Always Be Knolling

While researching a documentary on designer and photographer Herbert Matter, The Visual Language of Herbert Matter*, I went down a bit of a rabbit hole. Matter was the designer and photographer for Knoll furniture for many years, among his many notable career achievements. But what lead me to typing up this post was that I was reminded about “knolling”. Knolling is the original term coined for the craft of aligning objects at 90º angles. The term was coined in 1987 by Andrew Kromelow, a janitor at Frank Gehry’s furniture fabrication shop. Each day, Kromelow went the shop and found any tools that had been left out. He would arrange the tools on a flat surface so they were at right angles to one another. He called this knolling, since it reminded him of Florence Knoll‘s angular furniture pieces.

from Herbert Matter.org

This aesthetic also appeared in Knoll catalogs in the mid-century. The designer responsible? Herbert Matter.

from HerbertMatter.org

Matter used this technique in some of the photography work that he did for Conde Nast as well.

Tom Sachs, a former employee of Frank Gehry, also uses knolling in his studio for tidy, organized workspaces.

Penlux and Sailor swatches

Pentel EnerGel Clena Gel Pens

Today, we see knolling everywhere but many people call it “flat lays“. Instagram is awash in knolling. Catalogs, product photography, even we use knolling here on this blog.

Opus 88 Fantasia Green Orange Fountain Pen Comparison

All this kept me looking through other vintage designers (more rabbit holes) who have inspired me like Alvin Lustig, Giovanni Pintori, Irving Harper, and Ray and Charles Eames.

Pintori for Olivetti

Pintori used knolling for Olivetti typewriters paired with his graphic illustration style. His sense of color!

Ray & Charles Eames chair wires

Ray & Charles were human knolling.

Once again, I’ve gone a little off-topic this week but I used to do a design blog called Pica + Pixel (my friend Kirsten and I did it together but the site seems to be gone now) where a lot of things like this would have existed, and my post last week about Flickr. While I don’t imagine I will do this type of thing regularly, I hope you’ll forgive my occasional off-topic posts.


*My rabbit hole had a rabbit hole. I discovered Kanopy, a digital media streaming service that links into

A Tale of Three Planners

By Jessica Coles

I often joke that my planner contains my life.  Earlier this year, though, that joke turned out to be true; I lost my Hobonichi planner during the Chicago pen show and my organized life went with it.

This is where I wish I could tell you that planners are a great thing but really not necessary for life.

I won’t tell you that at all.

With four kids, two cats, and a dog, just making sure everyone is fed and clothed is challenging.  But trying to organize and remember school activities, play rehearsals, doctor appointments, and family events on top of the day to day schedule is more than my brain can hold.  After losing my planner, I began dropping the ball on everything!  Even though we were halfway through the year, I ordered a new planner and life soon settled into a normal rhythm once again.

Knowing how important my planner is to me, I’ve approached this year’s selection seriously.  My favorites so far are here.

An Addition

My first choice is not actually a full planner in itself.  Hobonichi has been my planner for the last two years, but I miss the ability to see my entire week at once.  I’m hoping that the addition of this insert helps.

This insert is also made by Hobonichi and is the same width and length.  The Hobonichi weekly insert is only about 1/4 the thickness, however.  It is supposed to be used in conjunction with another A6 sized Hobonichi and can fit in the same cover if you use one and I will be using it to juggle the entire week to make sure everyone gets to everything on time!

This gives extra space to block out time or to follow the flow of your time throughout the day.  The paper is the same weight as all other Hobonichi planners meaning that it is perfect for fountain pens, but gel pens do show through and can bleed through as well.

For My Desk

I was sent a beautifully bound planner earlier this year (I was so excited to use it.  Then I remembered I needed to wait until 2019!)

This planner ($35), by Easy Tiger, makes me laugh every time I open it.  Sarcasm and witty sayings add a wonderful touch to this book.  Earlier, Ana wrote about the smaller version of this same book; the smaller format still packs in the same information and seems to leave little space for writing.  But this larger version seems to have plenty of room in my opinion.  It won’t be my only planner, but it will be the perfect spot to keep track of a to-do list, write down notes from phone calls and doodle throughout the day.

The paper in the Easy Tiger book is higher quality than any other planner I have found that is not marketed to the fountain pen world.  Fountain pen ink had a few dots of bleed-through with a medium nib, no bleed-through with a fine nib.  Gel pen and pencil wrote beautifully.

(Front with writing)

(Back side of the written page)

I enjoy seeing the small tidbits of information each day; who was born on this day, important past events, what is remembered or celebrated on each day, the number of days left in the year.

An Alternate

I have one other planner that will be joining the line up as well.  The Pat-Mi calendar system.

This thin folder is approximately the same size as an A5 notebook but is less than 1/2 an inch in thickness.  The red board is thin but doesn’t bend, meaning it is perfect for supporting the calendar when no other surface is available.

My favorite part of the Pat-Mi planner is the separate book for each month of the year, however, two months fit in the folder at any given time. This allows for some future planning but the folder remains thin enough to add very little bulk to the rest of your bag.

To start the year, I have January and February loaded in the folder; the back cover of each booklet slides through an elastic band to hold it to the cover.  When both booklets are opened, the staggered pages allow you to layout two full months together.

The layered pages give a monthly and weekly view at the same time while the two booklets in combination give a continuity between months.

At the beginning of February, book 2 is moved to the upper elastic and book 3 is added to the lower.

The paper in the Pat-Mi planner is lightweight but holds up well to fountain pens with a fine nib, gel pens and pencil.  Nibs or ink that tend towards the wet side may show a bit on the opposite side, but should hold up well to normal writing.

(Front with writing)

(Back side of the written page)

Wrap It Up

The coming year is getting closer by the day, but this year I feel like at least my planner setup is ready to go!  Since even the best plans can go awry, however, I will be revisiting the same setup later in the year. Keep your eyes open for that update!


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were purchased by myself, provided free of charge by Ana Reinert (Editor’s Note: I bought it with my own money but I work for the company. See About Us for details) or from Jet Pens for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

 

Notebook Review: Hallmark Traveler’s Notebook & Inserts

Notebook Review: Hallmark Traveler’s Notebook & Inserts

I’ve been meaning to write up this review for ages! Hallmark released a series of notebooks and covers in the spirit of Traveler’s Notebooks and I wanted to try them out and see how they performed. I purchased several different packs of the notebooks because I loved the cover designs and they even had a set of planner style books. I also got one of their gold faux-leather covers as well. I was not able to find the cover listed on the web site but I found a similar cover in chambray fabric (blue or tangerine) for $24.99. Each cover includes one, lined notebook. The cover I purchased may still be available in your local Hallmark Gold Crown Store.

Gold Notebook Cover

The notebook cover is faux leather in a soft gold with coordinating elastic closure and elastic pen loop. The covers are actually stitched over board so unlike most Traveler’s Notebooks, they are stiff and supportive, not floppy.

Inside Gold Notebook Cover

Inside, there are two business card/credit card-sized slot pockets and a larger slot for ephemera. There are two elastics for notebooks. Both the front and back covers have vertical slots to tuck additional pages into your cover. On the back cover, there is an extra secretary pocket.

Notebooks were available in two sizes:  A6 (105x148mm) and the larger B6 size (125x176mm) that fits in the cover shown above. When I realized that the smaller books were A6, I snapped up a couple packs since I knew those would fit into other covers I already owned. The kraft colored covers contain kraft paper inside. The other sets have white paper inside. Each set contains three notebooks: one lined, one dot grid and one blank — even the kraft set.

The B6 sized notebooks are $11.99 for a 3-pack. Each notebook has 40 pages. The A6 notebooks are $9.99 per 3-pack and each book has 75 pages.

Scribbles Notebook Set

The A6 kraft set had copper foil on the covers and each cover had a different design. I also got a B6 set in kraft that had copper foil and a different design on each cover.

Assorted Hallmark Notebook Sets

Kraft Notebook set

While I knew black pen would show up well, I was excited to try the kraft books out with white gel pen. The gel pen showed up great. The smudging was entirely user error — lefty stuck her arm in still-wet ink. I think other pastel or metallic gel pens will also look great. I think these books will be great for collage, doodling, colored pencil and markers.

Notebook Planner Set

Inside Notebook Planner Set

The set of Organizational Notebooks are available in the B6 size and come with one To Do, one Daily and one Goals book. Inside, the pages are pre-printed with light grey markings. The Goals book offers space for four goals per week, four weeks per page. The Daily book has AM and PM on the lefthand side, a To Do list on the right and the bottom third reserved for notes. The To Do list book is broken into four sections on each page: errands, phone calls, emails and groceries. My instinct is that you would not need to use all three books together but chooses which book best suits your needs at any particular point in time and use that as needed. If you keep your schedule digitally, maybe you just need the Weekly Goals and the To Do lists? If you utilize the Daily Schedule which has the To Do list on it, you might not need the separate To Do List? The three notebooks present a very different way to organize tasks.

Hallmark Notebook pen tests

Of course, none of this is relevant unless the paper is good. And lo and behold… it is! The lined and blank is my favorite, of course. The lined has a space at the top of each page for the date which is handy and the blank is excellent for someone like me who prefers to be freeform and all-over-the-place. The dot grid dots are super close together and a bit larger than necessary. I think its a 2mm grid and the dots are BIG. However, I have used the dot grid first because I am a midwestern, middle class human who uses the thing I like least first to “get it over with” and they don’t bother me as much as I thought they would. But if they were have the size, I would be SO much happier. Honestly, its my only gripe.

inside Hallmark Notebook pen tests

Because, would you look at that? That’s the back of the pen test paper. Not the least bit of bleed or show through. That paper is top-freakin’ shelf. Color me impressed.

Hallmark A6 size notebook in Hobonichi

And here’s the thing that makes me happiest. I am sticking the smaller A6 books in my new Hobonichi cover because its November and I can’t use my new Hobo planner yet but I can use my cover.  This fine Hallmark paper and these fun little books with paper WAY better than some other books which shall not be mentioned is making it possible to bide my time until January.

I’ve used the books to track my travels and daily activities. We even stamped heavy, alcohol-based, ink stamps in NY at the flagship Muji store when Brad and Myke and I were traveling. The stamps didn’t feather on the paper but there was a little show through on the back. Not too shabby!

Check your local Hallmark Gold Crown store for these Customizable Notebook covers and Notebook Sets. My shop carried a charcoal grey faux leather cover as well as the gold plus the chambray covers.


Full Disclosure: I purchased all the notebooks and cover reviewed here with my own money but I do work for Hallmark Cards, Inc. No one asked me to write a review about these products and all opinions are my own. Please see our About Us page for more info.

Link Love: Non-partisan, politics-free, stationery glee

There is no post-election coverage in this week’s Link Love. Just ink, pens, paper and other stationery goodness. There are a couple more recaps from the Toronto Show, an article about Why Fountain Pens are Cool (as if we didn’t already know that?) and a lovely piece about ink chromotography.

Go forth and revel in non-partisan, politics-free, stationery glee.

Pens:

Ink:

Notebooks & Paper:

Other Interesting Things:

Ask the Readers: To Pro or Not to Pro….

Ask the Readers: To Pro or Not to Pro….

This post is going to be a little off-topic today. It verges on “how the sausage is made” in the blogosphere. Yesterday, Flickr sent an email out, in what can only be described as a last-ditch attempt to save the photo-sharing site from absolute demise.

Flickr is limiting the free accounts on the site to 1000 images starting in 2019 unless free Flickr account holders upgrade to the Pro account or back-up their images elsewhere. The Pro accounts will be $49 per year though they are offering a 30% discount if users upgrade before November 30, 2018. There is also a discount if you have an Adobe Creative Cloud account (the discount is on your Cloud subscription which basically covers the $49 you’ll be spending on your Flickr Pro account).

I have been a member of Flickr (most of that time as a Pro account holder) since 2004 and for many years, I thought it was the absolute best community on the internet. I met some of my favorite people through Flickr and have accrued over 10,000 photos on their site.

Over the last couple years, I’ve only used the Flickr to back-up my Instagram images (because who knows what might happen with THAT service in the future!?!?!?) and after 14 years, I’d gotten pretty confident about Flickr’s longevity. This move, limiting accounts and insisting on Pro accounts makes me wonder how much longer they will last?

Flickr was slow to come to mobile devices and the service was eclipsed by cloud sharing, Instagram, YouTube and so many others. In the time that it took them to move to mobile, most users had found other platforms to share images and video. And even when they did move, the mobile app was just okay.

Much of what lives on my Flickr account is not relevant to what I do now. I have changed in the last 14 years. But its also a history in images of my creative journey, my life, my travels and everything in between.

So, I am stuck trying to decide if I pony up for the Pro account or if I officially walk away from Flickr forever.

So my question to you, dear readers, is where do you store your digital photos? Did you use Flickr or do you still use Flickr? What is the best way to store images to share online in multiple places — blog, Instagram, Twitter, etc?

Kickstarter: Pebble Stationery

Kickstarter: Pebble Stationery

If you live Down Under, you may be happy to hear that you will soon have a hook-up for your own Tomoe River notebooks. Thanks to Pebble Stationery, who has just released their Kickstarter campaign for their first products, Aussies will now have access to domestic Tomoe River notebooks and matching pencils.

I got an early look at their notebooks and they are everything that you’d want in a pocket-sized Tomoe River notebook. The paper inside is 52gsm with sturdy 350gsm covers.  Final versions will include 4mm dot grid and each book is conveniently sized to 3.5″x5.5″ (Field Notes size) to fit many available covers.

In my pen tests, the paper withstood all the pen tests and the heavier-than-average Tomoe River paper had less-than-average show through so both sides of the paper can be used.

Alcohol-based Sharpie markers were the only show-through exception.

But since each notebook has 80 pages, there’s plenty of room for experimentation too.  Backer prices starter at $15AU ($13AU for early birds) for two notebooks and two pencils, with shipping to limited countries.

Pebble Stationery is working to bring boutique stationery to Australia but also want to give back and support creativity and learning across the globe. For each pack of Pocket Tomoe River Notebook sold, they will donate a pencil through Pens for Kids UK.

Having just had Bob’s host brother here this week (from his year in AFS) from Australia, I have a particular soft spot for Australia and know that they are often overlooked in, not just the stationery community, but in many areas of the internet. So, here’s hoping that Pebble Stationery is another success story from Down Under.