Review: Calepino Notebook

It’s taken me forever to get around to reviewing these notebooks, despite having basically had someone else write it for me! Below are some comments and photos from Ted, a former addict of the week:

Got my order of Calepino today. Basically the french Field Notes. Right down to some of the wording on the website. You even get the extra goodies. Ruler, Bic 50’s reissue and a pencil. This is a great notebook. Heavy duty all around. Chipboard cover in the 100-120# range. Approx 60# interior pages. A little coarse. Green grid. No bleed and only slight show through except for the obvious sharpie. 2 staple saddle stitch. We’ll see how that plays out over time abuse wise. This is thicker and heavier than a doane. The stack is FN, Moleskine, doane, Calepino. I think this book is great and easily as good as a FN only sturdier. The only negative is price. All told 20.00 & change after discounts and shipping. Auto 19% discount outside eu plus 5% email sign up. For my daily pocket book a 3 pack takes me over a year to use so for me this is totally worth it to have a great notebook like this.

Ted’s photos:

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I basically agree. I didn’t order mine from France– I was lucky enough to find them stocked at McNally Jackson bookstore in SoHo (a GREAT bookstore with an excellent selection of stationery products). My 3-pack of squared notebooks was $12.95. I like the packaging a lot– the sturdy cardboard case could be used to store used notebooks later, or to stash index cards (if anyone still uses them!).

The notebooks themselves feel substantial, with a nice heavy cover and cleanly cut corners. I like the design– it may seem like overly loud branding to some, but I find the stripes attractive, and the exterior just says what it is in a fairly straightforward way, without any smirking. Inside, the usual space for your info on the inside front cover, and a story about the company in the back, which I translate roughly as follows:

The hardcover notebook was covered with sawdust, often set down between the plane and its shavings. Or on the machine tool or the workbench in my father’s woodworking shop in the basement. With his big red wooden pencil, he made notes in it, drew his plans and sketches, then slid it into the rear pocket of his overalls.  Calepino was born with the desire to offer these notebooks again. Simple, practical and durable… to fill with your notes, creations, or memories, now on 100% recycled paper, made in France.

[As an aside, I think it is really interesting to note the different kinds of memories, nostalgia and aspirations that are encoded in the marketing schemes of various notebook brands. Moleskine wants to be all about creativity and travel, trying to associate themselves with globe-trotting writers and artists of the early 20th century. Field Notes romanticizes American agriculture in a simpler time when small-scale farmers used notebooks given to them as promotional items by companies that took the time to sell them seeds or machinery. Calepino similarly looks back at a warm memory of craftsmanship, and associates notebooks with the hand tools used by a worker in blue overalls. When is someone going to present a notebook that will explicitly appeal to our deep-seated inner desires to look like a black-clad, espresso-sipping avant-garde architect in fancy eyeglasses? Or our longing to replicate the notebooks used by a harried suburban soccer mom with long lists of groceries to buy and children’s activities to plan? Or our desire to associate ourselves with the eternal cool of the pimply teenaged Dungeons and Dragons player, scribbling spells and maps on crumpled pages stained with Mountain Dew? Surely these marketing schemes will come along when enough time has passed for them to have that retro appeal?]

Here’s my own photos:

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The Calepino paper feels less smooth to the touch than many others I’ve tried, but fine point pens still somehow glide over it quite comfortably. Fountain pens worked well. The grid lines slightly resist certain inks. I also found the bleedthrough and showthrough to be better than average.

Ted also sent me a followup email after he ordered several packs of Calepino’s first limited edition:

Got my Calepino Alteration Limited Edition. #’s 37-41/500 copies. Pretty swell. Thought you might like to see them. Cover appears to be sections of a painting/paintings? Doesn’t look familiar and doesn’t look like it fits together in any way. Dark Gray ruled pages which kind of sucks with such a colorful cover. Rulings occasionally off left to right on the pages if one writes across the crease. And I’ve noticed an ever so slight amount of smearing when using my regular graph so a couple seconds drying time. I got approx. 18 euro discount for ordering so much but can’t say at what point that kicked in. It was better than free shipping anyway which I was suppose to get. Fabrice apologized for that and sent a free pack of graph so I made out pretty well considering the exchange. I can say nothing bad about this company. Great product and service on the two purchases I’ve made. Even sent a quality heavy stock card thanking me and apologizing for the mix up and free pack. Hope the pics turned out. As I’ve said before, Field Notes, but their somewhat rougher around the edges French cousin. Or something.

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If there’s anything negative to be said about Calepino, it’s only that they really do seem to be copying what Field Notes has done– packing the notebooks with pencils and pens, offering subscriptions, creating limited editions to encourage collectors, etc. But at the end of the day, these are notebooks, after all, and there’s not all that much you can do to reinvent the wheel! But they are making a very nice product and I’m looking forward to using mine.

Ruled, plain, and squared pages are available, one size only. See here for a list of retailers around the world, or you can order directly from the website.

Thanks again to Ted for sharing his photos and comments!

 

Moleskine Monday: Take Note Exhibit

A review of an interesting art exhibition, based on a collection of Moleskine notebooks:

Don Maynard’s Take Note exhibit was a bit like climbing a mountain. Slow and tedious at first, but well worth the required time and effort. Housed in Modern Fuel’s State of Flux Gallery, the installation consists of 18 artists’ notebooks chained to the white walls of the gallery space. Their soft dark-brown and black covers, perfectly smooth Moleskine, rest quietly on a thin wooden shelf that runs in a strip around the square room….

The notebooks belong to a number of local artists who were asked to document their creative processes over an eight-month period.

In the curator’s artist statement, his instructions to the artists were simple: “do what you would normally do with a small notebook when keeping notes for your artistic practice.”

Read more at  A peek into the mind of the artist – Queen’s Journal.

Henry Jones’ Grail Diary Replica

I don’t even remember how I stumbled across this, but it looks pretty cool, even if you’re not a die-hard Indiana Jones fan:

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The guy who created this also offers similar products for the Hobbit and other films and TV shows, and can rebind journals in real leather, with an aged look and rubbed corners.

Read more at Henry Jones’ Grail Diary Replica.

A Five-Year Old Notebook Fan!

This is one of my favorite reader-submitted photos ever– meet Tholakele, a 5-year old from South Africa.  On a trip to Paris, left the toy department at Le Bon Marché empty handed and instead picked out a notebook and pen and ink set for herself, which she tried out the minute she and her mother got to the café!

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I love her look of concentration– and that’s a nice little Eiffel Tower she’s drawing in gorgeous purple ink!

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The notebook is made by L´après-midi and is called Mini Note: Eiffel.
The children´s calligraphy pen is made by Marc Vidal, France.

Tholakele’s mom, Annicka, admits that a notebook obsession runs in the family– she writes and draws daily in notebooks herself.

A big thank you to Annicka for sharing the photos!

Notebook Addict of the Week: Luis

Luis emailed me from Brazil. He’s a fan of Zequenz and Moleskine notebooks, as well as Leuchtturm and some other brands I can’t quite identify from this photo of his nicely organized collection. I think I spy some Writersblok notebooks towards the left:

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Thanks for sharing your addiction, Luis! Obrigada!

Review and Giveaway: Canson XL Mix Media Sketchbook

I think I first came across this notebook on the Blick website. It comes in several sizes, and I was excited to see that one of them was 3.5 x 5.5″, a rare size for sketchbooks. I went to the Blick retail store in Manhattan to see if I could check one out in person, but they only had other sizes, so I ended up placing an order online. Here’s what I got:

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Here’s the Canson sketchbook next to a pocket size Moleskine for comparison:

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The notebook is a pleasing shape and heft– a sharp-cornered rectangle, with a soft cover.  (The item photo at Blick shows rounded corners, so this may have changed since I bought mine.) The cover is fairly thick and substantial, with a faux-leather texture. On the back is a label with price and brand info– fortunately it peels off very easily.

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The paper is heavy enough that the whole notebook only bends slightly. The square spine reveals the stitched binding underneath.

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When you open the notebook, there’s a space to write your name on the inside front cover, but otherwise it’s completely plain inside– no ribbon marker or pocket, no other branding. The pages open quite flat.

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Given that this sketchbook is marketed as being suitable for mixed media work, I would hope it had substantial paper that could stand up to most pens, and happily, this does turn out to be the case! While the 160 GSM paper has a bit of tooth to it, it feels ok with fine rollerball pens, and really shines on showthrough and bleedthrough, with only the toughest pens showing through. I also tested it with watercolor paint after these photos were taken, and found that it held up well, with minimal buckling.

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I think this is a fantastic little sketchbook for artists on the go. It will slip right into your pocket, with no annoying hard cover or wire binding. Some people might want to protect the outside and corners by using it with some sort of notebook cover, but I think it should hold up pretty well as is. And at $4.49 for a 48-page 3.5 x 5.5″ sketchbook of this quality, it’s a great bargain at Blick. It also comes in 5.5 x 8.5″ for those who prefer larger pages, at only $7.99. (The manufacturer’s list prices are $7.70 and $14.35 respectively, but they are 41% off at Blick.)

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If you want a chance to try the Canson Mix Media Journal for free, I’m giving one away! I’ll select 3 lucky winners from entries received in these ways:

On Twitter, tweet something containing “Canson XL Mix Media Journal” and “@NotebookStories”, and follow @NotebookStories.

On Facebook, “like” the Notebook Stories page, and post something containing the words “Canson XL Mix Media Journal” on the Notebook Stories wall.

On your blog, post something containing the words “Canson XL Mix Media Journal” and “Notebook Stories” and link back to this blog.

The deadline for entry is Friday March 1 at 11:59PM, EST. Good luck everyone!
And please remember to check my posts on Facebook and Twitter for an announcement of the winner.

More Good Stuff from Our Readers

From Jennie, a link to an article with some more great reasons to favor paper over digital note-taking:

“The notebook has an immediate tactile advantage over phones: they aren’t connected to the Internet. It’s intimate in a way computers aren’t. A notebook has never interrupted me with a screen that says, “Wuz up?” Notebooks are easy to use without thinking. I know where I have everything I’ve written on-the-go over the last eight years: in the same stack. It’s easy to draw on paper. I don’t have to manage files and have yet to delete something important. The only way to “accidentally delete” something is to leave the notebook submerged in water.”

Read more at  Why little black books instead of phones and computers | The Story’s Story.

 

Matt Jackson invites you to take a look at his Etsy shop featuring handmade leather journals:

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Paul sends this photo of the best vending machine concept I’ve ever seen. I love the idea of being able to pump in some coins and grab an emergency notebook:
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David sends a link to some funky looking notebooks at Animi Causa, including this one, which comes with a LED pen so you can write in the dark:\
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Anke tips us off to the Envelope Book notebook, whose pages are made of recycled envelopes:
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Thanks for the info, everyone! Keep the tips coming!

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