AbstractLaminated paperboard is often used as a packaging material for products such as toys, tea and frozenfoods. To make the paperboard packages appealing for consumers, the fold lines must be both neat and undamaged. The quality of the folds depends on two converting processes: the manufacture of fold lines (creasing) and the subsequent folding. A good crease contains some delamination, initiated during creasing, to reduce the bending stiffness and to prevent the board from breaking during folding. However, for boards of high grammage breaking of the top layer is nevertheless a frequent problem. The mechanisms that operate in the creasing zone during creasing and folding, and that may thus result in breaking of the top layer, are studied...