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An Obsession Part III

Sherwood Hughes

Posted on June 3, 2015

Midori Traveler's Notebook Blue Edition

Midori Traveler’s Notebook Blue Edition

As I’ve searched the internet the past few weeks for different types of journals, I’ve stumbled across the Midori Traveler’s Notebook by Midori from Japan. Let me just say that my debit card has sadly been the target of this journal and its many accessories. Having said that, the Midori Traveler’s Notebook is eminently affordable and you can customize it to your heart’s content. There is also a thriving community of folks that post videos on YouTube their Midori Traveler’s Notebook “un-boxing,” how they use their notebook, and how they choose to organize the contents. My favorite video is from Stuff and Things (https://youtu.be/tBRjYNQ1qio), primarily because, as he says in his video, his review won’t be like the many videos already on YouTube by “artsy crafty women with long painted nails and lots of dangling jewelry” (be steady my heart), who talk in “great detail about how they had set up” their notebook with oodles of scrap booky handmade inserts etc. As sexist as his statement may be, he’s right, and that’s what I find so funny. So on with my review.

Midori Traveler's Notebook Star Ferry Edition

Midori Traveler’s Notebook Star Ferry Edition

The Midori Traveler’s Notebook is a leather cover that can contain any number of inserts. The inserts can be notebooks, Kraft file folders, plastic zip pouches, card files, sketch books, and more. The covers come in two sizes, standard and passport. The standard size is approximately 5.1″ wide X 8.4″ tall. The passport size is 4.6″ wide X 6.1″ tall. The passport size can evidently hold a passport while traveling, which for some, will make it an excellent choice for capturing thoughts about their travels. The leather covers come in two standard colors, black and brown, but every now and then, Midori comes out with special editions. Two such editions are: a 2013 Hong Kong Star Ferry Company special edition with a tan leather cover in passport size, and a 2015 Pan Am special edition with a medium blue leather cover in standard size. Both of these special editions came with a number of fun, and at times, silly, accessories. For the record, most of the accessories for the 2013 Hong Kong Star Ferry edition are now out of stock, and despite many attempts, I was unable to find the leather cover. Special pencils, pens and holders, fun stickers, and other stuff will take up hours of your time and make you think you are going crazy. Trust me I speak from experience.

The notebooks you can insert come in blank, lined, and graph paper. Some notebooks have thinner paper and more pages, some are made of Kraft paper, which seems like it is good for folks that want to sketch, and some of the notebook’s pages are scored for easy removal. There are monthly and weekly diaries available as well. Most of the videos I’ve watched on YouTube claim not to use the notebook as a calendar but as a writer’s or traveler’s journal. This seems to make sense to me in this day and age of smart phones. Most of these inserts are available on Amazon, but another brand, Banditapple, is available at Goulet Pens website.

Despite my making fun of some of the accessories, there is something decidedly fun about these notebooks. They are not high style but rather have a homemade feel. The simple leather cover is just a large rectangle of leather that folds over to protect the contents. They have a vertical elastic in the spine that for holds the inserts and an elastic around the middle to keep it closed. You can use additional elastic bands (an accessory), to load in more notebooks by piggy-backing off of a primary insert. There are other ways of loading in notebooks, which you can research on YouTube. Some folks have even gone as far as to punch additional holes in the spine and string more vertical elastic into the cover to avoid the piggy-backing of inserts. You can even remove the closure elastic and add charms to it, and to the end of the built-in bookmark. Customizing it is what makes this notebook fun and it reminds me of all the keychain types of charms my nieces used to hand on the zippers of their knapsacks years ago.

This notebook is fun, relatively inexpensive if you can control your desire to get all the accessories, and useful as well.  I bought a regular black, and change the horizontal elastic with a red elastic. I also bought the Pan Am special edition, and a black passport size. I’ve filled them all with fun inserts, and coins with holes in them as charms on the middle closure elastic. I’ll use the passport size for a planned trip to Brugge, Belgium and Amsterdam in the fall. The sheer number of accessories and knock offs (search “faux midair” on Etsy), I think is testament to how successful this notebook has been. So run out and get one yourself, but don’t blame me if you can’t control your urge to accessorize!

Categories: Writing

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An Obsession Part II

Sherwood Hughes

Posted on May 29, 2015

Levenger's Stanley Journal High-res version

So yesterday I shared with you my new obsession, journals and pens, and in specific, I reviewed the Allen’s Journal.  Nothing has changed today; I’m still obsessed. I think this will go on for a bit so sit back and enjoy the review of the next journal.

20 year old black leather Levenger Stanley Journal Cover

20-year-old leather Levenger Stanley Journal

The journal I looked at for part II is Levenger’s Stanley Journal. I’ve had this smooth leather journal cover for almost twenty years. Last year, however, when I went through a pebble leather obsession (yes, I know, I need to control my impulses), I purchased from Levenger a new black pebble leather cover. There was simply no comparison between the old and new covers. The twenty year old cover is incredibly well made, and looked like it was an expensive leather piece when I bought it. It still looks fantastic despite tons of use. The 2014 cover by contract, is slightly larger, isn’t nearly as well made, and feels flimsy right out of the box. The workmanship is similar to most of Levenger’s other current leather goods: cheaply made. This cover just isn’t up to the standards Levenger had years ago, which from my perspective is really unfortunate. For example: the stiff boarding in the front and back cover visibly ends near the binding area of the cover — you can see and feel the outline where the stiff boarding under the leather ends. It is incredibly unattractive. The current cover measures 6 1/8″ X 8 1/2″ and you can personalize it with your initials. You can find it on Levenger’s website, although with what I’ve shared here, I don’t know why anybody would consider buying it unless they simply didn’t know anybetter. Thank God I kept 20 year cover, because it still looks great.

The one thing going for the Stanley Journal is that it is refillable, something that is lacking in most good journals. The refills come in sets of 2 notebooks, 118 lined pages with gilt edges, and a linen brown cover that inserts into the leather cover. I received two of the earlier line blue covers before Levenger changed the color to Brown — so keep in mind I am reviewing the blue linen cover refills here. They are 5 1/2″ X 7 3/4, and fit well into the older leather cover, and a tad loosely, from my perspective, into the new cover. I was really exited to get these because it meant I’d be able to keep using a cover I really like, but the paper turned out to be a disaster.

If you are a fountain pen user, the paper in these refills will drive you batty. I used three pens when I did a writing test: a 1956 Sterling Silver with gold nib fine Parker, a Lamy CP1 with extra fine nib, and a TWSBI 580 Diamond Clear with an extra fine nib. In each case, my writing samples experienced feathering. And when I turned the page to continue writing on the other side there was enough bleed through to make further writing impossible. Note: using these same pens and the same writing tests on an Allen’s Journal yielded no feathering and no blade through. but when I turned the page to continue writing on the other side there was more than enough bleed through.

What a huge disappointment. So now starts my search for notebooks that will fit my lovely 20-year-old leather cover (I threw out the cheaply made 2014 pebble leather one).

Stay tuned for part III. I’ll be writing about the Japanese Midori Traveler’s Notebook.

Categories: Writing

Tagged: Writing

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An Obsession Part I

Sherwood Hughes

Posted on May 28, 2015

Rarely do I get so obsessed with something that I wonder if I’m loosing my marbles, but that’s exactly what’s been happening for the past two weeks. My obsession started because I had ankle and foot surgery about four and half weeks ago, and as part of recovery, I must remain home from work, with my foot in a surgical splint, elevated above my heart for as many hours a day as I can stomach. Seems easy right? Not so fast buckeroo. It’s as boring as hell. And with boredom, you guessed it, came obsession.

What obsession you ask? I’ve finally indulged my love of journals and pens, and done so for more than a week. So I must be obsessed, right? I already had two fountain pens, one an antique Parker and the other a Lamy CP1 with an extra fine point, but I’d never been able to maintain a journal for more than a few days. I’d start, and then stop, which is pretty typical from what I’ve read on the internet. But now, I’m whole hog into it. I’m writing two pages daily, by hand no less, on thoughts about life, my job, frustrations with life, my ankle and foot that continue to throb, and anything that comes to mind, including ideas for short stories, and an itinerary for an eleven day trip to Bruges and Amsterdam in the fall. Hum, hopefully I’ll be able to walk decently because it involves a ton of walking.

The two journals I’ve been using are an Allen’s journal by a Scotish bible printer (not a religious thing) and a Levenger’s Stanley journal.

The Allen’s journal is by far my favorite of the two journals. I love the 4mm thin ruled paper, which is red under gold edging, and extremely well bound with a built-in bookmark. I’ve never found a journal that was less than 6mm ruled, so this was a real find. The newer versions have a gray line instead and the rule has been increased to 5mm, but it remains a great option for those who like ultra thin ruled paper and whose writing or script is small. The paper is incredibly thin, which I like. Despite that, your will not experience feathering or bleed through when writing with a fountain pen in this journal, a real testament to the production quality of the paper and the product overall. There are 256 pages in this and because the paper is so thin, the book is just under a half inch thick. Mine has a black goatskin leather, which is very supple. Some of their journals use other types of leather like calfskin, but they are just as beautiful. Allen’s journals come in other colors as well, like red, green, brown and tan. My cover has “Journal” printed in gold leaf lettering. Note: newer versions of these journals omit the cover gold leafing and the paper is slightly heaver. I prefer the older style, but I’m ultimately fine with these changes. The journal comes in two sizes:  6 1/8″ X 4 1/2″, a passport size, and a larger 8 3/16″ X 5 3/8″. The smaller size is, as of this writing, £30.00. The large is not currently in stock so I can’t quote you a price. Allen’s ships to the United States as well. I love this journal. In fact I love it so much I’ve been known to kiss the cover. Yeah, I know, weird, but true.

If you are looking for a good journal, try out Allen’s in England at https://www.bibles-direct.co.uk and click on the “Journals” item in the page navigation on the left. While they are a bible printer you won’t get strange emails trying to sell you bibles. The one draw back so far with this journal is that they print them at the same time they print up new batches of bibles. As a result, they’ve been out of the larger size for about six months. I’m hoping, and I check back often, that they print some up soon.

Enjoy!

Categories: Writing

Tagged: Journals

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