Reminder: LWA Book Club Live Video Event TODAY!

Just wanted to remind everyone that today (Sunday April 12th) is the first ever Letter Writers Allinace Book Club. We are meeting online so everyone can join in. The book to be discussed is 84, Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff. The live feed discussion begins at 3pm CST. For more information, visit the Good Reads group page or come to the chat at the live feed page.

Did I mention I will be one of the guests on the chat?

If you miss this event, the book club will be meeting quarterly online to discuss books that may be of interest to letter writers and mail lovers. The discussion will be done as a live video chat. Come join us!

Fashionable Friday: Purple Rainy Day

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April showers bring May flowers. And color too.

  • Hunter Original Wellies in Lavender $158 (via Hunter US)
  • Uni Style Fit 5 Color Multi Pen Body in Metallic Pink $4.25 (via Jet Pens)
  • Uni-ball Signo 0.38 mm Black Ink Light Pink Body (via Jet Pens)
  • Exotic Pencils of Caran d’Ache: Fourth Edition $30 (via Pencils.com)
  • Filofax Finsbury Raspberry Pocket Organizer $65 (via Goldspot)
  • Parker IM Vacumatic Pink Pearl Medium Point Fountain Pen $50.95 (via Goldspot)
  • Lamy Safari yellow fountain pen 19,50 € (via Fontoplumo)
  • Pilot Metal Falcon Soft Fine in Burgundy $240 (via Pen Chalet)
  • The Pencil Factory Nashville Pencil Box Set of Six $12 (via European Paper)
  • Sailor Professional Gear Yellow 21K Gold Rhodium Plated Medium Point Fountain Pen $247.95 (via Goldspot)
  • Monteverde Limonada Fountain Pen Tivoli Yellow $28 (via Goulet Pens)
  • Monteverde Artista Fountain Pen in Pink $22.50 (via Pen Chalet)
  • Rohrer & Klingner Alt-Bordeaux Bottle Ink $12 (via Goulet Pens)
  • Kyokuto French Classic B5 Ruled Notebook in Pink (via Jet Pens)
  • Rhodia Rhodiarama Yellow Blank Notebook $18 (via Goldspot)

(photo via Hunter US blog)

Link Love: Notebooks Galore & Brush Pen Love

rp_link-ana111.jpgPost of the week:

Lots of love this week for the Uni-Ball Signo Pens:

Fountain Pens:

Brush Pens:

Ink:

Notebooks:

Pencils:

Planners & Organizers:

April is National Letter Writing Month

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Has your letter writing slacked off since the big push in February during InCoWriMo and A Month of Letters? Are you ready to get re-invograted and reply to that stack of letters sitting in your in box? Well, let April be your inspiration since its National Letter Writing Month. And ther are lots of things to help inspire you.

From Me to You Forever Stamps

First, the USPS just released the new From Me To You Forever stamps designed by Michael Osborne. Around the postage are useable stickers with designs and messages to embellish your letters, cards or envelopes.

Laura from Suburban Pen Pal created a video on how she makes mail art. Jazz up your letters with some of her techniques. (link via Letter Writers Alliance)

Paper Crave collected ten great cards to use to write your April missives.

And finally, Egg Press created their own 30 day letter writing challenge called Write_On and offered others free cards to inspire them to connect with others through letters. (link also via Letter Writers Alliance)

There’s still plenty of time to write some letters this month. Send a thank you to a friend for just being there, mail some birthday cards instead of just saying “happy birthday” on Facebook, or send a love note to your significant other.

Review: Pilot Frixion “Color-Pencil-Like” Pen Set

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Pilot has made so many different variations of the Frixion line of erasable pens. Its a little bit confusing. There are highlighters, needlepoint “Point”, gel pens, markers and the “Color-Pencil-Like” pens. For you, my fine readers, I was willing to try these Frixion markers with the very weird description.

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I purchased the 6-color assortment pack of the Pilot Frixion Color-Pencil-Like 0.7mm erasable gel pens ($13). The pens are plastic and have a faceted body to appear and feel a bit like a hexagonal pencil. The caps do not have clips, just a little nub to make it easier to remove the cap. The erasers for each pen are mounted on the end of the cap so that, when posted, the eraser is still accessible. The set came with yellow, red, blue, green, tea brown and black pens.

My first mistake was probably buying a pre-selected set of six since several of these colors I never would have purchased individually. Nine times out of ten, a yellow pen is useless for writing of any sort and the yellow Frixion is no exception. Because its a 0.7mm rollerball gel pen, its doubly true. The yellow is not wide enough to be used as a highlighter so it really is not particularly useable.

I would have much preferred trying an orange, purple, or one of the more unusual colors likt the gray, ultramarine blue or purplish red pens over this uninspired assortment.

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If what you’re looking for with these pens is a pretty smooth, pretty quick-drying  0.7mm rollerball pen that erases, then these might be perfect. If you were genuinely hoping to have a uniquely “pencll-like” experience, then you will be disappointed.The pens did not seem to lend themselves to coloring large areas like I might do with a colored pencil so I’m not sure what Pilot was hoping people would do with these pens?

The product is described as “vibrant colors” but this particular assortment is very dark and solemn in tone. The red is the most vivid color in the set. The green is an evergreen color and even the blue is more blue-black than a bright royal or true blue. And the yellow is a total waste.

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All of the pens in the set erased as well as any of the other Frixion products I’ve tried. The erasing is far superior to any other erasable pens I’ve ever used so if that’s a key feature for you, then these might prove useful.

In the end, I may have been more disappointed by the color assortment in this set than the actual writing experience. These are quite smooth and, even for a lefty, I had no smudging issues or false starts. Also, the writing experience was not “color-pencil-like” so I was disappointed by the sales pitch. They are just gel pens.

There is no cost benefit to buying a set of these pens rather than buying the pens individually ($2.15 each) so if you’re interested in trying these, I’d recommend building your own color assortment and avoiding the yellow altogether. There are other yellowish hues like the mountain yellow and yellow ochre available that might be a darker shade and more useable color than the yellow.

If you’re interested in trying some of the Frixion line, I prefer the Frixion Point 04 line and the Soft Color Highlighters. See my full review here.


DISCLAIMER: This item was sent to me free of charge by Jet Pens for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

Peek: Calepino No. 2 Papier Quadrille Pocket Notebook

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I recently swapped one of my lined Calepino notebooks with @inkpairing in exchange for a grid paper edition to be able to see what the difference is. While the lined version of the Calepino Pocket Notebook features a red printed, kraft cover and red lines for writing, the grid version has a green printed, kraft cover and green grid lines inside. The grid lines are thin and pretty light but I was strangely surprised that all the rulings weren’t consistently printed in one color.

Everything else about these books is consistent with the lined edition — 3 books for $10 and they come in the sturdy kraft board box.

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The paper stock is exactly the same as the lined edition and handles inks fairly well for a pocket notebook. Mostly, I just wanted to share the difference in the printed lines/grid.

I would extrapolate that the Calepino Dot Grid books have dots that match the greyish-olive hue of the covers. Has anyone tried the Calepino Dot Grids? Let me know if I’m right about the dots.