Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set Review

Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set Review

(Sarah Read is an author, editor, yarn artist, and pen/paper/ink addict. You can find more about her at her website and on Bluesky. And her latest book, The Atropine Tree, is now available!)

It's a great feeling when you are interested in something because of one feature it has (like, say, a tiny Retro 51 pen), but then you find yourself enjoying all of its features much more than expected. So yes, I selected this item because I wanted the tiny Retro pen. It's cute! And now I am enjoying having a great wallet, too. Double win.

Pularys makes lots of nice leather wallets, and the Modern Traveler Set collaboration with Retro 51 combines their quality features with a great portable pen, ensuring that you can be well equipped for any tasks that combine card-carrying and writing. There are a lot of those. While many receipts have gone digital, I used mine today in a restaurant, and earlier this week signing a form in a doctor's office. I wouldn't want to write a whole book with this teeny tiny pen (though I'm mad enough to try it someday, probably), but it's fantastic for jotting down a quick note or signature. And the pen writes well! It’s a ballpoint pen, not the gushing rollerball of Retro 51 Tornado fame, but that is much more practical for what will likely be used on receipt paper a lot of the time.

Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set

The wee Retros included in these wallets are color-coordinated to the set. This blue wallet comes with a copper-colored pen. The Cognac wallet's pen is teal, and the black wallet's pen is black. All have the Retro 51 brand on the front, and they close with a silver snap strap. They all look great.

It's a surprisingly small wallet, though it carries a lot. It holds 8 cards in the aluminum RFID-blocking sleeve, which releases the cards with the flip of the black plastic lever at the bottom of the wallet. There are also two folder-style sleeves inside the wallet to store additional cards. There's also a folded plastic bill holder behind the aluminum card sleeve. Then, of course, there's the mini Retro pen sleeve in the spine. I was able to move everything I need to carry into this wallet--from a much larger wallet that did not include room for a pen. It was a wonder of physics.

Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set Open

This is my first time using a wallet with one of those card-flipper features. I've been nervous to try one. The little flippers stick out funny, and what if they break, leaving my important cards trapped in their aluminum coffin? Okay, I'm still a bit anxious about that, but I can say that using this one feels very sturdy and reliable.

Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set Pen

I knew I would love the pen. I had a tiny Retro 51 like this that I purchased at my first ever pen show in Colorado in 2015, and I lost that treasured pen when it fell out of my pocket in a parking lot one day. I've been searching for a replacement ever since, and it looked like this wallet set was the only way to find one. I did not expect to like the wallet as much as I do! I figured it would be nice, don't get me wrong, but I have never considered myself to have "wallet preferences." That might change, now.

Retro 51 X Pularys Modern Traveler Set Ballpoint

The only thing I'd change about this wallet is that I'd include a teeny tiny notebook tucked into the right side slip pocket, just for a bit of scrap paper to go with the wee pen. Happily that's something I can add, myself.

The Retro 51 Modern Traveler set sells for $120, though as I write this, it's on sale for $96 at Dromgoole's. It's worth the full-price cost, and the sale is a great deal. If you have someone in your life who needs a nice new wallet, or if you need a tiny Retro 51, this is a total win.

(This product was purchased from Dromgoole's at regular price.)


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Posted on November 6, 2025 and filed under Retro 51, Accessories Review.

KOKUYO Sooofa Soft Ring 2026 Diary Giveaway

KOKUYO Sooofa Soft Ring 2026 Diary Giveaway

Have you decided on your 2026 planner yet? If you are looking for a simple calendar plus notebook option, then the KOKUYO Sooofa Soft Ring 2026 Diary is one worth looking at. 2-pages per month in the front (through early 2027,) followed by 125 pages of 4 mm grid paper in the back. I have one of the B6 Light Blue diaries to give away this week, so read the rules and enter below!

Posted on November 4, 2025 and filed under Giveaways.

iA Notebook Review

iA Notebook Review

What do you get when a software company who puts a lot of thought and care into their product ventures into the analog world? A notebook built with the same philosophy, executed well.

I admit I was hugely skeptical of the iA Notebook. I used their wonderful distraction-free writing app, iA Writer, in my early days of blogging, and have always held a soft spot for its design and functionality. Translating that experience into a physical good, though? I’m glad they were up for the challenge.

iA Notebook Binding

The core feature of the iA Notebook are the watermarked pages. Watermarks are typically an identification marker of the paper maker, usually only seen on the page when held up to light. iA has taken that concept and made the watermark functional by using those subtle marks as the lines on the page. Yes, this is a lined notebook.

iA Notebook Lines

Can you make out the subtle lines?

While great in concept, they are challenging to see when writing. Notebook pages aren’t backlit, so you need good lighting to stay on the lines. I often found myself tilting my head to ensure I could see where I was writing. Luckily, they are spaced at 10 mm apart, so you have plenty of room if you wander.

iA Notebook Ink Test

I tested all kinds of pens, pencils, and inks on the paper, and it held up well to most of it. The 81g Araveal White used in this notebook is slightly textured, and uncoated, giving it performance characteristics of a dry page. That means inks dry fast, but you lose some of the character (shading, sheen,) that fountain pen inks are known for. The ink gets into the top layer of the page, but didn’t bleed through to the back, and didn’t feather on the top.

iA Notebook Ink Test Back

The finer the nib, the more I enjoyed the ink experience, which is odd to say. Lines from wet nibs seemed to be oversaturated, while the finer nibs gave my lines more color balance. It’s like the lighter application of ink didn’t have a chance to get deep into the fibers, and was allowed to show off the ink characteristics.

One of the best inks to test paper absorption is the rollerball ink of the Schmidt P8127, and it wasn’t great. This water-based ink wouldn’t be my choice for this paper, as it did have some feathering. Fineliners were not great either, as the dry paper didn’t allow the ink to grab well from the plastic tip, giving them a pencil-like feeling. Alcohol ink Sharpies showed off how the ink absorbs into the top layer of the page, but didn’t immediately blast through the back and on to the next page. Gel and ballpoint inks were nice to use, and pencils felt great.

iA Notebook Swatch

Cotton swab ink swatches.

iA Notebook Ink Swatch Back

Taking away any performance preferences, the build of the iA Notebook gets an A+. It’s solid, with thick front and back covers, and a cloth/mesh binding. It’s an object, as well as a notebook.

If the design gets an A+, I’d rate the paper as a B. As I mentioned earlier, it’s usable for many types of pens, but not universally great. It doesn’t have the all-around performance that you get from top Japanese brands like Maruman and Midori, and it may be more in the Leuchtturm zone for fountain pens, which is good, but not elite.

iA Notebook Writing

One note on the 10mm line spacing: If you stay committed to the lines, and don’t use the back side of the page due to ghosting, you are giving up a ton of writing real estate. At this cost per acre, that’s tough.

iA Notebook Writing Back

Ghosting. Not sure I’d love writing on both sides of the page.

The watermark lines of the iA Notebook are its killer deign feature, and, along with the packaging, turned it into the design award winning notebook that it is. But it has to be functional, too. I’d much prefer it as a standard blank page notebook, but then iA wouldn’t get to show off the cool features and construction they have here. I love it as an object, there are better choices for performance.

iA Notebook Writing Close

At $79, the iA Notebook is on the upper end of the pricing spectrum. Is it fairly priced given the design and quality of the product? Probably. It’s close. I’d personally love to see if they could create a blank page option and get the price down to a still expensive $49-$59, but that’s just me wishcasting. I think iA knows their market for this, and they are leaning into what the company has always been about: design.

(I purchased this notebook from iA at full price.)


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iA Notebook Box
Posted on November 3, 2025 and filed under iA, Notebook Reviews.