Wet
Wet paper becomes translucent or see-through because water fills the air gaps between fibers, reducing light scattering.
When paper gets wet, its physical and optical properties change significantly due to the behavior of its cellulose fibers, which are normally held together by hydrogen bonds. Wet paper becomes translucent or see-through because water
Water competes with the fiber-to-fiber hydrogen bonds, causing them to break and making the paper soft and fragile. the paper buckles
As fibers absorb water and expand unevenly, the paper buckles, creating a wrinkled, uneven surface, a process known as cockling. creating a wrinkled