strap bag is an open pouch. This is one type of reusable shopping bag, as well as the type of packaging.
Video String bag
History
The pockets of nets-like material have been used by many cultures in history. For example, Japanese divers use a rope bag to collect items to bring to the surface.
Czechoslovakia
In Czechoslovakia, the production of rope bags dates back to the 1920s to the town of ÃÆ'ár nad SÃÆ'ázavou/Saar in the former Czechoslovakia, the current Czech Republic, when a Vav seller? ÃÆ'n Kr? Il, representing Jaro J. The Rousek Company, started producing rope bags under the Saarense trademark (EKV) at the local chateau? DÃÆ'ár. They had previously made a hair net, which had become obsolete because the shorter hairstyle came into vogue. This has led to years of prosperity for the company. Handmade shopping bags made of artificial silk thread, plaited by women who work at home (this is often their second job) or by using child labor, the bag is then given to Vav? ÃÆ'n Kr il il. Bags quickly became very popular because of their cheap, light, and solid price. Kr il il soon expanded the range of designs, including bags to carry on the elbows or on the shoulders, and bags for sports equipment. In the late 1920s, rope bags were produced in Switzerland and Italy, and distributed throughout the world. Kr? Il himself exported the bags to Canada, France, Switzerland, Germany, Austria and North Africa countries.
East Germany (German Democratic Republic)
The classic Eastern German Einkaufsnetz (shopping net) has colorful leather handbags and webs made of Eisengarn, a strong, rigid, and waxed cotton thread.
Due to the lack of many types of raw materials in the GDR, recycling and reuse are the norm; plastic disposable shopping bags are rarely available in stores.
The pockets take up a little space when not in use and therefore can be carried around in one case by chance finding something useful to sell.
In West Germany the use of net shopping bags declined since the early 1980s because disposable plastic bags became common in shops and supermarkets, but they continued to be used in the GDR.
In the 1960s and 1970s, the net bag was also made from Dederon, the East German trade name for Nylon 6. The oil crisis of the mid-1970s meant that the GDR could no longer produce Dederon in any quantity great like that. and Eisengarn is then used more often for making clean bags.
Environmental concerns, Ostalgie (nostalgia for East Germany), and the common mode for retro products from the mid-20th century have caused a resurgence, in all parts of Germany, from what was once thought to be dozens of Omas Einkaufsnetz net shopping). The DDR Museum in Berlin has a collection of Einskaufsnetz , and bags are now often sold as DDR kult Klassiker .
Russian
The rope bags are popular in Russia and other former USSR republics where they are called avoska (Russian: ??????? ), which may be translated as a maybe-bag . Avoska was the main cultural phenomenon of Soviet daily life. They are manufactured using different types of strings. With the advent of synthetic materials, some of them are made of ropes that can be stretched, so that very small nets can be stretched into enormous sacks. By popularizing the plastic bag (which has the same essential properties of easy-to-use flexibility), avoska is gradually becoming unused, but recent political trends that ban plastic bags can bring it back.
Etymology
The name "avoska" is derived from the Russian aviators 'avos' (Russian: ????? ), vague expression of hope about luck, translated in various contexts as "just in case", "hopefully" etc. The term originated in the 1930s in the context of the shortage of consumer goods in the Soviet Union, when citizens can earn a lot of basic purchases by luck; ordinary people carry avoska in their pockets all the time if an opportunistic situation arises. The exact origins of this term are still uncertain, with several different attributions. In 1970, a popular Soviet comedian, Arkady Raikin, explained that around 1935 he introduced the character, a simple man with a sack netted in his hand. He used to show the sack to the audience and say "?????????????????????????????????????????????????? "And this is what-iffie . What if I bring something in it..."). This script is associated with Vladimir Polyakov.
Maps String bag
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia