It's obvious that the volume of a envelope is 0 when flat and non-0 when you open it up. However, if you were to fill it with liquid, there must be some shape where it has a maximum volume. Is there a practical way to determine that volume?
I think a starting point would be to start with a cylinder and seal one end by putting it in something like a vice. That gives you the same shape.
EDIT: The reason this problem came to mind is because Quaker's oatmeal packets have a fill line on them so that you don't need a measuring cup. Every day, as I fill up the little packet with water, I think "what a clever idea," but also I wonder about the math behind it. I expect they approximate because, after all, it is just oatmeal.