Vintage toy typewriter collection. Mmmmm, start the love of typewriters and writing young!
(via Collectors Weekly)
Vintage toy typewriter collection. Mmmmm, start the love of typewriters and writing young!
(via Collectors Weekly)
Topping a small wooden desk with a larger glass work surface makes one multi-functional workspace. Not much room for your knees though!
(via SF Girl By Bay)
I have been futzing around with what kind of planner I want to use for 2013. I’ve pretty much been hemming and hawing about this since my Exhaustive Planner/Calendar Round-Up back in August and now I’m feeling the crunch as the clock ticks down to January 1. I even went out and bought something thinking it was the right solution only to realize I was already on the road to planner fail — it was an insert for a binder-style planner like a Filofax or Franklin Covey binder and discovered I did not have the binder anymore.
Luckily, I found Plannerism’s How to Find Your Perfect Planner post. This was a great tool to help me think through my needs and help me narrow down the options to planners that met my personal criteria.
Here’s my preferred qualities:
This doesn’t seem like it should be impossible to meet all these standards but it does take some digging.
Notemaker carries a great selection of planners and agendas and is a good place to start narrowing down the possibilities. They stock binders and refills for Filofax which are getting harder and harder to find. They also carry Delfonics, Quo Vadis, O-Check and the charming Frankie Diary. They even have a full assortment of Moleskine planners if all else fails.
Referring back to my earlier post, I’m still considering the Paperblanks planners from Jenni Bick and We Are What We Do Action Diary. I am also intrigued by the Ciak Day Planners which have lovely typography. And I did love my Cavallini planner for two years but wonder if I should try something new.
Have you chosen your planner for 2013 yet? What did you choose and did it meet all your needs?
Pens
Everything Else
The Real Boy pushpins set was created by designer Duncan Shotton. Each set is a handcrafted, hand-painted box of two wooden pushpins. It is a limited production run of just 1000 sets and each set is numbered. £8 per set. Go forth and pin-occhio!
Yep, thanks to the Maker blog, you too can craft this colored pencil fragment pendant or other cool home decor or jewelry with this fabulous tutorial.I’m thinking necklace and maybe some coasters!
“Oh, honey….! I found a project I need you to help me with!”
(shout out to my pal Geoff for tipping me off to this one)
Bound Custom Journals was a Kickstarter project out of North Carolina. All went swimmingly and now they have a site fully stocked with three styles of customizable books to choose from to build your very own: the 4×6″ linen flexible hardcover ($35), 3.5″x5″ memo book ($10) and the 4×6″ leatherette flexible hardcover ($50). The linen cover is available in five colors, the leatherette in two. Even the memo book is available with five color options for the covers.
An assortment of paper types can be chosen for the inside:
Any combination of pages can be used; you can fill the front with a calendar and checklists and then the remaining pages with lined, blank, grid, isometric grid or all of the above. The options are pretty open.
Bulk orders will allow you to customize the covers with your business logo or personal artwork.
As best as I can tell, the interior of the book appears to be a bright white paper stock. And as luck would have it, Brad at the Pen Addict just posted a review of his new journal and memo book from Bound with pen tests and images of interior pages. Check it out as he finds the paper good with gel pens but not so good with fountain pens.