Observer’s Notebooks

I stumbled across these notebooks via Notizbuchblog.de and love the concept! They are blank journals with various pages of full-color illustrations and information interspersed, so you can learn about a subject while making your own notes about it.


The series includes Astronomy, Weather, Butterflies (due February 2018), Home, and Trees.

When I first saw the name, I thought they might have something to do with the Observer’s Guide book series, which I have collected since I was a kid:


By Source (WP:NFCC#4), Fair use, Link

The original Observer’s books are about the size of a pocket notebook and I’ve always thought it would be cool to have notebooks that would look just like them. Unfortunately, the Observer’s Notebooks from Princeton Architectural Press are a lot larger at about 7.5 x 9″. Still pretty cool, though!

You can buy them at Amazon.

Review and Giveaway: Castelli Notebooks

Castelli Italy recently provided me with a lovely assortment of their latest products. (Also see my last review of Castelli notebooks from 2014.)

Castelli Italy - 3

My first impression was “elegant.” The dark colors and black and gold packaging really look snazzy, the stationery equivalent of an formal evening gown. As with an evening gown, some people may find it a bit too dressy or blingy for everyday use, but it’s eye-catching for a special occasion or gift!

I received 3 lined journals in different styles, and I opened and tested this one:

Castelli Italy - 4

The cover is a soft faux leather material with a smooth feeling (similar to the Rhodia Webnotebook and PSN Notebooks I’ve tested in the past).  The front cover is embossed in an interesting pattern with gold dots. There is an extra Castelli logo on the front in gold, which I think is overkill, as the brand is also on the paper band and stamped on the back. The exterior is also dressed up with gilt edges. An elastic loop holds the included Castelli pencil in matching black and gold.

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Inside, you have black endpapers, and another gold stamped Castelli logo. The back has a matching black paper expanding pocket. There is a black ribbon marker. The notebook opens pretty flat, but not 100%.

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The pages inside have dotted lines that do not go to the edge of the page. The Castelli logo appears yet again on the bottom of every page. There’s no worry you’ll forget what brand this notebook is!

The paper is very smooth, in creamy off-white. It works great with gel ink pens and pencils but with wet inks and fountain pens, certain fibers in the paper tend to grab the ink and go shooting out– it’s not an overall spreading but a spidery, jagged sort of feathering. Because of this I was surprised that most of my fountain pens did not bleed through to the back of the page, though a few other pens did. Show-through is a little worse than average.

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All in all, this notebook scores high for gifty-ness with its black and gold design. The negatives are the overuse of the logo and the unfriendliness of the paper to fountain pens and other wet inks.

Other goodies I received were a set of 3 pencils (the same black and gold ones that come with the notebooks, a calendar desk pad, and a beautifully packaged 2018 planner embossed with “Notebook Stories.”

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And I’ll be sharing the goodies with two lucky winners! One prize pack will be a notebook, the 2018 planner, and the set of pencils. The other prize pack will be a notebook and the calendar desk pad.

The winners will be randomly selected from entries received in any or all of these ways:

On Twitter, tweet something containing “Castelli Notebook @CastelliUK @NotebookStories”, and follow @CastelliUK and @NotebookStories

On Facebook, “like”  the Notebook Stories page and the Castelli page and post something containing the words “Castelli Notebook” on the Notebook Stories page.

On your blog, post something containing the words “Castelli Notebook” and “Notebook Stories” and link back to this post.

The deadline for entry is Friday January 26, 2018 at 11:59PM, EST. Good luck everyone!
And please remember to check my posts on Facebook and Twitter for an announcement of the winner. Please allow a couple of weeks for me to check all the entries and determine the winners.

Notebook Addict of the Week: vmaddesso

I found this via the Journaling Junkie Tumblr page, which offers a wealth of beautiful art journal images. This one is from another Tumblr user who goes by vmaddesso:

That is a ton of journals! Lots of variety on the top shelves, and then all those labeled composition books on the bottom!

vmaddesso says:

A shelf in the corner filled with notebooks & sketchbooks – some of my writing & art journals. I try to keep them in chronological order, & I pull different ones out now & then to reflect back on who & where I have been through the years…

 

Read more at: journaling junkie or vmaddesso

Katherine Miller’s Sketchbooks

I love these images of Katherine Miller’s handmade sketchbooks:

Katherine Miller is a printmaker and sculptor from St. Louis, Missouri. Through her print- and book arts-based work, she references the handwritten letter to explore themes of slowness, distance, embodiment, and emotional intimacy.

In her sketchbooks, she collects things she doesn’t want to forget. She uses her sketchbook as a notebook, planner, and a way to get ideas out of her head and into a physical form. She calls it her “catch all space.” After they are filled, her sketchbooks become a representation of a period of time.

See more at: Sketchbook: Katherine Miller – BURNAWAY

Notebooks Used by Henry and Edsel Ford

Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company, was famous for always carrying a pocket notebook in which he jotted notes and ideas. After seeing this mentioned in various books, I was curious to see what kind of notebooks he used. A little research brought me to the website of The Henry Ford, which comprises a museum and factory tour venues as well as an online archive.

Here’s one of Henry Ford’s jotters, used sometime between 1880-1935:

Henry Ford always carried a small notebook to jot down important pieces of information or simply reminders of things to remember. The over 50 small jot books give a sense of a busy man trying to capture information on the fly. The contents vary from questions to ask Thomas Edison to names and addresses to grocery lists.

I also liked this notebook, which belonged to Edsel Ford:
 

Henry Ford and his family spent the beginning of January, 1911 visiting the Grand Canyon. Edsel noted in his diary that on New Year’s Day he joined his parents on a hike in the canyon. Other activities included visiting with Clara’s sister Eva and her husband, watching Native American dances in the Hopi House and photographing the canyon.

See more at: Notebook Used by Edsel Ford, 1911 – The Henry Ford

Review: Iconic Essay Notebook

Here’s a notebook that gets a lot of points for style: the Iconic Essay Book. “Un Recueil D’Essais” means “collection of essays,” and this notebook suggests that you “write down every precious moment of your life”. The cover design looks like an old-fashioned book- various colors are available but the maroon color I chose seemed to go especially well with the retro concept. I first noticed these online back in 2014, and bought mine at Foyle’s in London in 2015.

iconic essay book recueil d'essais - 1

 

Outside, you have a soft faux-leather cover. The notebook is pretty thick so it’s not super flexible and floppy, and the covers themselves are also pretty sturdy. The size is considered A6, but it is slightly taller than a pocket Moleskine, closer to the 3.5 x 6″ size used by Leuchtturm. I love the tightly rounded corners and the slender ribbon marker. The notebook has stitched signatures and opens perfectly flat.

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Inside, you have a few sections. First, some pages with grid layouts that will work well for yearly and monthly planning or tracking. Then there is a section divider, as if to introduce the next chapter of the book: the Essais section, where you have a plain page on the left and a lined page on the right. There are page headers for you to note the “Essay No.” and a date. This takes up most of the notebook, and then at the end there is a small section of pages with a leafy diamond grid pattern. The very last page has a space for your personal contact info. There is no brand info other than “created by Iconic” on the last page, not even a web address!

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It’s all very attractive and the undated layouts should make it a bullet journaler’s dream… until you try writing in it. The paper is a bright white and feels nice and smooth. My lovely  Uniball Style Fit pen worked so well in it that it was incredibly disappointing to try a fountain pen: disastrous feathering and bleed-through. Just a mess. I’d had high hopes that this was another Asian notebook with nice paper, similar to some of the Japanese notebooks I have, but it seems that this Korean brand doesn’t prioritize paper performance.

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These tend to retail for between $14-19 USD. I paid £11 at Foyle’s, which would have been around $16.50 at the exchange rate at that time. This is very reasonable compared to some other planners of similar size and bulk, such as the Hobonichi Techo, but I’d gladly pay more for better paper.

Iconic seems to introduce new versions of the Essay Book every so often– mine is Version 4, and I’ve seen Version 5 available on Amazon and Version 6 on eBay and at the Journal Shop. The differences between the versions seem to be slight variations to the typography, and different layouts to the final section of paper– where mine has the leafy diamonds, Version 2 had pages that were plain on top and gridded on the bottom (see this review for photos.) This notebook isn’t exactly my favorite size but I love the colors and the chunky feel, and could see myself collecting a series of these in the different versions to use as yearly planners– but only if they improved the paper. Fingers crossed for Version 7!

 

Notebook Addict of the Week: paperedstars

This week’s addict is Laura at paperedstars on Instagram. I fell in love with this image! All those fat notebooks full of crinkly pages and and colored edges that hint at what’s inside… she doesn’t keep it all secret, though! Check out her Instagram feed for lots more great pictures of her notebooks and their contents.

 

Bhav Notebooks from Nepal

What a great story! Bhintuna “Jya poo” couldn’t find the kind of notebooks she wanted in Nepal, so she started a company to make them. Bhav has now been in business for 3 years.

When Bhintuna started looking for the kind of stationery that she often stumbled upon on the internet, she realised that the choices in the Nepali market were rather limited. The notebooks available in the market were cheap, but they didn’t really cater to a crowd that loved to write, to draw, or both.

“Of course there were notebooks but they didn’t meet my practical or aesthetical needs. As a graphic designer, I was particularly looking for a notebook that came in grid and dot, and had minimal design but high utility value. I was also looking for a planner.”

Bhintuna finally gave up, and started making her own Do-It-Yourself-notebooks, which to her surprise introduced her to a crowd that felt the same as her about stationery.

“When people saw my hand-made notebooks at meetings they first appreciated it and then complained about how there weren’t enough choices in the market. And it just pushed me to think that maybe there are Nepali consumers for a good Nepali stationery line, but nobody has really thought of supplying to them.”

Read more at: A paper trail – News Makers 2017 – The Kathmandu Post

Review: Ideal Notebook from Mexico

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Let’s take a look at an adorable little notebook I bought at a store called Kiosk in NYC. The store unfortunately no longer exists– it was kind of a conceptual project more than a real business, I guess, almost more like an exhibit of various products from around the world. You can still see their archives here, though nothing is for sale online anymore. They do curate a selection of items for the ICA in London, which can be ordered online.

Anyway, I liked the look of this Ideal notebook when I first saw it online, and I liked it even better in person. It is a nicely pocketable size at about 3.5 x 5″, (just a bit shorter than a pocket Moleskine, shown below for comparison) and looks great with a red faux-leather soft cover and red stained page edges. I like the retro logo on the front, too. The spine is rounded with staggered stitched signatures– rather unusual for softcover notebooks like this.

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The inside front cover has space to write your personal details, and an ad for the rest of their product line. Again, very retro looking and kind of reminds me of the Alwych notebook.

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When I first opened the notebook it seemed a little stiff and I worried that it wouldn’t open flat, but it immediately loosened up and did open flat. The pages inside have a dark blue line, with wider spaces at the top and bottom. A few pages in my notebook had lines that didn’t run all the way to the edge of the page– just a quirk in the way they were trimmed, I guess.

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The paper feels fairly smooth– not super smooth, but when I started writing on it with a fine gel ink pen, it seemed really nice. Unfortunately, when I moved on to some fountain pens and other wet writers, things got pretty messy– feathering and bleed-through were pretty bad, though I would say show-through was average to maybe a little better than average. This is a notebook you’d want to use with pencils or fine gel ink pens only.

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I love this notebook for its aesthetics and that it allows me to tick off Mexico in my list of notebook origin countries. Too bad it doesn’t have better paper.

If you want one, it might be tricky– I found a couple of listings online (here and here) but I’m not sure if they ship to the US. Don’t be alarmed when you see the price as $90 MXN– it’s only about $4.56 in US dollars.

Moleskine Monday: Leather Classic Notebooks at B&N

I was in my local Barnes & Noble the other day and noticed something I hadn’t seen before: medium sized Moleskine notebooks with real leather covers instead of the usual faux leather. Moleskine does occasionally have some limited editions that use real leather– there were some really cool planners years ago– but it’s rare. I checked Moleskine’s website and had to dig around for these, but they are sold in a gift box. Barnes & Noble must have worked with Moleskine to get these as an exclusive product, sold just in shrinkwrap so customers in stores can see what they are getting. They don’t seem to be available on Amazon or elsewhere.

From Moleskine or B&N, they are a bit pricy at $39.95 but the colors are rather nice… of course I wish they were the pocket size, in squared or plain page format, but oh well!

Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Black
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Black
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Moss Green
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Moss Green
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Sienna Brown
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Sienna Brown
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Avio Blue
Moleskine Limited Collection Notebook Leather Large Ruled Avio Blue

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