Link Love: Paper Phone? Isn’t that a notebook?

First, this week, we are shamelessly plugging Jesi’s sister and her nieces Kickstarter project. Because we all need a chance to scare away bad dreams and make our dreams of entrepreneurship a reality. Nobody tell Emma and her little sister what a drag order fulfillment and logistics can be, okay? Of course, she’s going to be the only kid in school who can actually use logistics in a sentence.

Kickstarter Zero the Dream Hero

And then there’s this:

While I appreciate that even Google recognizes that we all spend too much time checking our phones for input and scrolling endlessly through updates on Instagram, Reddit, Facebook or Twitter… a paper phone? Isn’t that just a notebook? C’mon!

Pens:

Ink:

Notebooks & Paper:

Art & Creativity:

Other Interesting Things:

Notebook Review: Revisiting the Catherine Pooler Canvo Journal

Review by Laura Cameron

Back in February I picked up and reviewed a Catherine Pooler Canvo Journal after seeing one at a trade show I attended. For several months after that review, it sat quietly in my desk drawer waiting for a purpose. Then a few months ago I decided I had the perfect use for it!

I’m a handspinner, meaning that in addition to knitting, I turn wool into yarn using a spinning wheel. Since I started spinning in 2010, I’ve been using a small unlined, recycled-paper notebook I purchased from Papyrus probably 15-20 years ago. The journal is almost full, which is why I started thinking about what I wanted to do next. I have used the notebook to record the details of my spins: dates, weights, measurements, types of fiber, and who the dyers are. But my efforts have been slapdash and messy, and I frequently have tags or other items that I stuff in the back of the notebook (no pockets) making it kind of a mess!

 

 

Enter the Canvo Journal. I got the idea that I could turn the Canvo Journal into a sort of scrapbook for spinning. I could use my fun sheepy washi tape to add labels into the book, and try and record the spinning details in a more complete, neater fashion.

One slight crimp in my plan has been that the pages in the Canvo journal are coated, and the washi tape doesn’t want to stick, but otherwise I’ve been very pleased with the results.      

I’ve also found a favorite pen for recording my spinning adventures – the Pilot Juice 0.5 in Coral Pink!

While not the intended use for the journal, I’m enjoying making it work for me!

 

Which NockCo Case is Right for You?

Over the past six years (yes, NockCo has been at this case making for awhile now) or so NockCo has made quite a few pen cases. I’ve had the honor and privilege of getting to test drive most of them. This has given me the ability to really see when and where certain cases shine. So I thought I’d help anyone trying to decide which NockCo case might be best for your needs.

As you peruse this round-up, be warned that I may show a colorway or material that is from a limited edition or is no longer in production. I apologize in advance if I get your hopes up. I used the stash of NockCo products accumulated over years.

Lookout 3-Pen Case

Lookout 3-Pen Case

The Lookout ($25) is one of the most minimal, slimline cases NockCo carries. If you prefer your pens do not touch, carry only a few pens and have another solution for a notebook, then the Lookout is right for you.

Lookout 3-Pen Case

The Lookout holds pens from average size to large. Oversize pens or very long pens (Conids and such) might be too long for this case.

Lookout 3-Pen Case

Sinclair Zip 3-Pen Case

Sinclair Zip 3-Pen Case

The Sinclair ($40) is the Lookout with room for a Field Notes and more. There are slots on one for three pens you do not want to touch and an open slot on the other for a Field Notes-sized notebook. The open section in the middle can accommodate additional cards, receipts, a couple random pens like a Sharpie or ballpoint that you don’t mind touching, etc.

Sinclair Zip 3-Pen Case

The nice thing about the Sinclair is that many folks have discovered alternate uses for it. My husband has used his for a money pouch at craft and pen shows or to store a small portable harddrive as the padding is enough to provide protection and the pouch has room for the cables and harddrive. Laura store her knitting supplies in her Sinclair. I’ve been know to fill the open pocket with pens and stuff a small notebook in the middle section. So, if you like the pens plus more and still have a small, portable carry, than the Sinclair is a good option.

Sinclair Zip 3-Pen Case

Brasstown Pen Roll

Brasstown Zip Roll

The Brasstown ($40) is the multi-tool of pen cases. Inside the neat zip-up case is a multitide of options for organizing pens and accessories.

Brasstown Zip Roll

Inside is a roll-up, divided pen sleeve. Originally, I thought this seemed excessive. Why have a pen roll in a zip case?

Brasstown Zip Roll

Because you can overstuff a Brasstown. Not only can you divide your “fine pens” in the roll, your other items can be tucked to the left and right of the roll and the case will still easily zip closed. As shown above, I have filled the space on either side of the roll with fineliner pens, some business cards and a pack of stickers.

Brasstown Zip Roll

The roll, when unrolled, reveals sleeves for six pens. The sleeves can hold an array of sizes and since the pens are contained inside the zip case, both clip pens and clipless pens can safely reside in the Brasstown.

(Please overlook the condition of my Brasstown. I once had a pen explosion which lead to discovering that NockCo cases are machine washable. The more you know!)

Brasstown Zip Roll

The photo above shows all the items that were contained in the Brasstown and it was not at all difficult to zip shut. I often include other items in my Brasstown like a pipette, cotton swabs, and a vial with spare dip nibs when I travel for pen shows or go to pen club. The Brasstown is definitely a bigger case and may be more pen case than you need. Or you might need two.

Lanier/Burton A5 Pouch

Lanier A5 pouch

The latest case available from NockCo is the Lanier A5 Pouch ($35). Originally only available as part of the Lanier Briefcase, its now available as a standalone item.

Pictured here is the Burton case available in this year’s Kickstarter and will be available at a future date. It is padded and has individual pen slots and the extra slot for paper ephemera. Inside there are three large slots for pens and I mean LARGE. (Thanks to the eagle eyes in the Pen Addict Slack Group for catching my mistake.)

Lanier A5 pouch

The Lanier A5 pouch is a great “around the office” or “around the conference” kind of case. If you like to organize your bag-in-a-bag as well, the Lanier A5 pouch will help with that too. There are two slots for Field Notes-sized notebooks or a phone. The open section holds an A5 notebook.

Lanier A5 pouch

I work on a large campus and often walk from meeting to meeting without returning to my desk. The Lanier A5 Pouch plus my laptop keeps me organized and well-stocked for a whole day. Though I don’t recommend the smooth matte black if you have pets. I lint rolled this before the photos and it still looks like I rolled it around on my dryer vent. Imagine what it will look like at the end of a long week? Lint city! The standard Cordura is a way better option, lintwise.

Seed Case A6

NockCo Seed A6 Case

The Seed A6 ($60) (also available in an A5 size) is a pen case in the loosest sense of the word. It’s really more of a notebook case with a pen slot. However, it does hold a couple pens, a notebook and some miscellaneous items so it fits into this round-up.

Nockco Seed A6

The double zip on these cases are one of my favorite aspects. As a lefty, I tend to zip and unzip in the opposite direction from the rest of the world so being able to choose directions is awesome.

NockCo Seed A6 Case

Depending on the thickness of the notebook will determine how stuffed you can get with your Seed case. These really work best with a more streamlined notebook and regular sized pens. The A5 case has a bit more wiggle room than the A6 case overall.

Rare & Discontinued Cases:

There are a few cases that are no longer available but that might turn up on Buy/Sell/Trade, at pen shows or might come back at some time. I thought I’d include a couple.

Fodderstack Pen & Card Case

NockCo Fodderstack

The Fodderstack existed in a regular, an XL model and this diminutive version. The XL was large enough to hold 4×6″ cards, the regular held 3×5″ index cards and this little guy holds mini DotDash cards, business cards or… Col-o-ring cards. That’s where it really won my heart. I stuck one of my hacked traveling dip pens in the slot on the front, plus a couple cotton swabs and a handful of Col-o-ring cards and I had an instant traveling ink sampling kit.

NockCo Fodderstack

For everyday use, I stick a Kaweco Sport and a stack of mini index cards. I luck out having a printer for a husband so I just have him give me cut scraps to fit into the Fodderstack Mini. If you like writing on index cards, I say send a pointed email to NockCo and request that they put the Fodderstacks back in the production rotation, particularly the Mini!

Sapelo Penvelope

Sapelo Snap Pouch

While this is the small Field Notes-sized Sapelo that was a limited edition, NockCo does make a larger Sapelo XL ($40) that is currently available. The larger Sapelo XL fits a slim A5 notebook or miscellaneous papers and features additional pockets on the front to hold pens and a Field Notes-sized notebook. The original Sapelo holds a Field Notes-sized notebook or similar and a pen.

Sapelo Snap Pouch

As a travel companion, the Sapelo is the picture of minimalism. It could double as a makeshift wallet as well to hold a couple credit cards and some cash and be the perfect “at the beach” or “going down to the cafe” companion. The closest alternative to this would be the Sinclair or the Hightower ($25).

Sapelo Snap Pouch

Not Pictured:

There are even more cases that I didn’t have here at Desk HQ or that I didn’t actually own one. So, this round-up is not as complete as I’d like.

Hopefully, this round-up gave a good overview of the various NockCo cases and which one might be right for you. Maybe you need more than one, maybe you need all of them too. We won’t judge.


DISCLAIMER: Some of the items included in this review were provided free of charge by NockCo for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Eye Candy: Baron Fig Trace Notebook

Eye Candy: Baron Fig Trace Notebook

The newest notebook release from Baron Fig is the Trace Softcover Notebook ($15). It’s a 5.4×7.7″ cardstock cover, guided sketch experience created in collaboration with artist Kyle T. Webster. Kyle is best-known for revolutionizing the Adobe Photoshop brushes. So much so that Adobe hired him and made him part of the development and evangelism team.

Baron Fig Trace Notebook

The new Baron Fig Trace notebook features 72 pages of soft white, 90gsm pages printed with Kyle’s illustrations in a light reddish orange print. As an end-user, you get to bring them to life by tracing the linework. Think of yourself as a comic book inker. Using bolder or thinner lines, change the emphasis of the artwork.

And the artwork is weird, wonderful and whimsical. Some of it is surreal. Some of it is abstract. Some of it is straight-up trippy. But there’s probably something for everyone.

Baron Fig Trace Notebook

I chose to start with the pile of stones image to trace. I used a brush marker for the wider, outside lines and then used the Pentel Pointliners for the finer, more delicate inside lines. The Baron Fig paper is great with pencil so I think adding colored pencil would be an awesome addition.

Baron Fig Trace Notebook

When I flipped the page, there was no bleed through and very little show through. Mr. Moustache may be the next trace picture I tackle for fun. Do I like this more than the adult coloring book trend? I think I might.


DISCLAIMER: The notebook included in this review was provided free of charge by Baron Fig for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Sketchbook Review: Clairefontaine Graf’Book 360°

Review by Tina Koyama

Perhaps better known for its fountain-pen-loving notebooks, Clairefontaine stationery company has come out with a new book specifically intended for sketching: the Graf’Book 360° ($13.50 for A5 portrait; several other formats available). The A5 portrait-format book I chose contains 200 pages of 100g/45-pound “ultra white, super-smooth French milled paper for drawing, sketching and writing. Perfect for pen, pencil, marker and calligraphy inks.” I was told by a Clairfontaine rep that the paper is archival, pH neutral and sustainably made. The soft cover is flexible and relatively thin; it looks and feels like a heavy file folder.

 

A unique feature is the book’s exposed spine thread knots, which look very much like the ancient Coptic hand-stitching technique I use myself. A rubbery-feeling substance protects the spine and threads.

The advantage of this binding method (and the main reason I use Coptic to make sketchbooks) is that the spine allows any page spread to be opened flat and fully. This is an essential attribute of any sketchbook I use and makes scanning pages so much easier, too. Oddly, a prominent black band appears in the gutter of every page spread. At first I thought it was some kind of protective tape to keep pages from tearing at the stitching, but the black band seems to be printed on.

I fanned the book open all the way so that the covers touched – proving that the 360 book is aptly named! For sketchers who require a flat-opening page as I do, this binding is fantastic.

Inside, the paper is smooth enough to make fountain pen users happy. I threw my usual arsenal of sketch materials at the pages, and the only ones that bled through were the paint pen and Sharpie (both expected). The paper’s weight and sizing are not appropriate for wet media – watercolor and water-soluble colored pencil hues lost their vibrancy, and mild buckling is permanent – but most inks, especially brush pens, took to the paper well. I was also pleased by the paper’s opacity. Even the bold, black brush marks do not show through much.

 

For my test sketches, I used a Tombow Fudenosuke brush pen for the bunny and a Blackwing for the pencil sharpener. The Fudenosuke is one of my juicier brush pens that can feather on some papers, but not here. I prefer a bit more tooth with graphite, but the surface is nonetheless pleasant to use. I like this paper best with brush pens, fountain pens and ballpoint.

My objections are mostly idiosyncratic: I’m not sure what the purpose of that black band in the gutter is, but it’s unnecessarily obtrusive because I enjoy occasionally sketching across the gutter to use the full page spread for larger sketches. It’s also a bit on the heavy side – at 12 ounces, the Graf’Book is about 50 percent heavier than an A5-sized softcover Stillman & Birn Epsilon (which, admittedly, has half the number of pages and costs more, too). I would prefer a Graf’Book half as thick for easier portability. The 360-degree-opening binding, though, is an excellent feature that’s hard to find in any commercial sketchbook.

The Graf’Book can be purchased at Jenni Bick, Hyatts or your local retailer.


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by Exaclair for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.


Tina Koyama is an urban sketcher in Seattle. Her blog is Fueled by Clouds & Coffee, and you can follow her on Instagram as Miatagrrl.

Ink Review: Sailor Studio 237

Ink Review: Sailor Studio 237

By Jessica Coles

Sailor Studio has 100 inks in their lineup – plenty of space to explore various nooks and crannies of ink properties that are not usually present in commercially available inks. Because of this freedom, Sailor has created many distinct inks in the Studio line and 237 is one of them. Dromgoole’s is the perfect place to pick up a bottle of this ink ($18 for 20mL).

Today’s ink is 237. Most of today’s post will be photos rather than words – this is an ink that speaks for itself.

The ink shades beautifully and has a golden brown halo.

The shading and halo are both present even in normal writing.

If you have ever tried to purchase Sailor Studio inks, you know how tough it can be to find a store selling it, pay for the shipping and wait for the slow boat to make its way overseas (unless you are lucky enough to live in Japan). Good news! Sailor has recently started allowing sales of these small bottles of sunshine by select retailers in the US. However, Sailor did put a restriction on these sales – orders for Sailor Studio inks can only be taken over the phone. Dromgoole’s was kind enough to provide this bottle of 442 for review and you can find ordering instructions here. The entire staff is great to talk to when ordering and if you are able to stop by their store, the inks can be purchased in person! Here’s a glimpse of that book full of Sailor Studio swatches:

 


Tools:


DISCLAIMER: The ink included in this review was provided free of charge by Dromgoole’s for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Link Love: Quintessentially Link Love

Link Love: Quintessentially Link Love

Whether this is the first time you’ve ever read Link Love (if it is, welcome!) or if you’ve been checking in every week for years (if so, thanks for coming back!), this week’s links are so quintessentially link love as to make me laugh a little. I think the only thing missing is a knitting link, a funny animal photo or cat, and me making fun of Brad from the Pen Addict. Wait… let me see if I can make that happen! Otherwise, we’ve got all the go-tos: ink. Check! Pens? Check! Pencils? Check! Star Wars? Yep. Something Barbie-related. Yes, that too. Calligraphy, NASA and watercolor? Yes, all accounted for. Postal link? I spared you the link about the postal general retiring but I did read it. But you want a funny Brad picture? I got you covered.

Pens:

Ink:

Pencils:

Notebooks & Paper:

Art & Creativity:

Other Interesting Things: