Technical product photography, top-down flat-lay shot on a white laboratory surface with neutral gray background. A single die-cut sheet of warm beige bagasse pulp (300gsm thickness) laid completely flat, shown at 1:1 scale for clarity. This is the raw material for an innovative two-in-one food container called the "Española Box." THE GEOMETRIC SHAPE (fully visible): A complex starburst pattern cut from one continuous piece of paper. CENTER: A perfect hexagon in the middle (~11cm across) forming the bottom base. Its surface has subtle micro-dimple texture visible under close inspection. OUTER WALL FLAPS: Six large triangular panels radiating outward from each edge of the central hexagon, like pizza slices. Each panel is scored along its diagonal edges with faint crease lines visible. At the tip of each triangular flap is a trapezoid-shaped locking tab extending beyond the point. Adjacent to each tab on neighboring flaps are teardrop-shaped slots cut into the paper. INNER LINING STRIPS: Attached to the INNER SIDE of each triangular wall flap is a long, narrow rectangular strip (~2cm wide, extending 8cm downward from the flap's bottom edge). These six strips hang naturally downward due to gravity, folded flat against the backside of their parent wall flaps. They are made of the same beige bagasse material but slightly lighter in tone to indicate they will become the waterproof liner. THE WATERLINE SCORE: On every inner lining strip, approximately halfway down its length, there Mehr sehen