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I'm not sure how universally this question applies; I live in Canada. When we buy potatoes, they often come in large bags made out of heavy paper. The bags are closed by sewing a string into the top of the bag with a distinctive stitch. Sometimes it is very easy to open a bag: you just pull on the string. Other times, not so easy. Noone seems to know whether the efficacy of such an undertaking depends on the method used. Some suspect or even claim that snipping the string in a certain location, or pulling in a certain direction, will guarantee success.

However, it is also possible that some of these bags are just not sewn correctly. It may also be that any such ease of opening is altogether a side effect of the bag-closing process, and that they are not meant to be easy to open.

Is there a reliable method for opening potato bags with ease and rapidity?

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Apply scissors. – Tim N Mar 17 '11 at 23:03
@Tim: That's still less easy and rapid than just pulling on the string. To be fair, though, I didn't specify the quantity of ease and rapidity. – intuited Mar 17 '11 at 23:57
Some rice bags seem to be similarly stitched closed and after playing with one for a bit, I determined that it appears to be designed to close the bag, not to provide an easy zip-like opening. I don't know how it compares to potato bags though. – Allison Mar 18 '11 at 6:22
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I love your question! We have the same stitching here, for cat litter and chicken food. And I have the same problem. – Mien Mar 18 '11 at 8:22
This is a question that has bothered me for years. I never thought to ask. Sometimes, one pull and the whole string comes out. Other times, It seems like I'm ripping one stitch at a time. – Chris Cudmore Jul 4 '12 at 14:13

4 Answers

High-carbon forged 9-inch santoku. It'll go through a paper bag like butter.

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11  
Cutting paper is one of the worst things you can do with a good knife ... unless it's cotton rag or linen, it's probably made from wood pulp, and will dull your knives rather quickly. Yes, I know, you don't use it this way very often, but I'd still rather go with a pair of crappy scissors (or one of the many pocket knives / multitools I likely have on me, or a utility knife that I probably have in the next room), than use a good knife. – Joe Mar 18 '11 at 2:52

Heh, this used to trip me up with feed bags all the time...

The bags are machine-sewn (of course). For each stitch, a needle pushes the string through the bag creating a loop which intersects the loop from the previous stitch on the other side. Pull from one end, you'll pull the loop out all the way across. Pull from the other, you'll pull it tight.

Hold the bag to where you're looking at the "messy" side of the stitches (with all the interlocking loops). Find the edge where the loops start - the end of the string will probably be tucked into the first stitch. Pull it out, and keep pulling...

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This depends entirely on the stitch used. Chain stitch comes apart easily. Lock stitch doesn't, as the name implies. There are many other types too, with varying degrees of locking. See wikipedia for more info than you need. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sewing_machine – yossarian Mar 18 '11 at 13:52
@yossarian: quite true. There are some bags I've never been able to pull open... Including the sugar I bought yesterday :| – Shog9 Mar 18 '11 at 14:49

Both sides are looped. Take an end, loosen it hale way, grab one string and pull. It will very easily pull off all the way across the bag.

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doesn't work always, sometimes the last loop is tightened around a string end. – rumtscho Oct 10 '12 at 21:36

I know this is an old discussion, but in case anyone is still reading... sometimes when it locks up like that, if you tease out and un-sew a few stitches from the flat side, then pull both the flat and knotted strings at once, it'll go.

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