Super-specialized art supplies are fun and can ease the tedious part of creative work. What makes special supplies most useful is combining them with the basics you love and use every day.
Here are my four new favorites for everyday journaling use.
Open notebook showing yellow first page (others are white) and pocket insert that does NOT come with the notebook.
Notebook: Mnemosyne 183. Unlined, 70 sheets (140 pages). Now that I’ve abandoned six journals for one–the Commonplace Journal, I needed something practical. So it has to:
- fit in a purse (or carry-on)
- fold over on itself
- have paper that’s thick enough for sketching and writing
- have paper that doesn’t have severe show-through
- have pages that can be removed (and leave as a note for someone)
I’ve loved the Strathmore Mixed-Media journal, but the wire binding is just too bulky, and the paper seemed a waste for client notes, which go into the Commonplace Journal most.
Showing double-truck spread of Maruman Mnemosyne notebook. Right page has been deliberately blurred.
Maruman is a Japanese company that makes notebooks for writers. Mnemosyne is the Greek goddess of memory. The notebooks are made with meticulous care. For example, the small-diameter wire binding is “short”–doesn’t go to the very top or bottom of the page. So you can easily hold the gutter side of the page when you tear out the perf’d page cleanly.
I got the notebook at JetPens, which has a huge variety of sizes, lined- graphed- and blank notebooks. Here’s what they say:
The way a paper interacts with a specific ink is as unique as a snowflake. Fountain pen users will prefer paper that produces the perfect inkblot levels, paper that absorbs too much ink would not be good. On the other hand, a ballpoint pen user might seek a paper that allows their pen to guide more smoothly across the page. Japanese paper manufacturers pay attention to these preferences by tweaking numerical values ever so slightly during the manufacturing process to create the perfect page for their customers.
Very little show-through on this book.
It’s true–the pages are thin, and have an almost smooth, fabric feel to them. It has a black plastic front cover, and a chipboard back cover, which makes writing easy, even when folded over to save space.
Pack of 5 x 8 inch Post-It Pockets. A must-have for every journal-keeper.
Post-It Pockets. There are items I like to carry in my Commonplace Journal–the gift certificate to an art store, the business card I just got, a postcard (with stamp) to send to someone on the spur of the moment, the names and phone numbers of doctors and emergency contacts.
These plastic pockets work like Post-It Notes--they attach to the inside front cover of your notebook and peel off when you need to move it. A flap is held shut with velcro, so you have easy access to the contents. These fit in a 5 x 8-inch notebook perfectly, and they do come in different sizes.
Pentel Hybrid Technica ballpoint, extra fine (size 04). I’m not a gel pen fan. I like
ballpoints. And this gel pen is perfect is you like extra fine pens. It’s crisp, black script is perfect for detail. It does what most gel pens don’t–it dries as soon as it’s on the page.
It’s a great sketching pen, too. Smooth, even, no blurring when you cross-hatch. Archival, acid free. Writes when you touch it to paper, so no “scribble start” with this pen. If you draw and write in your journal, take sketchnotes, or doodle, (and like a superfine pen), this is perfect.
Drawing in a 9 x 12-inch wire-bound notebook is a nice way to create and keep your pieces the same size and together. It’s also hard, because you work consecutively, but not emotionally sequentially.
You also have to put the book aside to dry if you are doing something messy and wet. Patience is not always my strong suit.
Canson has solved your problem–they make a wireboound book with repositionable pages. (The link takes you to Dick Blick art supply.)
You carefully peel out a page, top to bottom, and let it dry or decide where you want to put it. Then you put it back in, carefully “clicking” the pages back into place.
It works along the same lines as Rollabind or Circa, which uses removable disks to hold notebooks together.
This makes the book doubly useful. You can arrange the pages by date, media, technique, color, emotional content. You can rearrange them to your heart’s content, as long as you are careful.
Note: I paid for each of these products. I am not being compensated in any way by any company for the content of this blog.
—Quinn McDonald loves basic art and writing tools.
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