Posts filed under Notebooks

My Seven-Notebook Writing System

Lochby Midori Notebooks

(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!)

Last week I reviewed the Midori MD 70th Anniversary set of seven notebooks and I had a lot of fun thinking about all the ways I could put them to good use. I knew I didn't want to split up the set--the rainbow stitching is everything! Normally I'd use them for school, but I'm in my last two classes now--there are no future semesters to save them for! But the thing I'm most excited about being done with school is returning to full-time writing.

Being an author really means running a small business and there can be a lot to keep track of. I have, in the past, used one notebook to track all my writerly business, but they fill up fast when you're keeping busy. Enter a big set of seven lovely notebooks...

Lochby Field Journal

Also enter the fabulous Lochby Field Journal, which is robust enough to contain this ambitious plan.

I assigned each of the notebooks to a different aspect of writerly business: Deadline and submission tracking, listing and outlining ideas, jotting down bits of story drafts, making notes about critiques and edits, listing publication and contract details, notes about the craft of writing, and keeping track of the classes I teach or readings/signings, etc.

Lochby Field Journal Open

Keeping track of deadlines is important for obvious reasons, but it will be helpful to keep them listed in one place, alongside due dates for other open calls for submissions that look interesting. That way I can glance at that list and make a more informed decision about how busy I am when I'm approached for a project. Since many deadlines can be six months to a year out, tracking them on a calendar isn't a good way to get an overview. This way I'll have a list I can reference to confirm that I should definitely not take on any more work in the month of April! I can also keep track of where I send work and when. Some publishers don't send rejections--you're meant to assume you were rejected after not hearing back after a certain amount of time passes, so it's important to know when that time is. Most publishers also don't allow you to submit the same work more than once, so it's crucial to keep track of where you've sent each piece.

Draft Notebook

Keeping track of ideas is also important. Ideas are everywhere, and some are more demanding than others. Sometimes a good idea tries to butt in when I'm working on something else that has a due date and I don't have time to set it aside to focus on the shiny new idea. I've always kept an idea notebook, so this isn't a new one for me, but hopefully this will help me keep them in better order. They do tend to show up on the backs of receipts or scribbled in the margins of school notes. Sometimes I need a place to just jot down a single-sentence concept, and sometimes I need to write the whole outline. This book will hold both/either.

If whole sections of a story jump into my head, but they aren't ready to be fully written yet, I need a place to write down that bit until I'm ready for it. That will go in the next notebook, Draft Bits. Stories often come to me out of order, so this is a place where I can write scenes down when I need to come back to them.

Quote Notebook

I am part of a monthly critique group, as well as a more sporadic workshop, so I need a place to write down the feedback I receive on my work, as well as any ideas I have for edits to a piece. The Critique and Edit Notes notebook will be the home for that info.

Publication information goes in the next one. This is where I'll keep track of contract terms (Do I retain audio rights to this story or does the publisher? When does the exclusive printing period end? Is it a flat rate payment or are their royalties to track?). This way I won't have to go combing through contract files every time I want to reprint a piece.

In the next notebook, I'll record bits of wisdom about the craft of writing. When I attend panels or author talks, I like to write down anything educational or interesting, or notes about what particular editors are looking for in work submitted to them.

In the last notebook, I'll keep track of my own gigs--when I lead workshops or teach classes, do readings, speak on panels, do interviews, or appear on podcasts. I haven't always been good at tracking that, and then a friend mentioned how important that info is for a potential CV if I ever want to get a teaching job or archive my work. This will give me a good way to plan for and track all those appearances.

Lochby bands

To cram all this content into one notebook cover, I used skills gleaned from Traveler's Notebook journalers. I used sewing thread (because that's what I had--I'll get elastics eventually) to tie notebooks 1 and 3 together, with the back cover of 1 and the front cover of 3 facing each other. Then I slid notebook 1 through the first elastic on the Lochby so that the elastic fit between the two notebooks, holding them by the threads. Then I slid notebook 2 through that same elastic at its halfway point. I repeated that process by tying notebooks 4 and 6 together, sliding them though another elastic, and then putting notebook five on that same elastic between them. Notebook 7 is on its own elastic at the end. They all fit quite well! There's enough movement that each notebook is still easy to write in, and there's even still room for me to stuff a bunch of writing note scraps in the pockets of the notebook cover. The thick spine and adjustable clasp on the Lochby are my friend, here.

Lochby bands closed

I'm eagerly anticipating the shift from writing research papers to writing more stories and novels. I've still written a handful, but not nearly as much as I want. For the past two years, the notebook that's been filling up fastest is the one where I list all the ideas I don't have time to write. I'm excited to start filling up all these notebooks, replacing the inserts, and filling those up, too. 93 more days. (In fact, my last ever day of class is the first day of the Chicago Pen Show.) I'm so ready.


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Posted on February 2, 2023 and filed under Notebooks, Writing, Midori, Lochby.

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Leather Cover V2 Review

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Leather Cover V2 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!)

Notebook covers are the perfect combination of my love for bags and my love for notebooks, and trying new ones is always enlightening. Because how can something so simple be continually surprising? I've tried dozens of them, across brands and price spectrums, and the Pebble Stationery Co. Leather Cover V2 version is up there with my favorites.

To start with, it's real leather--very soft calf leather. And it's only $60. For me, those two facts by themselves are reason enough, but there are even more reasons!

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Leather Cover
Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Pockets
Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover

The outside of the cover has no branding or decoration. It looks very office chic. Inside the left cover, there are three card slots, one folder slot, and the debossed Pebble Stationery Co. name. The card slots are deep, so only an edge of a card peeks out, but they are lined with smooth fabric, so cards are very easy to insert and remove. The folder is also lined, and it's large enough to hold a small pocket notebook.

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Pen Loop

In the fold of the inside spine, there are two cuts in the leather that are a clever pen holder. Either clipped or clipless pens can be inserted through these slots, and the pen is kept safe along the spine of the case. It's my favorite sort of pen storage in a case, because the pen isn't pressed up against the notebook or hanging out of the edge of the case. Because this slot isn't lined, the raw leather inside keeps pens securely in place. The right inside cover is plain, but the right edge has a zippered pocket that is the full depth of the cover flap. It's a metal zipper, smooth and strong, and the inside of the pocket is also fabric lined. There is an elastic band closure to keep the case closed.

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Notebooks
Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Inside

The flaps inside the case can hold two slim notebooks, one on each side, or a larger notebook. The Pebble Stationery A5 Cahier with Tomoe River Paper (to be reviewed next) is the perfect insert, but it also worked excellently well with my Seven Seas Writer, which is a fairly large notebook. It will also fit hardcover notebooks, like a Leuchtturm1917. The inside of the cover flaps are lined with the same smooth fabric as the other pockets, so there's no wrestling required to get the notebooks in.

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Closed
Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Nanami

The biggest question about this case is, how does it work to have a zippered pocket in the back flap of the notebook cover? Won't you be writing on top of whatever is in the pocket? Yes, possibly. It's a slim pocket, so you wouldn't be putting anything too bulky in there, anyway. It's great for planner supplies, like rulers, stencils, or a card of washi tape. A small notepad can fit in there, or some sticky notes. Flat things. What I use mine for is my phone. I often have no pockets in my work clothes, so a folio like this is perfect for carrying a notebook, pen, scratch paper, and my phone around with me. Having slim things in that pocket doesn't bother me when I'm writing--but often I am using whatever was in that pocket while I write, so the stuff has been removed before writing happens. YMMV.

Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Zipper
Pebble Stationery Co. Notebook Cover Zipper Open

What it all comes down to is that this really is the perfect work folio for me. It has room for business cards, scrap papers, a notebook, a pen, and my phone. That's my essential kit, and it wraps it all up in a very professional-looking, luxurious-feeling package. For an incredibly fair price. I've had this in use for a while, now, and I don't intend on putting it away anytime soon.

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


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

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Posted on June 23, 2022 and filed under Pebble Stationery Co., Notebook Cover, Notebooks.

Enough is Too Many is Just Right

Notebooks

(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!)

We Pen Addicts spend a lot of time talking about finding the right notebook and paper to best use our nice pens. But there are days when I think what I'm really doing is searching for the right pens to use for my tower of notebooks. I'm just as enchanted by a nice notebook as I am by a nice pen, and I love a plain and simple notebook as much as an ornate one. It's very possible that I own too many notebooks. I'm not even sure how many there are... But it's also true that I use them. A lot of them. Constantly. Here's what I'm using right now.

This stack is just what I'm using on a weekly/daily basis right now. There's a separate stack for ones I'm using slightly less often.

Notebooks

The Lineup:

A hardcover Cognitive Surplus notebook with their insect pattern that I'm using to outline and research a new novel. These are gorgeous notebooks. The recycled paper is not the best for fountain pens, but they are still among my favorites. You just can't beat the cover designs.

A Barnes & Noble Italian Leather notebook that contains the draft of the novel I'm currently writing. These are my go-to novel books because they have lots of pages, durable but flexible covers, and the paper is thick and great for fountain pens.

Notebooks

A Field Notes Dime Novel edition that contains the outlines and research for the above novel.

A Graphilo slim notebook that contains the research, outlines, and notes for the novel that is finished, but which I am currently editing.

A huge notebook cover system that holds four slim notebooks (one Midori MD, two Kunisawa, and a Kawachiya) that I use for school. One is for general notes, two for class notes, and one for career planning/course schedules, etc. There's also a Field Notes pocket notebook in the back pocket of this notebook cover that I didn't even remember was there. It has random notes in it.

Notebooks

A Midori MD A5 daily planner that started off the year as my planner but has become my commonplace book where I make random lists, take meeting notes, and write down everything that needs to be written down. It follows me around everywhere I go.

My Seven Seas Writer that is my short story notebook. It has just enough pages left in it for one more story, then it will be time for a fresh story notebook. I'm extremely excited to pick out what notebook to use next.

My Hobonichi Techo that has become my day planner. I've found that I can't have my planner be my commonplace book because I need my plans to stay simple and organized, and my commonplace book must endure utter chaos. No one who looked inside the two notebooks would think that they belong to the same person.

Notebooks

A Doane Paper Grid + Lines spiral book. This lives on my desk as scrap paper. Everything gets scribbled here, like doctor's appointments that need to be transferred into the planner, grocery lists, reminders, lists of which fish I still need to catch in Stardew Valley. Things that get written here are either transferred into another notebook later, or thrown away.

A Traveler's Company notebook system in passport size. This is where I jot down new story ideas, the starting lines of new drafts, or outlines before they get written into the Seven Seas. It's also where I take notes when my writer's group critiques my stories. It serves the same function as my novel planning notebooks, but for stories.

It's a lot, right? Maybe too many, but maybe not. It's a system that has evolved over decades and reflects my need to keep different areas of my life organized and compartmentalized. It also allows me to try lots of different notebooks so I can pass my thoughts onto all of you. I really do put all these through the wringer. You can even see some of them are starting to fall apart. But most of all, and most importantly, using this many notebooks lets me justify buying more notebooks.


Enjoy reading The Pen Addict? Then consider becoming a member to receive additional weekly content, giveaways, and discounts in The Pen Addict shop. Plus, you support me and the site directly, for which I am very grateful.

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

Notebooks
Posted on March 31, 2022 and filed under Notebooks, Writing.