Primary paper for coating & laminating
Engineered base papers suitable for extrusion coating, lamination, and further processing, with controlled surface properties and strength.
From Nayagarh, Odisha, MINAKSHI DALAGANJAN SINGH manufactures primary paper materials and composite paperboard designed for coating, laminating, packaging, and specialty conversion. [web:85][web:86][web:88][web:90]
Product families are structured around how paper is actually used—by converters, laminators, and packaging lines—rather than just by grade names. [web:88]
Engineered base papers suitable for extrusion coating, lamination, and further processing, with controlled surface properties and strength.
Multi‑layer structures and composite boards designed for stiffness, barrier performance, and machinability in packaging lines.
Supply in reels or cut‑sheet formats, with core sizes, widths, and sheet dimensions matched to downstream equipment.
Support for adjusting basis weight, caliper, or fibre mix across trial runs while keeping communication clear and documented.
Practical shipment planning around your line changeovers and inventory constraints, with a focus on predictable arrivals.
MINAKSHI DALAGANJAN SINGH operates from Flat/Door/Block No. 88C020, Rajabati Nua Sahi, Ranapur, Nayagarh, Odisha, serving customers who rely on primary paper and composite board as core inputs.
The focus is on making base materials that behave consistently in production—with clear, accessible communication rather than complex, opaque grade codes. [web:85][web:86][web:90]
These examples illustrate the kind of end‑use contexts that guide product development— from cartons to composite formats.
Folding cartons
Composite paperboard with stiffness and surface suitable for printing, creasing, and folding into cartons.
Laminates
Primary papers supplied for combining with films or foils to build barrier, print, and stiffness in layers.
Specialty
Paper and board variants tuned for specific processes, such as die‑cutting or pattern forming.
Feedback often highlights communication, predictability of supply, and how materials behave on real lines.
The board has behaved consistently across runs, which has helped us keep waste under control.
We appreciate the willingness to adjust specifications through trials instead of just saying “standard grade”.
Deliveries have matched the schedules we share, which matters for our own planning.
These example pieces mirror the type of practical, non‑marketing content decision‑makers look for when evaluating industrial suppliers. [web:85][web:88][web:89][web:90]
A look at how small shifts in grammage affect coating weight, stiffness, and overall line behaviour.
Read note →
How joint feedback between mills and converters leads to fewer surprises at scale.
Read note →
Simple ways to align delivery patterns with the realities of your production scheduling.
Read note →Use this form to describe your application, target specs, volumes, and timelines so the conversation can start with real context.