Posts filed under Notebook Reviews

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook A5 Green Grid Limited Edition Review

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook A5 Green Grid Limited Edition 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 Twitter. And check out her latest book, Out of Water, now available where books are sold!)

The Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year A5 Notebook is a minimalist everything notebook, which sounds like an oxymoron, but its secret lies in its flexibility.

By flexibility, I mean you can use this notebook in lots of ways. I'm not just referring to the cover, which is also very flexible. It has a soft woven-textured cover that reminds me of old books. I love woven covers, and this one is as nice as it is durable. The inside cover is lined with grey kraft endpapers. The corners are rounded, and the front cover has some gold-stamped branding along the left edge.

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook A5 Green Grid Limited Edition

Inside are 192 pages of 4mm grid paper, enough to use the notebook as a 6-month planner or journal. The paper is very fine 52gsm, so the notebook is only .3" thick and fits easily in bags or cases. The thread binding means that the notebook will lie open flat after a bit of training.

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook

The paper is a very pale cream-white color with faint grey ink used for the grid and guides, so the grid can be ignored if you prefer. At the top of each page, also very faint and in a typeface for ants, there are months and days of the week, and day numbers. You can circle the applicable month and day to label your page, or just pretend that tiny type isn't there. Along the left edge of each page are hourly labels from 1-24, so you can use it as an hourly planner as well. Because all of these labels are so unobtrusive, you can also just use the book as a journal or regular notebook. Or an everything book--planner and journal and commonplace book all in one. Which is why I call this the minimalist everything book.

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook Header

I've used the smaller all-year Stalogy notebook before, so I already had high expectations for the paper. My old Stalogy paper felt exactly like Tomoe River paper, so that notebook was much like a Hobonichi planner, but minus all the fuss and labeling. This paper is a bit different from the older Stalogy paper I used, but it's still wonderful. It has more tooth and crispness, closer to Midori paper. Being very fine, it does have some mild show-through with darker inks and bolder nibs, but there was zero bleeding or feathering, and ink shading was pleasantly visible. I used one pen that I fully expected to bleed or feather--a gusher of a nib with a wet ink in it that flows like a firehose, and even that did not faze this paper.

Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook Writing
Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook Back Page

If you're looking for a minimalist planner, or a well-made notebook with good paper, this is an excellent choice. The A5 1/2 Year size costs $21 at Jetpens, which is a little high, in my opinion. You can definitely find notebooks of comparable quality for a lower cost, and the non-limited edition Stalogy that is a full year's length (and twice as many pages) is $25. This limited edition green is very lovely, though, and I highly recommend giving Stalogy notebooks a try.

(JetPens provided this product at no charge to The Pen Addict for review purposes.)


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Stalogy Editor's Series 1/2 Year Notebook Back Cover
Posted on August 19, 2021 and filed under Stalogy, Notebook Reviews.

Maruman Into-One Binder Mini Size in Light Blue: A Review

(Susan M. Pigott is a fountain pen collector, pen and paperholic, photographer, and professor. You can find more from Susan on her blog Scribalishess.)

I purchased the Maruman Into-One Binder Mini in light blue, thinking it would be a handy replacement for loose index cards. It's the perfect size for a purse or backpack pocket, and the loose-leaf sheets make it quite versatile.

The binder is made of flexible, textured plastic, and the rings are attached with metal posts. The rings and opening/closing mechanism are made of clear plastic. To open, you simply pinch the mechanism with your fingers. Push the rings together in order to close the rings.

Maruman Into-One Binder Texture.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Metal Posts.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Plastic Rings.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Opening Mechanism.jpg

Unfortunately, one of my binder rings is out of alignment, so it doesn't close properly.

Maruman Into-One Binder Ring Out of Alignment.jpg

The binder is 5.9 inches/150mm wide, 3.6 inches/92mm tall, and 0.63 inches/16mm deep (where the binder rings are).

Maruman Into-One Binder Measuring.jpg

The binder comes with twenty pages of 80gsm lined (front and back) white paper. It is B7 size (130mm x 87mm = 3.4 x 5.1 inches) which is slightly larger than a 3 x 5 index card. Each sheet has nine holes, but the binder only has five rings. I'm not sure what the additional holes are for. Blue lines at the top and bottom of each page act as margins. Dots and dashes at 0.5mm intervals provide guidance if you want to draw vertical lines on the pages. The binder can accommodate up to sixty pages.

Maruman Into-One Binder Sample Page.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Close Up of Line Intervals.jpg

Considering how thin the paper feels, I was pleased by how well it stood up to various writing instruments. In my fountain pen test none of the inks feathered or bled through, with the exception of the wet flex nib in my Opus 88. There's some show through, but it's negligible enough that you can write on both sides of this paper.

Maruman Into-One Binder Fountain Pen Test 1.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Fountain Pen Test Show Through.jpg

The paper handled ink swabs with ease--I used very wet swabs but no ink bled through. The inks exhibited shading and pooling, but no sheen.

Maruman Into-One Binder Ink Swab Test 1.jpg
IMaruman Into-One Binder Ink Swab Show Through.jpg

I also tested various pens and one pencil. The only bleed through was with the Sharpies (both ultra fine and regular).

Maruman Into-One Binder Various Writing Instruments.jpg

The Maruman Mini Binder could be used in many ways. I listed several possibilities and created examples of some of them.

Maruman Into-One Binder Mini Binder Uses.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Example To Do.jpg
Maruman Into-One Binder Example Reading Notes.jpg

The Maruman Into-One Binder costs $7.25 on JetPens. You can get it in light blue, dark blue, and pink.

There are multiple options for filling the binder, including various print styles (ruled, graph, blank, to-do, and time planning) and colors/paper styles: white, pastel colors, croquis (for sketching), and scrap. You can also get a zip case, tabbed dividers, and paper protectors.

I love this little binder and plan to use mine for reading notes and memorization purposes.

(I purchased the Maruman Mini Binder and lined paper refill with my own funds.)


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Maruman Into-One Binder
Posted on July 9, 2021 and filed under Maruman, Notebook Reviews.

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Review

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook 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 Twitter. And check out her latest book, Out of Water, now available where books are sold!)

So, I live just a few miles away from Anderson Pens. It's fabulous when it's time to pick up the new Retro, or when I need supplies in a hurry. But it's also incredibly dangerous, like when I pop into the shop for one thing, and notice a new brand of notebook I haven't tried yet. It happens. Frequently. This time, the notebook I picked up was the Profolio Oasis Summit from Itoya.

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Index
Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Bookmarks

It caught my eye with a few features I know I love--lots of pages (126 sheets! 252 numbered pages!), sewn lay-flat binding with a taped spine, double ribbon bookmarks, an index, and versatile guidelines. It also has a sturdy cardstock cover, nice endpapers, and a minimal silver foil stamped logo. It's a pretty notebook, which hasn't stopped me from decorating the cover with some washi and making it my own.

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Lines

My favorite thing about this notebook is the guide lines. Through clever alchemy, it is grid, dot, and lined all at the same time. There are fine grey lines that are narrowed by two faint, dotted dividing lines, and then there are vertical dot grid lines. It works for writing text, class notes, outlines, lists, or working on handwriting. It would make a perfect Bullet Journal. None of the lines are obtrusive, so you can pick whichever way you prefer to use it. I've been using it as my everything book, and it's worked wonderfully. I have packing lists, daily/hourly to-do lists, important notes--all kinds of chaos. Which is also why I'm glad it has an index.

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Writing

The paper quality is also very good. It's fountain pen friendly, with a fairly quick dry time. It doesn't show much sheen, but shading is nice, and I did not have any bleed-through with normal writing, and no feathering. Some ink did bleed through when I let it pool and soak in, so it's not completely impervious, but I've written in it with a wide variety of nibs and inks and not had any issues.

At $25, I do think this is a little on the pricy side for a softcover B6 notebook. It's the quantity of pages that shifts it over into the "worth it" category for me. It's working well and I'm quite happy with it. I'm going to need a few more.


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Membership starts at just $5/month, with a discounted annual option available. To find out more about membership click here and join us!

Profolio Oasis Summit B6 Notebook Specs
Posted on July 8, 2021 and filed under Profolio, Notebook Reviews.