Moleskine Monday: My Collection

I haven’t done many Moleskine Monday posts lately… and it’s been a while since I’ve updated you on my stash of spare Moleskines. For those who haven’t read other posts where I’ve talked about how I feel about the Moleskine brand, here’s an abbreviated version:

Late 1990s/early 2000’s— not too long after Modo e Modo introduces them, I start seeing Moleskines in stores, and receive a pocket Sketchbook as a gift. It re-awakens my slightly dormant notebook fetish and I start using them for occasional notes and drawings. But I’m not totally obsessed because I’m still really into Palm Pilots. During this period I think I once bought 2 sketchbooks while on a 3-week business trip, and it made me feel like a crazy hoarder.

Mid-late 2000’s— the softcover Moleskines are introduced and for some reason, I fall head over heels in love with the pocket size squared softcover. It’s the first notebook I’ve truly filled from cover to cover. I start this blog and allow myself to wallow in full-on notebook adoration. (Palm Pilots are over, the iPhone isn’t as exciting, and I turn back to notebooks to satisfy my life-long need to fondle something small and rectangular.) My love affair with the softcover fades, but I am using and buying lots of hardcover Moleskines and other similar notebooks such as Piccadilly, HandBook Artist Journal, and the many others I’ve written about here. The Moleskine brand has exploded. They’re everywhere. They’ve become a bit of a cliché, perhaps, but I still love them. I settle into a habit of simultaneously using a pocket squared or plain notebook for daily list-making and journaling, and a pocket sketchbook for drawing and watercolors. (My other routine notebook is a small Moleskine cahier or Field Notes that I use for my French class.) At some point during this period, they stop putting the Modo e Modo name on them, and start using only “Moleskine” in all their branding. They also change their US distributor from Kikkerland, who used to be mentioned on the packaging, to Chronicle, who is not. At this time, I maybe stockpile half a dozen Moleskines, a few Piccadillies, and a couple of HandBook Artist Journals.

Early 2010’s— Moleskine’s rapid growth seems to have led to declines in quality and changes in how they’re made. They are introducing new products at a dizzying pace and focusing more on bags and wallets than notebooks. There’s too much cover overhang, they’re less refined, the paper is thinner– they’re just not as nice. But there still isn’t any other brand that quite meets all my preferences for daily notebooks. When I buy Moleskines in a store, it’s only after inspecting them very carefully to see if they are good ones. Sometimes I find older stock from batches that were better made. I would guess that at this point, I might have hit about 20 unused Moleskines stashed for future use.

Mid- 2010’s— I can’t find good Moleskines in stores anymore.  I have to send in quality complaints about a couple of notebooks ordered online– the company sends replacements, but they aren’t much better. I’ve had it. In February 2014, I post Moleskine Monday: I May Never Buy a New Moleskine Again. But I also turn to the internet and start searching for older stock that still has the Modo e Modo name on it, and once in a while, I hit the jackpot, especially on eBay. I quickly realize that I can only buy Moleskines if I see a photo of the actual notebook, not a standard product shot which may be out of date. Whenever I see the older-looking belly-bands (someday I’ll do a post on how their design has evolved over the years), I snap them up if I can get them for a less-than-outrageous price. I start building up my stash of spares, which by August 2014 includes 37 assorted Moleskines that I would potentially use as everyday notebooks/sketchbooks. After a while, it’s grown quite large and I start trying to track my inventory in a spreadsheet, but I don’t do a great job keeping it up to date. Last time I updated the spreadsheet, the total count was 132. I decide to cut back a bit on my eBay browsing, as I’m running out of room to store all my notebooks!

Now— below are some photos of my stash, which is stored in shoe boxes, some under-bed plastic boxes, and in piles on shelves. Whenever I look at some of the really nice old ones with their perfect corners, I get all pissed off all over again, knowing that somebody once figured out how to make the perfect notebook and then they turned it into crap!

 

I also had a whole drawer-full in my office, until I started working from home. I’m counting just my actual Moleskine branded notebooks for the purposes of today’s post, though I also have a bunch of similar non-Moleskine notebooks earmarked for potential daily usage someday (as opposed to things that are fun to have in my collection, but not planned to be used). Here’s the count:

56 pocket sketchbooks. (I go through about 3-4 a year.)

55 pocket squared (I go through about 3-4 a year.)

12 pocket plain

30 pocket ruled (I normally don’t like ruled notebooks but on a couple of occasions I bought large lots of mixed paper styles. Since they are old ones with good paper and good overall quality, I’m willing to use one occasionally just to stretch out the lifespan of my inventory.)

Other pocket size: 1 storyboard, 1 music, 1 info book, 1 plain softcover, 1 address, 2 Japanese album, 2 ruled reporter, 1 squared reporter

Large size: 1 Voyageur, 1 large sketchbook, 1 large squared

I have not counted any “cahier” or Volant thin notebooks, as I have a few of those mixed in with various Field Notes and other similar stapled or stitched-spine notebooks. But the quantity is very small, just a few I’ve been given.

A few of the sketchbook, squared and plain ones are more recent models that I will use as a last resort. The info book is all crooked and defective, and I’m not quite sure why I’m even keeping it. But the count ends up at over 166 Moleskines, over 150 of which I am likely to potentially use on a day to day basis. (I haven’t counted the sketchbook and squared notebooks I am using now, or any of the dozens I’ve already filled.)

So… I know I’m a little crazy. My partner, who has to live with notebooks constantly arriving in the mail and taking up way too much of our limited space, definitely thinks I’m a little crazy (but also knows there are far worse vices). But the question remains, is it enough? 56 sketchbooks divided by 3 a year is a little less than 19 years, and I’ll only be about 67 years old at that point. The squared ones, if extended with the plain and ruled notebooks, will last up to 32 years, when I’ll be 81. I can probably ease off buying any more of those (unless I spot any really good cheap ones!) but I think I’m allowed to buy some more sketchbooks. Yay!

 

11 thoughts on “Moleskine Monday: My Collection”

  1. I found an old Moleskine at the local thrift store one day and was thrilled to find it unused and with the Modo e Modo company name on it. Now I can try to figure out what all the fuss is about!

  2. this is so great. i feel you on the moleskine changes. i only experienced a few before i started noticing the slight differences in paper quality and cut and then the tacky collections. i can’t afford to pay extra for quality that isn’t there. I would love to see an in-depth comparison of moleskines over the years.

  3. Your moleskin story made my notebook hoarder spirit happy :) I just can’t help myself. I’m not dedicated to one brand, but there is this feeling I get when I know it is right

  4. I feel your pain. I also used to use Palms and got into Moleskines around the same time. I love the Reporters. I use the larger blank notebooks for journals. And yes, paper quality is terrible now. I was using a Moleskine for my journal and noticed that the last signature of pages is loose! It just wasn’t sewn well. I picked up a Rhodia for my new journal. At least I can use a fountain pen with it again.

    I guess I should check out Ebay for a few of the old school ones, before they disappear completely. And it really is a shame. The paper on the new notebooks feels like those old cheap school tablets. It’s rough.

  5. It’s an odd odd habit but I’m guilty as well. As I write this I’m trying not to order more cahiers. It’s not like we can fill all of these books anytime soon, but I love the look and feel. I love how handwritten words look in a notebook. I think I own a dozen Piccadilly notebooks and maybe 9 or 10 moleskines not to mention 5 or 6 more expensive leather journals. Nerds. Lol oh well. Makes us happy.

  6. After reading this, I went to Ebay on a whim and fell down an old-moleskine rabbit hole. I’m at the bottom now, trying to get out… “Hello? Can anyone hear me?” I found someone who had a cache of the old-ruled moleskines, and I picked up oh 50 of them – the ones with the orange label and black writing; modo e modo era. I also found about 10 in the larger size, and various other old sketch and plain moleskines. I’m using an old ruled pocket moleskine now, and they ARE better. Or maybe it’s just that I’m nostalgic, remembering when I first discovered them and had more time to write. The cover just looks and feels better, a little more oiled, no rubber feel. The corners are right in line with the paper, and I love the way the paper is roughly cut on some of the notebooks to make sure they don’t stick out of the cover. Anyway, hopefully they will keep me writing! Not sure if 50 is enough, or far too many of the pocket ones. I’ll just have to remind myself, “you also own a computer. And you know how to type.”

  7. Lucky you, what a great find! Maybe you are the reason I haven’t been seeing any good ones on eBay lately!

  8. Thanks! (and sorry!) I’m sure ebay will replenish. But I am very grateful for the new cache. Sending you a direct-message from the contact page about a few I see now.

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