Review: Stubby Pencil Studio Pencil Highlighters

Stubby Pencil Studio Highlighter Pencils

I love the idea of pencil highlighters. They don’t dry out, can be used all the way down to a stump and don’t leave a big wet patch in a book or on my notes. When the fine folks at Stubby Pencil Studios offered to send a few highlighters to try out, I was excited to try them out. These are wide, hexagonal pencils — like kids’ first pencils —  with a plain, untreated wood exterior. Stamped along one side is the Stubby Pencil name and “Eco Highlighter Austria” in black foil.

I received a set of five colors ($9.95) : yellow, orange, green, pink and blue. The pencils were wrapped in a simple cellophane bag, no fancy packaging which is fine with me.

The colors are much more vivid and quite comparable to the colors of regular wet highlighters. The colors are much better than the last set of pencil highlighters I tried.

Stubby Pencil Studio Highlighter Pencils

The colors are bright and the lead is thick enough to stroke across a line of text in one or two strokes. The lead seems strong and unlikely to break easily. The pencils have a pleasing wood smell and the untreated finish make them easy to hold.

Stubby Pencil Studio Highlighter Pencils Writing Samples

In writing tests, the joy of joys is that, over dry fountain pen ink, these pencils perform beautifully. They do not smear the ink or smudge. This applies to felt tip and gel inks as well. The dry highlighter does not smear the inks below as long as they are dry first. I let my writing dry for a minute at most before highlighting.

Pencil is a blurry mess with the Eco Highlighter though. If you need to highlight pencil, a wet highlighter might work better. Or stick to underlining.

The yellow, green and orange colors worked best to highlight over writing. The pink and blue were too dark over most writing but would work fine for underlining. They are dark enough to add bold writing to notes though.

Stubby Pencil Studio Highlighter Pencils sharpened

Stubby Pencil Studio also sent along a KUM double wooden sharpener ($1.99) which had a large diameter slot pefectly sized for the Eco Highlighters. It sharpened the highlighter easily. I’ll have a more extensive review of the sharpener later but wanted to be sure readers knew it was a good fit for the over-sized Eco Highlighters.

So far, these are my favorite highlighters. I can easily toss a couple in my pencil case, along with the sharpener, and be prepared for any situation. I’m so glad I’ve gotten a chance to try these out.


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

Review: Midori Pocket & Envelope Notebooks

Midori Pocket & Envelope Notebook

The Midori Spiral Ring Pocket and Envelope Notebooks are so simply utilitarian and classy I couldn’t resist them. They are both 3.5″x5″ with the covers wrapping through the spiral binding.

Midori Pocket & Envelope Notebook

The Pocket Envelope has cream-colored, folded sheets that create a pocket to slip loose ephemera. You can write notes on the pages which would make this a great small notebook to collect travel ephemera like tickets, wrappers, stamps and such.

The Envelope Notebook is filled with kraft envelopes with a clear plastic window. This notebook is going to be my stamp storage since the envelopes do have flaps to keep the contents from falling out.

Midori Pocket and Envelope Spriral Notebooks

They are both beautifully constructed, durable and elegantly simple. LOVE!

Midori Pocket & Envelope Notebook

Both notebooks are available from European Paper for $8.35 each. There are also larger editions of both books for bigger collections.

Ask The Desk: Kansas City Shop Options

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From Peter:

I am a fellow KC dweller, and have had a hard time finding anywhere to pick up quality stationery. Know of anywhere local to find it?

If you are specifically looking for paper for letter-writing, I would recommend the Paper Source on the Plaza. They carry an assortment of options from companies like Rifle Paper and Chronicle Books. Paper Source also carries paper and notecards in small packets in lots of colors with matching envelopes.

If you are looking for notebooks and other stationery goods, a lot of boutiques and small shops in places like Brookside, Crestwood and Prairie Village often have a table with products. Hammerpress in the Crossroads stocks a variety of desk products like Field Notes and they stock a few Kaweco Sport ALs and a few other writing tools as well as their fabulous cards, postcards, posters and calendars.

I also like Utrecht and Creative Coldsnow (both near Westport) art supplies for a variety of tools. Pencils, erasers, sharpeners, Sakura Pigma Microns, Moleskine and such can be found in these shops.

The Nelson-Atkins Museum Store has some lovely products as well. The museum is always free admission so popping by just to scout out the shop is an option. And lunch in the Rozzell Court is quite a pleasant affair.

For ink and fountain pens, the Pen Place in Crown Center is your best option. They have a wide variety of pen brands, from inexpensive like Retro 51, Lamy and Kaweco to much more expensive options like Waterman, Montblanc and Pelikan. They also stock  lots of ink (Noodler’s, Private Reserve, Mont Blanc, Pelikan Edelstein and many more). The nice thing is that you can see a swab of the inks before you purchase it but their costs tend to be a bit more than online retailers. If you go in informed and take into consideration shipping costs versus must-have-it-now, it might be worth a visit.

Let me know if you have any other sources for paper, ink, pens or office supplies in the KC area or if I left anything out. Hope this helps.

Top 10 Most Popular Posts for 2013

top10 posts from 2013

Here’s a  round-up up the most popular posts from 2013 that appeared here on The Desk.

  1. The Great Beginner Fountain Pen Debate
  2. Customizing a Midori Traveler Notebook
  3. Pilot Metropolitan Review
  4. TWSBI Mini Review
  5. Bullet Journal
  6. Piccadilly Essential Notebook
  7. Pipe Desk Building Plans
  8. Midori Traveler Star Edition
  9. Classroom Friendly Sharpener
  10. Kaweco Student Fountain Pen

I’m surprised to see the Bullet Journal and the Pipe Desk in the top ten but they are both great things to know. Thanks to all of you for continuing to read my reviews, leaving great comments and feedback and inspiring me with your own adventures in paper, ink and writing tools.

Happy New Year to all and happy writing!

Preview: Frankie Daily Journal for 2014

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I have always been curious about the incredibly popular Frankie Magazine Daily Journal ($26.95AU). So, I ordered one. In the time that elapsed between ordering the book and it arriving here in the States, I also received the Hobonichi which stole my nerdy heart.

This does not mean that I was not completely blown away with how lovely and romantic the Daily Journal is. Its full of gorgeous illustrations, decorative patterned borders and hand-lettered dates.

The planner is approximately 7.5″x5.75″. The cover is a beautiful heavyweight sage twill with the text stamped into it in cream. There’s a matching satin ribbon bookmark too. The binding seems sturdy but the book opens nicely. The paper is weighty (I’d compare it to American 80lb or 100lb text weight. Copy paper is about 20-30lb weight, if that gives you an idea of the sturdiness). My only concern for usability is all the printing on the paper may have added some coating to the paper that might resist some inks.

In the back cover is a printed pocket for loose sheets. There are also perforated cards, stickers and other goodies bound into the back of the book.

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In the front of the book are month overviews with floral illustration. Weekly pages span two pages with Saturday and Sunday sharing a small space.

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Its such a lovely book that I couldn’t bring myself to blemish it to do pen tests. Instead, I’d like to give it away to one lucky reader. In exchange, I hope that you’ll report back to me how well the paper performs so I can decide if I want to use one next year.

Let’s make this a quick giveaway so I can get this to the winner ASAP to start the new year off right. Leave a comment and tell me one of your goals, plans or resolutions for 2014.

Frankie Daily Journal 2014


FINE PRINT: All entries must be submitted by 10pm CST on Wednesday, January 1, 2014. All entries must be submitted at wellappointeddesk.com, not Twitter, Tumblr or Facebook, okay? Winner will be announced on Thursday. Winner will be selected by random number generator from entries that played by the rules (see above). Please include your email address in the comment form so that I can contact you if you win. I will not save email addresses or sell them to anyone — pinky swear. If winner does not respond within 30 days, I will draw a new giveaway winner. Shipping via USPS first class is covered. Additional shipping options or insurance will have to be paid by the winner. We are generous but we’re not made of money.