In Search of Notebooks: Paris and Amsterdam

I recently took a trip to Paris and Amsterdam. Searching for notebooks wasn’t the sole purpose of the trip, of course, but I did a better job than usual of preparing for the journey with some research on places to buy notebooks.

In Amsterdam, I had less time to devote to stationery shopping, as I’d never been there before and wanted to see all the sights. But I did make a point of visiting P. K. Akkerman, a stationery and pen shop I first heard of via this blog post. The shop has since moved from the location described in that post, and I didn’t get to see the ladies with the precise manicures and hairdos, but there was quite a nice selection of notebooks, and an even better display of amazing high-end pens.

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One of the other stationery shops I’d hoped to see in Amsterdam had also either moved or closed, so my other notebook spottings were all in newsstands or museum shops. At the Stedelijk museum, I saw a wonderful exhibition of the artist Marlene Dumas, and bought a lovely item that is part art book, part notebook, I guess– some of Dumas’ paintings are interspersed with blank pages in a small softcover booklet.

In Paris, I had more leads to follow and spent a good part of a day wandering around tracking them down. My favorite shop was Marie Tournelle, a small store that is just crammed with cute stationery and school supplies.

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The museum shop at the Centre Pompidou also has an amazing papeterie section. I loved visiting the Sennelier store– the selection of sketchbooks wasn’t all that dazzling, but the rest of the art supplies will blow your mind, and it’s wonderfully old-fashioned. I loved the color charts along the stairs.

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Papier + had some beautifully bound journals with rainbow pages– expensive, though.

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A store called Merci had a small stationery section with a few cool things– along with some great (expensive) clothes and shoes and selected home and garden items. And to top it all off, there was even an interesting notebook sitting right on the desk in the AirBnB apartment I stayed in in Paris. It looked like it was quite old, with numbered graph paper pages separated with thin sheets of tissue, as if it was meant to be a lab notebook where you’d make copies of each page.

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Here’s the stack of notebooks I brought home from my trip. Not a bad haul! I’ll do a more detailed review on the notebooks themselves soon.

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See my Flickr album for even more photos.

8 thoughts on “In Search of Notebooks: Paris and Amsterdam”

  1. The graph paper is an order book. At the end of this book you will find two sheets of blue paper (“carbon paper” in Dutch, no idea what it is called in English. Back in the days of typewriters this was used as well)

    You put a blue page in between the numbered paper and the blank one, you write with balpoint on the first the order of your client. It will be copied on the blank paper. You hand the copy over to your client and you keep the original.

  2. Do you remember if the PW Akkerman in Amsterdam had Clairefontaine pads/notebooks? Or any ot the other stores you visited in Amsterdam?

    It’s so strange here, even finding just squared pads is not so easy here….

  3. PW Akkerman did have some Clairefontaine– you can actually spot a small pink one on top of a pile in one of my photos. I think I may have seen Clairefontaine in another store there but I can’t remember!

  4. Perfect, thank you! I’ll check it out today! Really looking forward to get some nice paper here.

    I just found their Google page, maaan, this store is huuge!! https://goo.gl/maps/gm0Lg

    Thanks for the tip and nice blog!

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