Review: Rollo London Notebook

Rollo London is a relatively new player in the high-end notebook scene. Founded in 2016, the brand is an offshoot of Beauchamps of London, a maker of luxury accessories.

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I received a sample of their A5 size Hardy notebook, in burgundy. The cover is a faux leather with a pebbled texture. It is a hardcover, but the boards are not as thick as on some other notebooks, and there is a bit of flex to them. The spine is slightly rounded, which makes the notebook feel slimmer.

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The pages have gilt edges, and the gold accent is also picked up in the metallic ink used on the bellyband, as well as the little dog charm attached to the front cover. The brand name is subtly stamped on the lower back cover. The overall look is quite elegant.

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The notebook has the usual features: an elastic closure in red to coordinate with the cover, a black ribbon marker, and an expanding back pocket. The inside front cover is totally blank so you can decide how and where to write your contact details or other information. The first two pages are titled “Reference” and can be used as an index. The rest of the pages are lined, with a space at the top for the date. All of the pages are perforated for easy removal. The dog emblem appears again at the bottom of each page– always facing inward towards the spine of the notebook, which is a nice little detail.

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The cream-colored paper is 70 GSM, with a nice light feel to it. It performs similarly to other papers of this weight– very fine fountain pens may be okay, depending on ink used and writing pressure, but there will be some slight bleed-through where lines cross and with more pressure or wetter pens. Gel ink pens were mostly fine. Show-through is average.

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Rollo London also offers this notebook in A4 and A6 sizes, a softcover version, and various colors. They can personalize notebooks with stamped initials and even offer calligraphy services to further customize notebooks. For larger corporate orders, they can even design a custom charm for the front cover.

The design of the Rollo London notebook makes it a nice gift option for anyone with classic upscale tastes, especially if they’re a dog lover. At £22 (about $29.13 USD) for the A5 size, they are a little on the pricier side vs. some of the competition — the exterior details justify some of that price but it’s a shame the paper isn’t a little sturdier for fountain pen users. But just for context, a Smythson notebook with a similar look, more fountain-pen-friendly paper and a real leather cover is going to cost at least 4 or 5 times as much. The A5 size Seven Seas Crossfield notebook with Tomoe River paper costs $24 with a totally plain soft cover. So I think Rollo London has done a pretty good job in offering a luxurious look at a price in line with their competition.

You can buy Rollo London notebooks via their website or at Paperchase flagship stores in Manchester, Glasgow and Tottenham Court Road London.

I received this sample at no charge but was not otherwise compensated for this review and all opinions are my own.

Notebooks by Pad & Quill

I’m always happy to see a new brand of notebooks, especially hardcovers with linen cloth binding. These look quite nice– attractive grey exterior, two contrasting ribbon markers, and available in plain or dot grid paper, in two sizes.

Small Journal Notebook for bullet-style journaling with archival-quality linen cloth, numbered pages, table of contents, wide format, and more. Tailored for brilliant ideas.

Read more at Small Journal Notebooks & Paper Notebooks for Great Big Ideas | Pad & Quill

Notebooks from Burning Man

Several weeks ago, I went to the Renwick Gallery in Washington D.C., where there was a large exhibition about Burning Man, the annual festival in the Nevada desert where lots of creative people gather to enjoy each other’s art and self-expression in a variety of forms. The Renwick exhibition included a couple of notebooks:

This one was captioned as “Will Roger Peterson’s Department of Public Works notebook, 2001.” Peterson was one of the founders of Black Rock City LLC, which has overseen the organization of Burning Man for almost 20 years. The Department of Public Works is responsible for construction logistics and production at the festival.

This one belonged to Harley K. Dubois, another founding Burning Man board member. She was heavily involved in the organization of the festival as its City Manager for many years so I’m sure the notebook contained quite a lot of important information about the safety and logistics involved in such a massive event.

I like notebooks, of course, but these are by far the least outlandish, colorful and interesting objects in the exhibition, which you can still see until January 21,2019 (some of the works will only be on view until September 16, 2018).

The Mysterious Notebook of Tijuana

An interesting story about a notebook that has become quite powerful as asylum-seekers try to make their way through a chaotic situation at the US border:

All conversations stopped when they saw the notebook.

Men, women and children — asylum seekers from Central America, Mexico, Africa and beyond — parted to make way for its keeper.

The Mexican woman named Gaby waded through the crowd. She clutched the ledger-like notebook, its spine reinforced with duct tape.

Mothers scooped up their toddlers. Older children dropped their toys. Fathers hushed infants.

The notebook holds the names of hundreds of asylum seekers — from Guadalajara to Ghana — all trying to make their case at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.

Source: For many waiting in Tijuana, a mysterious notebook is the key to seeking asylum

Instagram-worthy Journaling

This article kind of made me sigh. I love pretty journal pages as much as the next person but all the super elaborate spreads you see on Instagram can set a dauntingly high standard! There are many other ways to make a journal page beautiful… but if the “Instagram look” is what you’re going for, here are some tips!

Searching for the perfect planner can suck you into a vortex. You have to find the perfect paper type for your pens, the right pens for your paper, the right planner format for optimal productivity, and maybe you’ll even look into learning calligraphy, so your notebooks can look as #goals as the ones you see on Instagram.

Read more at: 5 tips for an Instagram-worthy journal

Review: Etranger di Costa Rica Notebook

I bought this adorable little notebook from JetPens. Although “etranger” is a French word, “di” is an Italian word, and Costa Rica is in Latin America, the company is Japanese. I guess it’s just that enjoyment of slightly absurd foreign phrases that you sometimes see on Japanese products, as there is also French text on the cover of the notebook. “Foreigner from Costa Rica. Put the mail in the post office, the mail has arrived…” whatever! Let’s take a look at the notebook.

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This is a lovely little softcover notebook with a plastic outer cover– I chose lime green but other bright colors were available. It is slim like a Field Notes or Moleskine cahier, so it will slip right into almost any pocket, while being somewhat protected by the cover. It is very close in size to these other notebooks with the cover on, which measures 140 x 87mm, but the notebook without the cover is only 135 x 83mm. This unfortunately means you can’t refill the cover with a Field Notes or most other similar notebooks.

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The cover is white underneath, with black endpapers. On the back there is a removable sticker. Underneath that there is a similar small barcode on the notebook itself but otherwise there is no branding other than the “courrier” logo on the front.

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Inside you get a single stitched signature of 64 lined pages. The lines are spaced at 5mm, except for a wider space at the top. I love the red lines at the top and bottom of the page.

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The paper itself is not as good a quality as what you find in some Japanese notebooks like the Hobonichi Techo shown below for comparison. It feels nice and smooth and works well with pencil or fine gel ink pens, but I had some bleed-through and slight feathering with wetter fountain pens. Show-through is a bit more than average.
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Bottom line: the paper won’t rock your world, but if you want a cute little flexible jotter to add to your collection of pocket notebooks, this is a fun one! At $2.95 each from JetPens, why not? They even sell the refills separately at only $1.50.

Nature and Notebook

They go so well together, don’t they? The notebook below belongs to Mary Richmond, who really brings her nature walk to life in the linked article.

 The sun was still low enough in the sky that it cast a golden glow over and through the trees. The air was fresh scented, the leaves still a sweet limey green and an ovenbird was calling very loudly from not too far away.I took a deep breath of the warm, soft air and….yuck! Almost got a mouthful of bugs…

Read more at: Nature’s Ways: A walk in the woods – Entertainment & Life – Wicked Local Eastham – Eastham, MA

A Notebook for Chemists

This is pretty specialized, but I rather like the look of this notebook! It was designed by chemists with pages that have both lines and a hexagonal pattern, so you can draw molecules neatly. I’m sure it would also be a lot of fun for plain old unscientific doodling!

Source: ChemNote: The power of chemistry in ink and paper – Innovation Origins

Notebook Addict of the Week: John Hewitt

This week’s addict is John Hewitt, who you can find on Instagram at w_john_hewitt. I reposted this image of his sketchbooks on my own Instagram feed recently– I just love all those piled up sketchbooks, and am so impressed at his discipline in daily drawing.

From John’s caption:

Five years’ worth of sketchbooks. On 2nd June 2013 I started doing daily observational drawings in pocket sized Moleskine sketchbooks. I have managed not to miss a day since and there are now over 2,000 drawings and in 52 books….

Here’s one of John’s sketches:

Read more at: John Hewitt on Instagram: “Five years’ worth of sketchbooks. On 2nd June 2013 I started doing daily observational drawings in pocket sized Moleskine sketchbooks. I…”

Endeavor Notebook on Kickstarter

The Endeavor Notebook is an intriguing project on Kickstarter. I love the look of the simple leather cover, and the refills are very handsome on their own. The paper is said to be fountain pen friendly. The attachment system might not be the most quick and easy, but it seems like it would be sturdy, and it allows the notebook to open flat. (It would also allow there to be very little overhang of the cover vs. the interior notebook, so it is a little disappointing that they don’t seem to have designed it that way! My main beef with most leather notebook covers is that they end up adding so much overhang.) I would also be curious to try hacking the cover to see if it could be adapted to any other notebooks as refills.

The pricing is quite reasonable– the rewards for backers start at a very accessible $7 for one pocket size refill notebook (no leather cover). For a pocket size leather cover plus one insert, it starts at $44. (These don’t include a $5 shipping charge within the USA.) A larger size is also available.

They’ve already blown way past their original (surprisingly low) goal of $6,000– they’re currently at over $71,000 and still have until July 19, 2018 to raise more.
I decided to jump in and pledge enough to get a leather cover and two inserts so I can try blank and dot-grid paper.  I came across this campaign on my own and have not been asked to promote it, nor am I being compensated for this post, but I will earn a small commission on pledges made via the links in this post: The Endeavor Notebook

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