work to the
many mountain villages who make their living by making
the raw paper.
Lokta grows at an altitude of around 6500ft and over
and is strong, durable and has an inherent natural resistance
to worms and insects. It is made using a centuries old
process handed down from generation to generation.
How is it made?
The villagers trek to where the lokta grows, harvests,
then transports it back to the village. It is boiled, cleaned,
then beaten with wooden mallets to produce the fibre pulp.
It is then mixed with water and poured into a shallow floating
frame, made from bamboo poles stretched with canvas, then
sun dried to produce the crisp long fibre paper. Once dry,
it’s taken to a village outside Kathmandu where it
is made into our products by skilled craft makers, resulting
in a product that is tree friendly and fair trade.
Lokta is
the Nepali national paper and continues to be used for
the preparation of legal documents, land registry forms
and manuscripts, for which it’s excellent durability
over many years is a fundamental requirement.
See our Nepalese Lokta
Paper products.
|