The tote bag is a big bag and often not tied with a parallel handle that appears from the side of the pocket.
Video Tote bag
Description
Tote type is made of sturdy fabric, perhaps with thick skin on the handle or the bottom; skin versions often have pebbled surfaces. Common fabrics include thick canvas, perhaps dyed, or treated to hold moisture and mold. Hemp is another traditional material, though less popular. In recent decades, heavy nylon and other easy synthetic treatments have become common, although these can degrade with prolonged exposure to sunlight. Many of today's cheap or free totes are often made from recycled materials, from minimally processed natural fibers, or from byproducts from processes that improve organic materials.
Maps Tote bag
History
The term tote or tate, meaning "to carry", can be traced back to the 17th century but was not used to describe bags until 1900. However, the madness of tote bags in the United States began in the 1940s with the release of LL Bean's Boat Bag on 1944. Since they are easier than carrying luggage, most people choose to use tote bags. During the 1950s, tote bags began to enter into the mainstream culture. Women mainly use it as a practical bag because they do not need much care. It was not until the 1960s when the carrying case embraced the personal style. Bonnie Cashin released her own line of tote bags called Cashin Carry Tote Bags that combine style and functionality. In the 1990s, Kate Spade finally changed how American culture embraced the tote bag when she started carrying fashion bags. Today, fashion and consumer lovers can find handbags in various decorations and themes.
Environmental issues
Recently, tote bags have been sold as a more environmentally-friendly replacement for disposable plastic bags because they can be reused many times over. However, a study by the UK Environmental Agency found that cotton canvas bags should be reused at least 327 times before they could match carbon expenditure from a single-use plastic bag. Meanwhile, tote bags made of recycled polypropylene plastic require 26 reuses to be matched.
But because these handbags have grown and grown everywhere, their abundance has prompted consumers to see them as disposable items that they do not need to reuse, defeating their purpose. Not only do many stores offer cheap or even free tote bags at the register, they are also common marketing tools stamped with logos and used by nonprofits and businesses as promotional gifts.
This can be seen by a 2014 study that found that reusable bag owners forgot about 40% of their grocery shopping and used it only about 15 times each before being discarded. In addition, about half of respondents typically prefer to use the above-reusable plastic bags, despite having a reusable bag and recognizing the benefits.
References
Further reading
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Dillon, Noah (September 12, 2016). "Is Tote Bags Really Good for the Environment?". Atlantic .
Source of the article : Wikipedia