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ISO 216

ISO 216 sizes
(mm × mm)
A Series
A0841 × 1189
A1594 × 841
A2420 × 594
A3297 × 420
A4210 × 297
A5148 × 210
A6105 × 148
A774 × 105
A852 × 74
A937 × 52
A1026 × 37
B Series
B01000 × 1414
B1707 × 1000
B2500 × 707
B3353 × 500
B4250 × 353
B5176 × 250
B6125 × 176
B788 × 125
B862 × 88
B944 × 62
B1031 × 44
C Series
C0917 × 1297
C1648 × 917
C2458 × 648
C3324 × 458
C4229 × 324
C5162 × 229
C6114 × 162
C7/681 × 162
C781 × 114
C857 × 81
C940 × 57
C1028 × 40
DL110 × 220
ISO 216 specifies international standard (ISO) paper sizes, used in most countries in the world today. It is the standard which defines the well-known A4 paper size.

A comparison of different A paper sizes

The standard was originally adopted by DIN (as DIN 476) in Germany in 1922, although some of the formats contained therein were independently invented in France during its revolution and later forgotten.

ISO 216 defines two series of paper sizes: A and B. There is also a C series for envelopes, defined in ISO 269.

A series

Paper in the A series format has a 1:√2 aspect ratio, though this is rounded to the nearest millimetre. A0 is defined so that it has an area of 1 , prior to the above mentioned rounding. Successive paper sizes in the series A1, A2, A3, etc., are defined by halving the preceding paper size parallel to its shorter side, again prior to rounding. The most frequently used paper size is A4, which is 210 × 297 mm.

B series

The B series formats are geometric means between the A series format with the same number and the A series format with one lower number. For example, B1 is a geometric mean between A1 and A0. The sides of B0 are 1 m to √2 m.

There is also an incompatible Japanese B series defined by the JIS. The lengths of JIS B series paper are approximately 1.22 times those of A-series paper.

C series

The C series formats are geometric means between the B series format with the same number and the A series format with the same number, e.g. C2 is the geometric mean between B2 and A2. The C series formats are used mainly for envelopes. An A4 page will fit into a C4 envelope. If you fold the A4 page so that it is A5 in size, it will fit in a C5 envelope and so on.

Application

Prior to the adoption of ISO 216, many different paper formats were used internationally. These formats did not fit into a coherent system and were defined in terms of non-metric units. The ISO 216 formats are organized around the ratio 1:√2; two sheets next to each other together have the same ratio, sideways. This simplifies copying two A4 sheets in reduced size on one, and copying an A4 sheet in magnified size on an A3 sheet or copying half an A4 sheet in magnified size on an A4 sheet. The principal countries not generally using the ISO paper sizes are the United States of America and Canada, which use the Letter, Legal, and Executive system. (Canada uses a P-series of sizes, which are the American paper sizes rounded to metric dimensions.)

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

External links

* International standard paper sizes: ISO 216 details and rationale



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