I LOVE the “Collection a Day” blog. Vintage office supplies are often featured, and the other day she posted these old journals:
.
Moleskine Monday: One Hundred (and three) Notebooks
Imagine buying 100 at a time! From a Flickr user:
One Hundred (and three) Moleskine Notebooks
I have just finished writing my book on Moleskine notebooks titled “Moleskine: How to make use of the “legendary” notebook”.
I wanted to send a Moleskine notebook to each and every book reviewer and prominent reader of the book, so I bought a hundred of them.
It’s like Bruce Chatwin’s dream come true, isn’t it?
The book can be ordered here (in Japanese):
via One Hundred (and three) Moleskine Notebooks | Flickr – Photo Sharing!.
Notebook Addict of the Week: A Penchant for Paper
Heather at A Penchant for Paper asks How Many Notebooks Are Too Many?:
The true notebook addict would probably say that it would be impossible to have too many notebooks, but I am not so sure. I have been feeling overwhelmed lately by the number of notebooks that I am currently using, as well as feeling the need to simplify and use fewer notebooks. Here are all of the notebooks that I am using right now:
“Little Notebooks Everywhere”
From the Huffington Post:
The thing about opening your mind up to a new story idea is that you once you do it, there’s no going back. All of a sudden, everything seems like it has to do with the new idea. Songs and lyrics and billboards and articles and movies and books and people seem to come at me, out of nowhere, non-stop. It can be hard to breathe. I grab at all these things and try to capture them before they are lost in the noise and shuffle of life, and I do this with little notebooks.
I keep little notebooks everywhere — in my purse, in my car, on my nightstand. My favorite notebooks are the thin, soft Moleskine notebooks that come in colors, now (green and red and pink!) but they are expensive. I reluctantly bought several sets of Moleskine knock-offs at Forever 21 last year for about $1 each, which are nowhere near as inspiring, but they are serviceable.
Read more at Jennie Nash: Little Notebooks Everywhere: How the Idea for a Novel Grows.
Top Opening Pocket Lab Notebook
Here’s something that struck me as unusual: a top-opening lab notebook.
It looks a bit like the Book Company lab notebook I reviewed, but that was side opening, as is every other lab notebook I’ve seen. Also, this one is different in that the pages are printed on only one side, which might appeal to notebook users who like a mix of lined and plain pages.
They’re $7.99 here: Scientific Notebook Company. Other styles are also available.
Michael Bierut on 86 Notebooks
A couple of years ago, there was a great post on Design Observer about Michael Bierut’s notebooks:

The post made its way around the blogosphere so extensively that I never bothered to link to it here. But more recently, a reader asked me if I had seen it, and it got me thinking again about working these notebooks into a post. Now, I finally have a good excuse as there’s a video posted of Michael Bierut talking about how he uses his notebooks:
[Updated May 2018: the original post seems to have been removed, but I think the video is now at this link.]
Check it out, it’s an interesting look at a designer’s creative process.
Moleskine Monday: Colorful Edges
I love this photo of 5 Moleskines containing a year’s worth of art journaling.
From Journal Junk, a great blog about art journaling.
Notebook Addict of the Month: Paul
This week’s addict had to be upgraded to Addict of the Month. Paul has been a faithful reader and correspondent for quite a while now, sharing not only photos of his own notebooks, but links to historical notebooks and other interesting trivia. Did you know, for instance, that the last entry in Samuel Pepys’ diary was dated May 31, 1669? According to Paul, who celebrates the day as a special one for diarists, Pepys “discontinued his journal (begun New Year’s Day 1660) because he feared (mistakenly) he was going blind. So, every May 31 is the day that I feel I must post a blog entry, or write in my holographic diary, even if I abandon it all other times.”
More from Paul on his history with notebooks:
I’ve been a diarist since I was in fifth grade (I just turned 47). Unfortunately, all my diaries from fifth grade (1974) until I dropped out of college (1989) vanished when I stored them in a storage locker I didn’t keep paying for. Since resuming on New Year’s Day 1990, I’ve used legal ledgers, spiral notebooks, Write-in-the-Rain, and, more recently composition books (inspired partly, I admit, by JOE GOULD’S SECRET, SE7EN, and HENRY FOOL.) I turn 50 in 2013, and I have decided I will switch to bound legal ledgers (Boorum & Pease and/or Avery) at that point.
Here are various photos of some of Paul’s notebooks:





As for historical notebooks, Paul shared these, as well as some others I’ll feature in future posts:
These are in display cases on the first floor of the William Oxley Thompson Library at Ohio State University. These are notebooks included in this display.
The first two pictures (100_0283.jpg and 100_0284.jpg) are the work notebooks and rough drafts of William Vollmann’s gigantic novel Europe Central.
The other two are the field notebooks of Dr. Richard Goldthwait (1911-1992), professor of geology at OSU.
Many thanks to Paul for sharing his love of notebooks! You can follow Paul’s blog at Melville at the Customs-House.
Review: Japanese Notebooks from Kinokuniya
Here’s a look at a couple of notebooks I couldn’t resist buying at Kinokuniya, a store in Manhattan that specializes in books, movies, stationery and other Japanese items.
The first is a quite unique notebook, made by Pilot and branded “THE-II” on the front. The cover is a very retro leather-textured plastic:
But here’s what really sets it apart– thumb-indexed sections, like a dictionary!
One thing I don’t like about the notebook is that the cover overhangs the paper edges by quite a lot. The cover is very flexible so those corners would get bent pretty quickly with active use.
The inside cover is grey paper, with no printing on it.
The first page has one of those odd, somewhat nonsensical Japanese-English slogans: “THE-II : ALL PREPARATIONS ARE COMPLETED.”
There’s some index pages at the front of the notebook:
It’s not the best in terms of opening flat– I was a little worried the binding could fall apart.
From the font used for the stamp on the back, it appears to be made by the same Pilot company that makes pens.
A comparison shot, next to a Piccadilly notebook. The Pilot notebook is wider, approximately 3 3/4 x 5 1/2″.
In the shot below you can also see the difference in the paper color: the Piccadilly has a warm, creamy tone, while the Pilot notebook is a very cool white.
The paper is very smooth, and feels a bit lighter weight than most notebooks, with some bleed-through from various pens:
My second purchase was a very cute little loose-leaf binder by Maruman, again shown next to a small Piccadilly notebook:
This photo above shows something that often annoys me about looseleaf notebooks– the front and back covers are rarely parallel, as the spine has to be wide enough to leave room for the rings, and you can’t fit in enough paper to fill out the thickness. I’ve often tried to solve this by using post-it notes or something else to pad out the covers on the inside.
This notebook has a similar thumb-index look to it, but these are just cut-outs in the black plastic cover which reveal the rainbow-colored divider tabs within. First there’s a black page, then white dividers with colored tabs. I think these tabs must be a Maruman trademark, as I have another binder by them that is at least 10 years old and came with the same tabs.
The notebook includes a small amount of lined paper.
There’s also a clear plastic top-opening envelope.
The spine shows off the rainbow colors:
The looseleaf binding works in an unusual way, swinging to the side to open:
The paper is similar to that of the Pilot notebook: a cool white, nice and smooth but not the best for bleed-through.
The Japanese do make some great stationery! It’s been several months since I bought these and I’m already itching to go back to Kinokuniya and see what’s new there!
Anne Carson’s “Nox”
I’m coveting the latest book from poet Anne Carson, called “Nox”– it’s a beautiful slip-cased accordion fold-out, reproducing collaged journal pages she made in memory of her dead brother.
Read more at Amazon: Nox




































