Yoseka Notebook Review

Yoseka Stationery is a wonderful little independent stationery shop in the Sunnyside neighborhood of Queens, NYC. I visited the shop about a year ago and had a great chat with the owners, Daisy and Neil. I bought my Kokuyo Sketch Book there, as well as some ink. (I felt like I’d showed admirable restraint, given all the goodies that caught my eye on their shelves!) More recently, Daisy and Neil offered me a sample of their own Yoseka Notebook to review. YES PLEASE, I said!

yoseka stationery notebook

The Yoseka Notebook will immediately appeal to anyone with an eye for minimalist design. They’ve used lovely materials and the branding is subtle and elegant. Once you’ve removed the shrinkwrap, the outside is an uncovered heavy grey cardboard, with an exposed spine and square corners. A vellum band has a silver foil stamped Yoseka logo on the front, and the name on the spine. The company info is on the back of the paper band, and the back cover is debossed with the Yoseka logo. The size is a pretty true A5, with actual measurements of 5.75 x 8.25″. (About 5/8″ wider than a large Moleskine.) Everything seems very precise and squared-off and well-made.

Inside, the Yoseka Notebook has pale yellow endpapers in a slightly textured paper. They picked a shade of yellow that perfectly complements the grey cover– the overall palette is very soothing, somehow. (But also very difficult to focus a camera on unless you have some contrast in the photo!) The 224 pages of bright white paper, which they have sourced from Taiwan, are unlined and super smooth, and open perfectly flat so you can use the pages all the way across the gutter.

The paper almost reminds me of the stone paper notebooks I’ve tried in that it gives a little feedback with pens and pencils produce a darker than usual line. The paper weight is not stated on the packaging, but Yoseka’s website lists it as 85 GSM. It feels quite light but substantial, with show-through perhaps a bit less than average. Where it really shines is in the bleed-through performance. No pens bled through, even the Super Sharpie, except in a couple of tiny specks when I was using a lot of pressure to flex a nib and get a wetter, wider line. There was no feathering whatsoever. Every pen laid down a tight, vibrant line, with lighter colored inks really glowing on the page and showing off their shading. The only drawback with smooth, tight papers like this is that drying times can be a bit long (though I have not compared this to see if drying is longer or shorter than other smooth papers like Rhodia’s.). I really love using this paper– as you can see, I started doodling a bit more than usual and attempted to draw Totoro. I even tried a few splashes of watercolor paint– this is by no means a proper watercolor paper and big wet washes would not be a good idea, but you can get away with light use of watercolors if you just want to add a few pops of color to a page.

Yoseka notebook pen test
Yoseka Notebook pen test back of page

The Yoseka Notebook is $20, which I think is quite reasonable for a beautiful, high-quality, fountain pen friendly A5 notebook. Some users might miss having a ribbon marker, back pocket and elastic closure, but you could use the notebook with a cover if you need those things. A cover would also protect the square corners, which could get a little bent over time, and the light-colored cardboard, which is likely to get stained. To me, this notebook is great as it is– I’m just rooting for them to make a pocket size 9x14cm version too!

If you love simple, minimal design and vibrant, clean fountain pen lines, you will love the Yoseka Notebook! Definitely visit their shop if you can, but you can also purchase online via the Yoseka website.

As noted above, I received a free sample of this notebook to review, but all opinions expressed here are my own.

No More Notebooks for NYC Cops

Will police notebooks become a thing of the past? Officers in New York City will no longer be keeping hand-written activity logs, as they are switching to an iPhone app:

For more than a century, the New York City Police Department has required its officers to keep a detailed, handwritten memo book while on patrol.

“It’s basically our bible,” said Officer Ramses Cruz, who joined a platoon of officers writing down patrol assignments in oversize black leather binders at a recent afternoon roll call at the 90th Precinct Station House in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Officer Cruz’s locker at the station house holds dozens of completed memo books chronicling his 23 years in the department, with details about big arrests, countless 911 calls and even what time he took lunch.

The memo book may be the department’s oldest policing tool, one that has appeared in countless movies and television shows and become as much of a staple as the gun, handcuffs or the nightstick.

Read more: Why the N.Y.P.D. Dropped One of Its Oldest Crime-Fighting Tools

Notebook Addict of the Week: Isabel Val Bento

This week’s notebook addict was spotted on Instagram, with quite the stack of notebooks and journals! (There are more in the video.)

“Who Needs a Ratty Old Notebook?”

Mark LaFlamme at the Lewiston Sun Journal isn’t so sure if he still needs notebooks, but you’ll find his musings on the topic quite hilarious!

The humble reporter’s notebook, slim enough to slide into a back pocket, used to be my best friend. My partner in crime. My lover. 

OK, maybe not my lover. That would just be weird. 

Point is, I used to rely so heavily on the notebook for reporting news, I had more stash locations than a professional dope runner. 

In the car? They were everywhere: under the seats, jammed into the glove compartment and stuffed above the visors to the point where notebooks would rain down onto my lap whenever the sun was out. 

At home? Yeah, bruh. Notebooks all over the place. In the tool box, you’d find nothing but pens and notebooks in place of hammers, screw drivers and drill bits. If you wanted a spoon out of the silverware drawer,  you’d have to dig through a mile of notebooks to get it. My mattress was stuffed with notebooks instead of feathers. If you wanted to take a shower. … 

Wait, why are you showering at my house again? 

I had a lot of notebooks, is what I’m saying. They were as ubiquitous in my world as loose change, shoes or crack pipes in yours…

Read more: Street Talk: Much Ado About Notebooks

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The Exercise Book Archive

What a cool thing: The Exercise Book Archive is a website that is preserving exercise books, otherwise known as children’s school notebooks, from around the world and over hundreds of years!

Exercise Book Archive

You can click on each notebook and see larger images of the cover and interior. Here’s the pink one from 1980s China in the middle of the above image:

chinese 1980s exercise book from Exercise Book Archive
chinese literature exercise book from Exercise Book Archive

From their “About” page:

The Exercise Book Archive is an ever-growing, participatory archive of old exercise books that allows everyone to discover the history, education, and daily life of children and youth of the past through this unique material.
The Archive includes hundreds of exercise books from more than 30 different countries and dated from the late 1700s to the early 2000s. It is preserved and managed by the Milan-based NPO Quaderni Aperti (literally, Open Exercise Books).
Everybody is invited to contribute to the growth of the collection by lending or donating old exercise books, diaries, and letters, and by volunteering to transcribe and translate their contents.

OUR MISSION

Our main goal consists in the preservation and enhancement of the Archive through the digitisation, transcription, and translation of the contents of the exercise books.
We also work to bring these testimonies to life through social media, exhibitions, seminars, and other activities.

OUR VISION

Exercise books are the main historical source produced by the children of the past.
The books preserve their voices, thus they are powerful tools for research about children’s everyday life and about schooling in different countries.
But we are not just interested in the past.
We would like the contents of the exercise books to stimulate debate about education and the relationship between adults and children, inviting perspectives from teachers, educators, pedagogues, and historians, but also artists, writers, intellectuals, and general public.

(Found via The Pen Addict and Kottke.org

How To Start Sketchbooking

Here’s some tips from a few artists about how to get yourself going with a sketchbooking (or notebooking) habit: Indian artists offer tips on how to start sketchbooking in 2020. I feel like my own sketchbook has been rather stagnant lately so I need to take some of these insights to heart!

sketchbooking
Sketchbook page by Sameer Kulavoor

Mumbai-based artist Sameer Kulavoor uses his sketchbook to jot down ideas, and as a means to slow down. “Drawing and writing in a sketchbook is therapeutic. It gives me those moments when I can just focus on a page,” he says. For inspiration, he observes people, their features, gestures and behaviour, and uses a solid marker to sketch in his notebook.

sketchbooking
Sketchbook page by Indu Karikumar

Artist and illustrator Indu Harikumar, best known for crowd-sourced art projects like 100 Indian Tinder Tales, says she often looks inward for inspiration. “Sketching and drawing my thoughts and feelings help me accept and engage with them. Often, we run away from thoughts that make us uncomfortable. But if you don’t listen to what’s in your head, who will?” she says.

Read more at the Hindustan Times: Indian artists offer tips on how to start sketchbooking in 2020

Other posts from the archives about sketchbooks, keeping a daily sketchbook and tips for keeping a sketchbook.

2019 Image Diary

As mentioned in a recent post about my daily carry notebooks, I’ve been using an extra Nolty diary to keep a scrapbook of interesting images, often artworks seen in the newspaper or a magazine, or sometimes just random clippings and bits of washi tape. A couple people have asked if I print out online images, but I generally don’t, other than when I was putting miniature NY Times front pages in a notebook. (In 2018, the NYT printed mini pages in the newspaper. For 2019, I saved a bunch as PDFS but I haven’t yet actually printed them out, as it seemed like it would be rather tedious!)

Anyway, below is the video I posted on Instagram, giving you a bit of a peek at the contents!

I have started another image diary for 2020, this time using a regular size Nolty diary (95 x 144 mm) to give me a little more room. I’ve been using a glue stick from Muji to paste the images in– after trying various other glue sticks, the ones from Muji are my favorite.

Notebook Addict of the Week: Gary Varner

What notebooks would you pack for a year-long road trip? Gary is back home now, I think, but he spent a year traveling around the USA in a camper van and the photos below show the notebooks he brought with him:

What does a stationery fanatic and writer do to haul the necessary tools and paper for a year-long sojourn? Many have asked, so here’s the lowdown on the what and how…

The original post linked below has more photos of his various supplies Gary also did some notebook shopping along the way, and of course saw some fabulous sights– check out his photos on Instagram @Inkmuser.

I’m so jealous of his amazing road trip! I did a 5-week cross country drive and wished it could have lasted longer. I brought a few extra notebooks with me on that trip, but nowhere near as many as Gary did! But I was in a car, not a van. With more space, who knows??

Read more: Stationery for a Nomadic Year-Long Sojourn

Productivity Planners

Here’s an interesting reader question about productivity planners:

Hi I wonder if you have reviewed (productivity) Planners or if your readers can recommend some. Semi-business types with annual goals to help track goals break down tasks and monitor progress. Something like these type of planners: – http://nymag.com/strategist/article/best-undated-planners-productivity.html

Of the undated planners mentioned in the linked article, I have reviewed the Stalogy 365 notebook. I liked it a lot, but it’s basically just a notebook that gives you some very subtle guidelines along the top and sides of the page to indicate dates and times so you can turn it into a planner. But the print is hard to read!

I haven’t reviewed too many other formatted productivity planners, but here are a few.

Archer Planner

I think the Archer Planner has an interesting design, but some users may find it is pre-formatted for too many life-logging micro details, like the state of your hair each day. It also comes in monthly booklets, which can be inconvenient if you need to keep more long-range plans in a yearly book. And unfortunately, as of this writing, the Archer Planner may not be an active product anymore. Looks like it is not currently available, with no news on re-stocking.

Quo Vadis Life Journal Infinite Planner

The Life Journal Infinite is an undated hardcover A5 size planner. The layout is somewhat free-form and versatile, giving you a way to organize monthly and weekly layouts with out too much pre-formatting. It seems targeted towards Bullet Journaling and logging more than tracking goals and task lists, but can be easily adapted to multiple purposes. Quo Vadis also offers many other dated planner designs that are more business or academic oriented. I used their Sapa X for several years back in the ’80s.

quo vadis productivity planners

Nolty Planners

I continue to be a big fan of Nolty planners from Japan, though these fall into the annual/dated category. They have great paper and a wide variety of layouts. The only problem is that they are not that easy to find in the US, though you can order via Kinokuniya if you don’t live near one of their stores. The other downside is that some of the content is in Japanese, rendering most of the backmatter useless for English speakers. But I find their Efficiency Notebook layout really handy for planning and tracking. The week on the left has little time markers that you can use to block out appointments. The open page on the right can be used for notes or to-do lists. The monthly Gantt charts at the beginning of the planner are great for habit tracking but can also be used for project planning. (This review of my first 2018 Nolty has a lot of details.) Their Japanese website can be a little hard to navigate, but it does have photos of the various page layouts for different models.

nolty weekly layout productivity planners
nolty gantt chart productivity planners

At-A-Glance

This one might surprise people, as I’ve never reviewed an At-A-Glance planner. But I had to throw this in as I used to use the desktop weekly planners a lot at work in the mid-1990s and they still have a weird appeal for me every time I walk down that aisle at Staples! The wire-o binding and black faux-leather flexible covers seem kind of cheesy and retro compared to all the upscale hardcover planners that are out there these days, but they also offer some updated and more decorative designs. They are relatively inexpensive, and if you want a dated planner with lots of space to schedule tasks, they’re an option worth considering.

Of course it’s hard to recommend a planner because everyone uses them differently. It can depend on what kind of business or personal plans you need to track. Sometimes the best planner is one you design yourself, to suit your exact needs. (Some of the books mentioned in this post might give you some ideas!) I have actually been thinking a lot lately about ways to use refillable binders– partially because I have so many in my collection that I feel guilty about not using! I love bound notebooks, but sometimes a Filofax or similar notebook where you can add, remove or move pages is the most practical thing for productivity planning. You can use various pre-formatted inserts or make your own.

Readers, please chime in with your own ideas about favorite productivity planners!

Books to Inspire Notebooking

Shaunta Grimes at The Every Day Novelist has some interesting posts about notebooking. This one was particularly appealing to me:

10 Books That Will Make You Want to Keep a Notebook

I was familiar already with a couple of the notebooking books she recommends. Joan Didion’s Slouching Towards Bethlehem is a classic, and contains the essay On Keeping a Notebook. I’ve also posted before about Guillermo del Toro’s Cabinet of Curiosities. The Diary of Frida Kahlo is part of my own collection, and  The Revenge of Analog  has been on my to-read list for a while (I posted about its chapter about Moleskine but haven’t read the whole thing). 642 Things to Write About is a fun book that I gave to a teenage family member one Christmas. And of course there is The Diary of Anne Frank. But here are some other books that I hadn’t really been aware of:

breathing in breathing out writers notebookingmark twain notebooksvirginia woolf notebookingkerouac notebooking

Breathing In, Breathing Out: Keeping a Writers Notebook by Ralph Fletcher. Also by the same author but written for kids: A Writer’s Notebook: Unlocking the Writer Within You.

Mark Twain’s Notebooks: Journals, Letters, Observations, Wit, Wisdom, and Doodles by Carlo De Vito This book includes some facsimile pages showing his sketches. It is part of a series of books on the notebooks of Abraham Lincoln, Leonardo Di Vinci and Michelangelo.

The Diary of Virginia Woolf, Vol. 1: 1915–1919 by Virginia Woolf. There are 5 volumes in total.

Windblown World: The Journals of Jack Kerouac 1947–1954 by Jack Kerouac

One other inspiring book she doesn’t mention is Writers and Their Notebooks, which I reviewed a few years ago. You can also check out these other posts from my own archives about writer’s notebooks.

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