Review: Doane Paper Notebooks

What nice people they are over there at Doane Paper… I’ve been intrigued by their products for a while but hadn’t gotten to the point of buying anything, mainly because you had to buy a set of 3 Utility Notebooks and I just wanted to try one… but by a happy coincidence, I was able to do a trade for the ones I didn’t need, so I finally placed my order. As far as I can remember, I in no way identified myself or associated that order with this blog, which is what makes it even more amazing that after paying $9.50 plus shipping for a set of Utility Notebooks, I received a pack of A4 pads, a pack of small pads, a large wire-o bound Idea Book and a copy of Squares, Checks, and Grids (Communicating with Pattern), a book in which Doane Paper was featured, all as free extras! Now that’s a nice way to win some customer loyalty! And since I’m writing this review, they’re getting some publicity out of it too.
Here’s the front and back covers of the utility notebook. You notice right away that this is a very nicely made product. They just care about design and quality– everything is straight and sharp and tight, somehow.

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Look at the spine below– even the staples seem perfectly spaced.

Inside, the grid/line paper is carefully aligned with the edges, nothing askew.

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It’s very nice paper to write on– not quite as smooth as Clairefontaine paper, but it worked beautifully with all my rollerball pens. Show-through wasn’t too bad, though a few pens did bleed through a bit. I understand that an earlier run of these notebooks was made with heavier paper, which I’m kind of sorry I missed.

The grid+line concept is handy, but in using one of the larger Doane Paper pads to take notes in meetings at work, I found that the line spacing was a bit too big for me– I tend to write pretty small, and as you can see below, my natural line spacing doesn’t seem to quite jive with the Doane Paper lines. I might have preferred having a line to every 2 grid boxes instead of every 3.

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I also loved the Idea Book they threw in. It’s a nice size, and has very sturdy, thick cardboard covers, which overhang the edges of the paper a bit. This is pretty much the perfect large wirebound notebook, as far as I’m concerned, notwithstanding the line spacing issues I mentioned above, though I have to say it seems a wee bit pricey at $10.95.

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Again everything seems nice and square. It’s just a nice, simple notebook, just well-made.

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There is one sheet of plain paper inside the back cover.

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My only complaint about these notebooks is that the Doane branding seems very blatant, particularly on the Utility Notebooks– I don’t blame them for wanting to get their name out there, but I wish it was less conspicuous. I think I just feel a bit self-conscious carrying around a product that tells the world that I am a big geek who cares SO much about what I jot my notes in that I have to buy some obscure, high-concept product because regular old notebooks just aren’t good enough for me– I’m not saying this isn’t true, but I don’t want to advertise it that much!

But that said, I really love the quality of these products, and it’s nice to know you can support a small business who cares so much about doing what they do well, not to mention having fabulous customer service.

To order Doane Paper products, visit their online store page.

Utility Notebooks, 3.5 x 5.5″, $9.50 for a set of 3, available in black as shown or in traffic light colors.

Idea Journal, 8.375 x 10.875″, $10.95 each. Also available in 5.25 x 6.875″ size for $8.95.

Notebook Addict of the Week: The Munchkin Wrangler

The Munchkin Wrangler says he’s “hooked on paper!” This week’s Addict of the Week counted up his stash and did some math to prove the following:

I have enough paper stashed in the house to write 2.3 million words. Considering my current production rate of one 100,000-word novel per year, and maybe another 20,000 words in short stories, that’s enough paper to keep me writing for twenty years.

Yet, every time I stop by the bookstore, and they have a fresh shipment of Piccadilly notebooks, I pick one up.

Read all the details at the munchkin wrangler.

How Great Novelists Use Notebooks

There was a neat article in the Wall Street Journal the other day about the writing habits of some well-known novelists. I’m sure it will come as no surprise that many of them mention notebooks!

Orhan Pamuk: “Mr. Pamuk writes by hand, in graph-paper notebooks, filling a page with prose and leaving the adjacent page blank for revisions, which he inserts with dialogue-like balloons.”

Hilary Mantel, who just won the Booker Prize for Wolf Hall: “She’s an obsessive note taker and always carries a notebook.”

Michael Ondaatje, best known for The English Patient: “Booker-prize winner Michael Ondaatje’s preferred medium is 8½-by-11-inch Muji brand lined notebooks. He completes the first three or four drafts by hand, sometimes literally cutting and pasting passages and whole chapters with scissors and tape. Some of his notebooks have pages with four layers underneath.”

Edwidge Danticat: “She writes first drafts in flimsy blue exam notebooks that she orders from an online office supply store. She often uses 100 exam books for a draft. “The company I order from must think I’m a high school,” she said. She types the draft on the computer and begins revising and cutting.”

Amitav Ghosh: “Mr. Ghosh, who is now working on the sequel to “Sea of Poppies,” which is part of a trilogy, is particular about everything from his pen to the type of paper he writes on. He insists black ink Pelikan pens are the best, and buys white, lined paper from a French manufacturer. “If you work on paper so much, you get obsessive about even the spacing of the lines,” he says. “I need them to be fairly widely spaced.””

It’s always fascinating to get a peek behind the scenes at how people work– I just wish they’d been a bit more specific about brands, where they buy their supplies, etc.

Read more at How to Write a Great Novel: Junot Diaz, Anne Rice, Margaret Atwood and Other Authors Tell – WSJ.com.

Between Me And You Keepsake Journals

The maker of these journals contacted me, and I thought they looked like a nice gift idea: Between Me And You Keepsake Journals.
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The journals are meant to be given to a loved one, and each contains blank space as well as a number of questions designed to prompt recollections about the relationship. The idea is that you give the blank book to someone and ask them to fill it out for you, but I think it would also be nice to buy the book, fill it out yourself and then give it to the other person.
Some people might like to create their own personalized version of a memory book without the structured questions, but however you do it, capturing these sorts of memories and feelings can be one of the best gifts you can give.

The Next-Notebook Dilemma

I very much identified with this post at Writer’s Little Helper:

I am nearing the end of a notebook. One page left and it will be another filled. I like the achievement of finishing notebooks but there is also the fright. What sort of notebook shall I use next, will I be able to write on the pages?…
I have several choices for the next notebook. A penguin ‘1984’ notebook, a moleskine book (A5 in size, bigger than my normal selection), a notebook with wide lines (i like the small lined books) or buy another reporters pad. I love buying stationery. I could stand in a shop, staring at notebooks for hours. I think about the sort of things it would hold, if its portable for my handbag and train writing, if its durable….

Read the full post at The Accidential Notebook and Other Dilemmas.

I’m nearing the end of my current Piccadilly notebook, which I have just LOVED. What will it be next???

Siegfried Sassoon’s Notebooks

I recently noticed this story about Siegfried Sassoon’s notebooks being archived at Cambridge University. Sassoon was a poet who refused to return to fight after being wounded in World War I. (Read Pat Barker’s novel Regeneration for an interesting perspective on his story.) The archive contains, among other things “Sassoon’s journals [and]  pocket notebooks compiled on the Western Front.”

And don’t these images just make you drool?

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(image source)

sassoon notebook collection

(see full slide show here)

Maybe I should award good old Siegfried the posthumous honor of being an Addict of the Week!

Notebook Addict of the Week: Michael

Michael from Germany sends in these photos of the notebooks he’s using:

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Here are two pictures of my notebooks.
In my collection you can see some FieldNotes. One of them, I use as the Archery Training Manual you see at the second picture. The rampage at the bottom comes from an arrow; wrong time, wrong place
The little black notebook on top is the one, I currently use. It’s a Brunnen Kompagnon in DIN A6, lined with a backpocket, and a pencilholder.
The one in the background with the Label “Storybook” on the front, is my Storybook (you won’t tell that by it’s name???). There, I wright down stories and fragments of stories, the world will never see. Some of them might bring me into jail…..

I’d have to say that is the first notebook I’ve ever seen that’s been pierced by an errant arrow! Thanks Michael, and please stay out of jail so you can keep collecting notebooks!

Preserve Your Happy Memories in a Notebook

Here’s a nice way to use notebooks, from Gretchen Rubin at The Happiness Project:

Studies show that thinking back on happy times elevates mood, and observing and preserving memories is one of the most satisfying ways of bringing order to life.

My mother started a memory-keeping tradition a few years ago that has proved to be a lot of fun.

She bought two matching lined journals, one for each granddaughter. At the end of every visit to Kansas City, my older daughter writes a paragraph about the highlights of our visit, and I write in my younger daughter’s book.

We’ve only been doing it since 2007, but already, we all enjoy looking back at the entries from past visits. It’s astounding how quickly even intense memories fade, and how effectively a brief note reminds us of highlights from the past – the time my daughter fell into the duck pond, the time my father set off the fire alarm when making pancakes, the time when my sister and her husband got locked in the bedroom.

I wish I’d thought to do this when I was younger– I have a pretty good memory anyway, but I didn’t always keep a diary, and I know there’s lots of things that have slipped away. In more recent years, I often tended to write more in my journal when I was unhappy, and re-reading those notebooks only gives a partial picture of what my life was really like. Now, I try to write more often, and capture both good things and bad. As the years go by, it can be a surprise to find that I’ve written down events that I no longer remember, and I want to have some happy surprises!

The Happiness Project: Want to a Quick, Easy Way to Preserve Happy Memories?.

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