Reggie Kray’s Sketchbook

Here’s an odd one: a sketchbook by the notorious British gangster Reggie Kray.

The Kray twins were serving a life sentence in prison when they heard about James Fallon, a young boy living in South Africa who had been paralyzed as a result of being hit by a car and only survived thanks to a seven-hour operation. The imprisoned Kray brothers ended up becoming pen pals with Fallon and helping to raise money for his care. Among the correspondence they exchanged in the 18th months before his death was this sketchbook:

The archive includes six signed crayon drawings by Reggie of a sailor, a cowboy, a boxer, a landscape, a boat at sea and a boxing match.
Affixed inside the sketchbook are two Christmas cards. An inscription on a page at the front dated December 3 1989 reads:
“The most courageous boy in the world – James Fallon. God bless. Affection. Your friend. Reg Kray xxxxx.”

Read more:How the Kray twins helped a paralysed Codsall youngster from their prison cells

Moleskine Monday: Paivi Eerola’s Art Journal

I just loved this spread from the Moleskine sketchbook of Finnish artist Paivi Eerola, posted on her website Peony and Parakeet:

Here’s some of her thoughts on art journaling:

For me, art journals are little more than just sketchbooks. I like to call them “idea books” as I often process my ideas further when I am working on the page. I don’t always make one page on the same go, but work with it several times, adding more ideas as the page progresses. However, I have quite low expectations on how my pages will look. They are not pieces of art but more like collections of ideas to me.

My art journals are not chronological diaries but random visual notes that I process to full images. I can make a quick sketch of a rose one day and then continue the page with painting on the other day. When I am working with a new art class, I use art journals to record my visual ideas and practice the techniques. I also see creating art journal pages a route to bigger paintings. When I paint on canvas, I use the ideas that I have come up with when making the pages. Every artist should also be an art journaler!

Read more at Moleskine Sketchbook– Another Full Art Journal!

Notebook Addict of the Week: Stephen

This week’s addict shared a photo of his collection with me via Twitter several years ago and yet it somehow languished in my to-do list until now! (At least I think so… after 10-plus years of blogging, I can’t even remember all the Notebook Addicts I’ve posted about!)

Here’s Stephen’s collection as of 2015.

I bet he has a lot more by now! Maybe he’ll update us via Twitter again: @hdbbstephen

Hilma Af Klint’s Notebooks

This is my latest favorite find in the “Artists’ Facsimile Sketchbooks” category: Hilma Af Klint Notes and Methods. I saw it for sale at the McNally Jackson bookshop in NYC and it’s full of lots of great reproductions of full notebook spreads.

I saw the Hilma Af Klint exhibition at the Guggenheim a few months ago and found it quite interesting. They had a couple of her notebooks on display, as well as some additional images in a timeline, and I snapped these photos:

Lost and Found Sketchbook

Great story about a sketchbook that went astray for 36 years! In 1983, Thomas Thospecken set off on a cross-country journey, intending to document his travels in sketchbooks and journals. He lost one of them along the way, but decades later, the person who found it managed to return it to him!

Artist Thomas Thorspecken, known for his sketches of Orlando, was reunited with a notebook lost when he was in teens in New Jersey.

Read the full story: Sketchbook, lost 36 years ago in New Jersey, is reunited with local artist

Moleskine Monday: Wings of Judas Art Journal

I love coming across other people’s art journals, especially presented in spreads of thumbnail pages:

This is from Wings of Judas, the website of Judas Bardon. You can click to zoom in on each page via this link. The home page seems to be down so there isn’t a lot of other info about the artist’s background, but you can see other journals and artworks via this link.

Hahnemühle Sketchbooks Review and Giveaway

When I posted my first Hahnemühle sketchbooks review several years ago, the brand wasn’t that easy to find in the US, except for their artist papers. Fortunately, this has changed and Hahnemühle sketchbooks are now more widely available at Amazon, Blick and other retailers. The company contacted me to offer some samples of their various sketchbooks, so let’s take a look at all these goodies!

Hahnemühle Watercolour Book

First off, the Watercolour Book. This is an “A6″ (actual dimensions 4 1/4 x 6 1/16”) portrait sketchbook with a lightly textured 200 GSM watercolor paper. I love the unusual textured charcoal grey cloth they used on the cover. At 60 pages, it is nicely slim, and even though the size is a little larger than my usual favorite size, it has attractive proportions and offers a little more real estate on the page while still being very portable. I tested my Winsor and Newton artist grade watercolors and the paper held up well, with no significant buckling. Colors are vibrant, and the pens I tested worked well too. The list price is $17.49, and Amazon currently has it available at $14.00. (Buy at Amazon. Other sizes and landscape orientation also available.)

hahnemuehle watercolour book sketchbook review
hahnemuhle watercolor book exterior
hahnemuhle watercolor book cover texture
hahnemuhle watercolor book paper test
hahnemuhle watercolor book paper test back of page

Hahnemühle Report & Art Book

Next is the Report & Art Book. I guess the name indicates it is a reporter style top opening notebook, but the paper inside is plain, so it can be used in landscape format as well. The red stitching adds a cute detail to the exterior. One other distinguishing characteristic is the fold-back cover. Inside are 64 sheets of 130 GSM paper with a fairly smooth texture. The pocket in the back is a bit small compared to the size of the notebook, which again is said to be A6, but is actually 4 3/8 x 5 15/16″. This paper is toothier and I found it a bit rough an draggy with fountain pens, but they are certainly useable, and didn’t bleed or feather. The Acculiner and Super Sharpie did bleed a little, and I saw more show-through on this paper than with the other sketchbooks in this review. But I still think it’s a pretty good paper for basic sketching with most pencils or pens. The prices I’m seeing online for this are around $20 and up, which seems a bit high to me compared to some of the other items in this review. (Amazon only seems to have the A5 size.)

hahnemuhle report and art book
hahnemuhle report and art book cover folds back
hahnemuhle report and art book back pocket
hahnemuhle report and art book pen tests
hahnemuhle report and art book pen tests back of page

Hahnemühle Nostalgie Sketch Book

The Nostalgie Sketch Book, appropriately, has a very classic feel with a squared off spine and squared corners. (A6, but dimensions are 4 3/8 x 6″) The cover is wrapped with a grey textured paper that sort of has the look of a coarse woven fiber. This has 80 pages of 190 GSM paper with a smooth texture designed for finely detailed ink drawings. I loved the feel of writing in this sketchbook– fountain pens work beautifully, and nothing bleeds through, except for a little spot where I held the Acculiner in place for 5 seconds. This is one of the best papers I’ve tested for show-through, bleed-through, and fountain pen friendliness. The list price for this size is $16.95. (Buy at Amazon. Other sizes also available.)

hahnemuhle nostalgie sketchbook review
hahnemuhle nostalgie sketchbook cover texture
hahnemuhle nostalgie sketchbook pen tests
hahnemuhle nostalgie sketch book pen tests

Hahnemühle Grey Book

The Grey Book is aptly titled, as the cover is grey and the inside pages are also grey. The cover features a sort of wood-grain texture but you see the fibers in the paper, so it also sort of looks like grey flannel. It is an A5 size (6 x 8 7/16″), with 80 pages of smooth 120 GSM paper. I was happy to have a chance to play with my white gel ink pen and marker, as well as using black and white pastels to create shading and highlights. Obviously colored fountain pen inks are not the intended use, but most fountain pens will work pretty well on this paper with zero bleed-through or show-through, but maybe a tiny bit of feathering with really wet inks. I’ve seen prices online ranging from $7.50 to $15 for this size. (Buy at Amazon: A5 or A4. They also make a version with light brown paper, called the Cappuccino Book.)

hahnemuhle grey book sketchbook review
hahnemuhle grey book cover texture
hahnemuhle grey book pen tests
hahnemuhle grey book pastel crayon and marker tests
Page on left is the back of the previous pen test page showing one dot of bleed-through from the Acculiner marker

Hahnemühle Diary Flex

Finally we have the Diary Flex. This notebook features a refillable cover. Inserts can be purchased with blank, lined or dotted pages. The design is quite attractive, with a black faux-leather textured cover and red accents. The inside of the cover has slots for business cards or credit cards, and papers can be tucked in the front and back cover pockets. The top and bottom of the spine are notched so that the headband of the insert shows– this may make the spine less likely to wear at the corners but I can’t decide if I like it. I also don’t love how the elastic closure is anchored at the spine– this leaves the loop flapping around with no place to tuck it out of the way. The paper inside is very smooth, with an ivory tone. At 100 GSM, it feels quite substantial as you turn the pages. The paper feels very smooth and I expected fountain pens to do really well, and for the most part, they did. Just a tiny bit of bleed and feathering only when pressing down to really flex the nib.

The cover and its included refill sell for around $16-20 at most retailers, and the refill notebooks alone are around $7. These seem like a good value, but I’m not sure if the cover is special enough to merit refilling. I do like it, and it seems sturdy enough to last a while, but to me, the point of a refillable notebook is to have a cover made of leather or something that will break in and become more loveable over time, like a Filofax or a Traveler’s Notebook. The refills can’t be used on their own unless you want to look at a very unfinished cardboard exterior with mesh on the spine. But maybe there are other covers that would be compatible? The size is about 4 1/2 x 7 1/2″, so it is an unusual size, but maybe close enough to a Travelers Notebook if you don’t mind a wider cover overhang. (Buy at Amazon.)

hahnemuhle diary flex review
hahnemuhle diary flex cover
hahnemuhle diary flex insert and cover
hahnemuhle diary flex pen tests
hahnemuhle diary flex pen tests

Conclusion

All of these Hahnemühle notebooks feel really solidly made, with good attention to detail. They all have more cover overhang than I personally prefer, but everything is symmetrical and squared off and the construction seems precise and high quality. And because Hahnemühle is first and foremost a paper company, they know how to deliver specific paper types that will please artists as well as casual users. Like Stillman and Birn, Hahnemühle offers different textures, weights and colors to work with a range of art media. For me, the Nostalgie and Watercolour books will definitely be in my to-be-used pile, and the Grey Book will also be fun for more experimentation. I’m really pleased with these Hahnemühle sketchbooks and look forward to seeing more of their products in the US market. Check out their website for more details on their various offerings.

Giveaway!

The folks at Hahnemühle also sent me a pack of their Travel Booklets (they’re part of my review from a few years ago), which I will be giving away to a lucky reader:

hahnemuhle travel booklets hahnemuhle sketchbooks review
hahnemuhle travel booklets hahnemuhle sketchbooks review

The giveaway prize is this brand-new, in-wrapper two-pack of Travel Booklets, plus, as a bonus, I will throw in the Diary Flex and Report & Art notebooks tested in this review– just a couple of pages in the back have been used for my pen tests, but they are otherwise in like-new condition.

I will pick one winner from entries received in any of these ways:

On Twitter, tweet something containing “Hahnemühle Sketchbooks @NotebookStories @Hahnemuehle”, and follow @NotebookStories and @hahnemuehle

On Facebook, “like”  the Notebook Stories page and the Hahnemuhle page, and post something containing the words “Hahnemühle Sketchbooks” on the Notebook Stories page.

On Instagram, follow @Notebook.Stories and @Hahnemuehle_global and comment on my Hahnemühle giveaway post, tagging a friend and adding a hashtag of your favorite adjective describing the Hahnemühle notebook. (Example: “@myfriendsally #fountainpenfriendly”)

On your blog, post something containing the words “Hahnemühle Sketchbooks” and “Notebook Stories” and link back to this post, also leaving a comment below with the link in case the trackback doesn’t work.

Please note that the prize can only be shipped to a US address. The deadline for entry is Friday June 14, 2019 at 11:59PM, EST. Please allow a couple of weeks for me to announce a winner. Good luck everyone!

Adam Hackländer’s Travel Journals

My Modern Met interviews a talented artist whose notebooks are a constant companion as he travels the world. Adam Hackländer’s travel journals have a style very similar to (and probably inspired by) José Naranja’s notebooks:

adam hacklander travel journal
Journal page and art supplies by Adam Hacklander
adam hacklander travel journal
Journal page by Adam Hacklander

In the age of everything digital, Hackländer’s handcrafted keepsakes offer a more deliberate and thoughtful form of remembering his journeys. He’s not mindlessly snapping photos only to forget what they mean later on. He records everything from the currency exchange rate to the brilliant red-orange sun over a temple in Kyoto, Japan. No matter how mundane or amazing, the combination of pictures and words give his experiences some context so that he can return to them again and again. “Nothing beats the feeling when you read an old journal and recall everything you’ve done,” Hackländer tells My Modern Met.

Read more at My Modern Met: Interview: How an Avid Traveler Chronicles His Adventures Through Illustrated Journals

You can see more of Adam Hackländer’s travel journals on his Instagram feed.

Writing Exhibition at the British Library

I came across an article from The Economist about a new exhibition at the British Library, which sounds great: it’s all about the history of writing and note-taking. The article is behind a paywall, unfortunately, but here’s a taste:

NEATLY HANDWRITTEN, with a simple diagram below a numbered list, the sheet looks like any fussy hobbyist’s record of some cranky project in a garden shed. This, though, is a page taken from a hospital bacteriologist’s lab notebooks in December 1928. A few weeks previously, the researcher had found by chance that a common-as-muck fungus had contaminated his experiment but seemed to be purging bacteria. This sheet confirms that Penicillium, that nasty old mould that thrives in damp, has thoroughly zapped the streptococcus bacteria in a blood sample. Within 15 years, Alexander Fleming’s discovery at St Mary’s Hospital in London had—thanks to biochemists Ernst Chain and Howard Florey—led to effective penicillin treatment. It would inaugurate the antibiotic revolution, save tens of millions of lives and even (in some accounts) help win the second world war after its supply to Allied forces after D-Day. 

At the British Library (BL), Fleming’s modest but epoch-making notes sit alongside a selection of other illustrious scrawls as part of the exhibition “Writing: Making Your Mark”….

Source: The Economist: The Magic of Notebooks

The exhibition runs until August 27, 2019. Find out more at the British Library website.

Notebooks, journals, sketchbooks, diaries: in search of the perfect page…