World War I Notebook

This World War I notebook found on eBay is a recent addition to my collection of vintage notebooks.

world war i notebook

I was intrigued by this notebook because I’d never seen one quite like it, and there is no manufacturer’s name or symbol anywhere on it. Unlike the other World War 1 soldier’s diary in my collection, it’s just a plain lined notebook with no added content. It measures 3 3/8 x 5″, close to today’s standard sizes but a little bigger than many typical antique diaries, which tend to be more like 2.5 x 4″. It is about 1/4″ thick, with 6 signatures of paper.

The cover seems to be a faux leather wrapped around cardboard. The pages are gilt-edged, though the shininess is quite faded from what it probably used to be. Inside, the endpapers have a pattern printed in metallic ink. The endpapers are two separate sheets, so you can see a gap at the spine where red cloth tape shows through. This must have been a very elegant looking notebook when it was new.

vintage notebook endpapers

Inside, the pages are lined. Many are blank, and the notebook doesn’t seem to have been used from front to back. The written-on pages are scattered throughout. It seems to have been used to record letters sent and received while its owner was stationed in France during World War 1. The dates noted begin in 1918 and continue into 1919.

world war i correspondence

There is a mention of “devastated areas” so peacetime must have still been quite difficult for soldiers serving in France in the aftermath of the war, but he makes no mention of events as they happen, only the letters and postcards he sends or receives. Presumably their contents would have been censored until after the war was over.

The World War I notebook also contains various names and addresses, mostly written in the back pages, so it must also have served as an address book where the owner recorded information about people he met during his travels. Some of the addresses are in various US locations including military bases, while others are French names and addresses. The entries are written in a mix of pencil and different colors of fountain pen ink. The handwriting is quite beautiful. One page even seems to be written in shorthand.

world war 1 notebook addresses

There are a few odds and ends tucked into the notebook: a visiting card, a blank prescription slip with numbers written on the back, a newspaper clipping and a typewritten poem. As noted in the poem, the owner’s military service in France seems to have covered several months at the end of the war and continued during after the armistice.

world war i notebook poem typewritten

An interesting sidenote: The poem seems actually to have been a parody song written by someone named Grantland Rice, according to a newspaper from that time, though the words here are slightly different. I found references to this song in other online sources, such as this one where it was similarly written on a loose sheet tucked into a diary. It must have been quite popular at the time, perhaps as a humorous thing to include in letters home. But maybe the men were told not to mail it in censored letters, as it might have seemed too negative, and thus it was carried with them in their notebooks and diaries.

world ware i notebook with clipping

This is quite a fascinating and mysterious notebook. The contents are in a way quite mundane, without any personal reflection other than, perhaps, the poem/song, so we can only imagine what the owner’s wartime experiences must have been like. Someday I’ll take the time to look up some of the names in the notebook, but I’m not sure they will help me identify the owner, as he does not seem to recorded his own name or his relationship to the other people named in the notebook. It is amazing to think that this notebook has survived in relatively good shape through the end of a war over 100 years ago. It’s battered and musty smelling but seems alive with history.

Rashid Johnson’s Sketchbook

The MoMA website has an interesting feature on Rashid Johnson’s sketchbook practice. In a conversation with Samantha Friedman, the organizer of MoMA’s exhibition “Degree Zero: Drawing at Midcentury,” Johson talks about how he uses sketchbooks, some of the motifs in his drawings, and how the pandemic inspired him to think back to how he’d used sketchbooks in his youth.

Johnson’s sketchbook looks like the notebooks from Portugal made by Emilio Braga. I haven’t seen this brand marketed as sketchbooks per se, but they have blank pages so could work well depending on what drawing materials are used. If you look closely at some of the photographs, you can see it has a marbled design on the page edges, which is another trademark design element for Emilio Braga.

Rashid Johnson’s Stage, a participatory installation and sound work, is currently on view at MoMA PS1. It doesn’t sound like the sketchbooks are included, but I’d love to see more of them!

“Toxic Youth” Sketchbook Exhibit

Toxic Youth is an online exhibit of sketchbooks by Dana Jennings, on view at the University of New Hampshire Museum of Art’s website through April 2, 2021.

Jennings’ sketchbooks are full of writing and doodles and patterns and drawings, all inspired by his experiences working with his father in a New Hampshire factory. The factory was shut down by the EPA in the early 1980s and became a Superfund hazardous waste site. Jennings and his father have both suffered from a variety of serious health problems linked to the chemicals they were exposed to in the factory.

As you might expect with this sort of subject matter, some of the sketchbook drawings are quite intense and raw and nightmarish. You can flip through 3 sketchbooks on the website, and the page scans really give a feel for the sketchbooks and drawing materials used, as you see the smears of pencil dust and markers bleeding through the backs of pages.

A series of sketchbook workshops accompanied the exhibit over the last couple of months, all 45 minute sessions at lunchtime (for the Eastern time zone, at least) and open to any adults interested in sketching. The fee is $40 unless you are a UNH student. The last one takes place on Monday February 22.

Viviva Colorsheets Review

I don’t usually do art supply reviews here, but when the folks at Viviva Colors contacted me to offer a sample of their Colorsheets watercolor set, I couldn’t resist. Viviva Colorsheets are a slim, portable, pocket notebook sized booklet of watercolor paints: right up my alley! At least in theory…

viviva colorsheets and moleskine watercolor notebook
viviva colorsheets packaging

First off, the packaging is lovely. The booklet of paints came packaged in a cute envelope. The booklet itself is also really nicely designed, with a colorful flower design on the outside. At 2.75 x 5.25 inches, the Colorsheets are a great size to tuck into a sketchbook. They are too thick to fit inside a hardcover pocket sketchbook without bending the covers or possibly breaking the spine– or at least they are beyond my comfort level for doing so. I know other people often stuff their sketchbooks with all sorts of things that really fatten them up!

Inside the booklet are 4 page spreads with 4 colors each. When I saw the patches of paint, it made me recall some kind of similar watercolor paints that used to be included with Cracker Jack prizes or some other little children’s toy. You’d get maybe 3 tiny paint swatches to color in some tiny picture with a wet Qtip. The Viviva Colorsheets take that concept to a much higher level. Each color has a rectangle of paint that measures about 2.25 x 1.75″. The thickness is smaller than I could measure with a ruler but my very very rough estimate is that the volume of paint is maybe 1/4 of what you’d get in a typical watercolor half-pan. But the pigments seem more dense, so in theory you can use them more sparingly. The manufacturer claims they should last about as long as a traditional half pan.

The paints are separated by a water repellent sheet so they will never contaminate each other or stick together while wet. Viviva does recommend that you let the colors dry before fully closing the booklet, so I guess they can stick to the protective sheet when dry.

The page edges are staggered so you can see which colors are on each page. Some of these printed color tabs are less accurate than others but they give you a good idea where to go. Then next to each paint patch, you can dab a splash of the actual paint to see the true color. This is quite necessary because the paints themselves look nothing like the colors they produce on white paper! Some of the paint patches look almost metallic and remind me of photos I’ve seen of fountain pen inks that have a two-tone effect in the sheen. Viridian looks coppery but turns out to be a beautiful greenish turquoise. Peacock Blue looks like metallic purple, but turns out to be a cerulean blue.

viviva colorsheets persian blue and violet

The booklet comes with a coated sheet of extra cardboard that you can stick into the back cover and use as a mixing palette to blend colors or add more water for a lighter wash. It wipes clean afterwards, or at least mine did, but I didn’t let any paint dry there. I didn’t have it attached to the booklet when I tested it but I could see that it might be awkward to use that way. The fold-out design of my favorite pocket watercolor box (found in various artist and student-grade sets by Sennelier, Schminke, Schpirerr Farben, Arteza or available empty) is much more practical for one-handed use, if not as lightweight. There are other designs for lightweight, portable watercolor sets, such as this one, that I haven’t tried, but that look like they would be a bit easier to use than Viviva.

The colors are bright and vivid. (Here I’ve tested them in the Moleskine Watercolor Notebook.) The choice of colors included is pretty good, but I found that the reds and oranges and yellows all seemed a bit too similar to me. One red was slightly warmer, but not by much. The Gold Ochre is the lightest yellow, so people used to using a more typical watercolor set might be disappointed not to have a lighter, cooler yellow, like lemon yellow. These are all more intense, like a cadmium yellow or a permanent yellow, though if you add a lot of water you can get a lighter shade, as you see in my random test page, vs. the color swatch page where I didn’t use as much water. Viviva offers another set of colors, the “Spring Set,” which offers some different shades, but I did not receive one of those to try.

viviva colorsheets review test page
Viviva colorsheets color swatches

The biggest downside to the Viviva Colorsheets was not apparent until I took the photographs for this review. I had done my test painting a few days earlier and didn’t re-wet anything, but as I was handling the booklet to take photos, I realized that I had pink stains all over my hands. And on my computer, and my light box, and my desk. I realized that the magenta color seemed to be leaving pink dust all over everything, and was even present inside the original packaging envelope. What I’d thought was just a quirk of how the booklet cover was printed was actually smears of magenta dust. I washed my hands, wiped things down, and then did all of that again a couple of times. This dust is insidious. (You can see the pink stains on my thumb in a couple of the photos above.)

I was going to just say that the design of the booklet makes it likely that you might get paint on your fingers while you are flipping from one color to another. And that if you’re that worried about getting paint on your fingers, you should wear gloves, or just not paint at all. Paints can be toxic, so washing your hands is necessary anyway. But this goes beyond the expected level of mess you’d get with any paints. My Viviva set arrived with no evidence of damage in the mail, and I never dropped it or bent it or did anything that would destabilize the adherence of the paint. If the colors are so unstable that they dissolve and get pink powder everywhere, that is a big fail. I can only imagine how much worse it might have been with the actual in-the-field use a portable set is presumably made for.

Clean-up debris!

I was originally going to say that the Viviva Colorsheets were well worth a try, as their $20 price seemed reasonable for a fun, portable watercolor set for casual use. But I now have to say that I can’t recommend this product.

Secret Notebooks from 1983

What if someone found your secret notebooks from childhood, almost 40 years after you’d last written in them? It could happen: a 9 year old girl hid these notebooks in a crawl space in her home in 1983. They were forgotten and her family moved away. Decades later, contractors working on the home gave them to the current owners, who ended up being able to find the original owner and return them!

Read more: Someone in Toronto recovered secret 1983 notebooks in crawl space and found the owner

A Korean Notebook Review

It seems strange to be writing a review of this Korean notebook now, as it represents a pre-COVID milestone for me. It was a gift from a friend who lives in South Korea. She came back to the US for a visit in February, and we talked about the shutdowns that were already happening in Korea due to the virus. She was the first person I spoke to about the coronavirus who seemed truly worried by how serious it could become, but of course even she had no idea what was about to happen in the US starting in March. Anyway, her visits are always special because she is a dear longtime friend, but also because she often brings me a Korean notebook as a gift!

front cover of korean tradition notebook
back cover of korean notebook

This one is pretty cool. The brand name on the slip inside the packaging seems to be “Korean Tradition” but I can’t find any information about it online. It is an A5 size softcover notebook, quite thin but with a squared spine. It seems to be perfect-bound, with just glue instead of stitched or stapled signatures. It looks really snazzy, but the downside to this binding is that it doesn’t really open flat.

korean notebook doesn't open flat

One detail I really like about it is that it has French flaps. I always think this is a nice detail on a paperback book, and I wonder why you don’t see it more on notebooks, as it makes the cover seem more substantial. I would think it would make it more durable too, at least in terms of corners bending. The cover is a smooth coated paper, with a lovely colorful design. There is no branding anywhere on it.

The inside of the Korean notebook is quite unusual– the right hand pages are all lined, but the left hand pages have 4 different designs. Most are blank with a border all around or on top, and then one section has an all-over blue and white pattern. The overall design is really cute.

Unfortunately the paper is not good with fountain pens, but it feels great to write on and handles a fine-point gel ink pen just fine. This was the same problem I had with one of the other few notebooks from Korea I have in my collection, the Iconic Essay book.

korean notebook pen test front of page
korean notebook pen test back of page

This Korean notebook says it costs 1000 won, which is about $0.92 in US dollars. What a bargain for such a colorful, fun notebook!

Christmas Books

Before the holidays, I was talking about my wishlist of a few notebook/sketchbook/art supply items. Santa came through!

I expected to receive James McElhinney’s Sketchbook Traveler book, and I wasn’t disappointed. McElhinney’s pocket size sketches are reproduced life-size, each accompanied with text about the location depicted. Additional material in the book gives some lessons about the history of travel sketching, the Hudson Valley, some technical and practical tips, and lists of resources. There are even some blank pages so you can use the book as your own travel sketchbook. It is a delightful package.

Buy on Amazon

I also received another book. This one wasn’t included on my pre-holiday list, but I posted about it back in October: Finding Dora Maar. I am excited to read more about how the author happened to buy Dora Maar’s old Hermes address book on eBay, and then traced her life history. Alas, there are no illustrations other than the cover image. But you can see a couple of photos in my blog post.

Buy on Amazon

The December 2020 Conjunction

Saturn and Jupiter aren’t the only things intersecting in unusual ways this year. For me, I’m having a notebook conjunction, where my 4 daily use notebooks are all ending almost at the same time!

First off, two of them are 2020 Nolty planners, so it’s not unexpected that I’d finish using both of those at the end of this year. But my current sketchbook (old stock Moleskine) is down to its last pages, as is my current journal (Bindewerk Linen Flex Cover Journal).

It would be nice to start 4 fresh, new notebooks on January 1, 2021, but it won’t quite work out that way. I will be scribbling enough that I’ll finish my journal today. But unless I start drawing at a faster than usual pace, my sketchbook will probably last a few days into January. Pretty close, though!

You are probably wondering what’s next in my rotation. The 2020 Nolty Gold Efficiency Notebook will be replaced with the exact same thing for 2021. Same with the Moleskine sketchbook. But the Nolty Daily book isn’t available for 2021. And though I do have several Bindewerk spares, I don’t feel like using another one right now. I think I’m going to use one of my undated Nolty notebooks. I don’t think I’ll stick to the page-a-day habit I kept up this year with the Daily Book. Some of those pages weren’t that interesting, and it felt like there was too much overlap with what I was writing in my journal. I will still try to write something every day, but I won’t force it to be a single page. Some days it might just be a few lines, and some days it might be multiple pages.

Three notebooks at once instead of four is probably a better routine for me. But I’m sure it will still be quite rare to have them all ending at once!

What I Want for Christmas!

Here’s a few things I discovered over the past few weeks, at least one of which I think might be under my Christmas tree already. The rest will be purchased with a gift card I just received!

J.M.W. Turner: The Wilson Sketchbook

This looks like a lovely facsimile sketchbook to add to my collection. Turner was an amazing artist and even his casual sketches are so powerful. (Read more about Turner’s sketchbooks.)

Buy on Amazon

Remarkable Diaries: The World’s Greatest Diaries, Journals, Notebooks, & Letters

This just came out in September 2020 and I don’t know how I missed hearing about it until just a couple of weeks ago! The cover alone makes me droooool. Looks like it would be a great addition to my shelf of books about sketchbooks and notebooks!

Buy on Amazon

Sketchbook Traveler: Hudson Valley

This is what I’m pretty sure I’ll receive as a Christmas gift, as I basically ordered my partner to get it for me! It’s a new book by James Lancel McElhinney, who I wrote about in this post. I love his landscape sketchbook paintings!

Buy on Amazon

Escoda Travel Brush Set

I saw that James McElhinney uses these, and I’ve seen other artists mention them online. I don’t need any more brushes, and they’re expensive, with this $60 set being the cheapest. But that cool leather case makes me covet them…

Buy on Amazon

You can find these and many other art supplies and books about notebooks and sketchbooks in my Amazon storefront. Happy last-minute holiday shopping!

Rodin’s Notebook

A lovely image of a notebook that belonged to Rodin. I found this on the website of an auction house, where it was sold for over 20,000 Euros. A little out of my price range! I guess I’ll have to stick to eBay for buying notebooks that belonged to artists!

See the original image and description (in French) at Les Collections Aristophil

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