Posts filed under Stalogy

Stalogy Editor's Series 365Days A5 Notebook Review

Stalogy Editor's Series 365Days A5 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 Bluesky. And her latest book, The Atropine Tree, is now available!)

I'm going to throw caution to the wind and admit upfront that this is one of my favorite notebooks on the market right now. That's because it's one of the closest things I've found as a replacement for my true favorite notebook, the beloved and discontinued Nanami Paper Seven Seas Writer. It's far from identical, but it meets my needs in a similar way. It's also a great substitute for a Hobonichi Cousin if you want something similar to that, but with less structure. It's perfect as a commonplace book or daily pages journal, but also works well just as a regular notebook. With lots and lots of pages. Which we know I like.

Stalogy Notebook

The Stalogy Editor's Series comes in A5, A6, and B6 sizes (much like the Hobonichi--and these fit nicely into Hobonichi Cousin or Techo cases and covers) in a few colors: black, red, yellow, and this lovely shade of blue. There is also a B6 Landscape edition. The cover is a thin, lightly textured cardstock that is flexible. It wears well with use, looking loved without becoming too shabby. The design is minimal, with only a few metallic brand logos in the upper left corner.

Stalogy Notebook Cover

Inside, there are 184 sheets (368 pages) of 52 gsm white paper with faint grey graph lines (lined and dot grid paper versions are available if you prefer). The line spacing is a narrow 4mm. Each page is also numbered with the month, dates, and days of the week printed at the top, so you can circle the date for each page. This is perfect for folks who don't need or want to planner every day, but hate skipping precious notebook pages. Or, if you happen to need multiple pages for a day. The left margin also has hour markers from 0 to 24, if you need to track an hourly schedule. All these markings are very faint, however, so if you just want to use the notebook as a regular notebook, these guides do not get in the way at all. The binding is thread and glue, and the notebook lays open on its own. I have not had any pages come loose even after extended use and hauling around.

Stalogy Notebook Lay Flat

The paper is excellent quality. It's indistinguishable from Tomoe River paper, with the same thin crispness and ink handling capabilities. You will see ghosting, as you would with any thin coated paper, but even if that bothers you and you can only use one side of the paper, you still have a lot of pages to work with in this notebook. It handles liquid ink well and is great for fountain pen users.

Stalogy Notebook Calendar

I've used mine as a standard notebook, ignoring the calendar functions and hourly schedules--though sometimes dating my work is handy, too. The A5 is perfect for fiction writing, and the A6 is perfect for when I need to write while traveling. The thin covers fit beautifully into just about any case I want to use, or it holds up well without a cover at all. I do think it would make a good planner for those who don't need the rigid structure of a standard planner (I need the structure, personally).

Stalogy Notebook Writing
Stalogy Notebook Writing Back

The A5 size costs $26 (though the lined limited editions are more). That's a very similar cost to the Hobonichi graph notebooks, though those have 144 sheets (288 pages). These do, however, cost $6 more than the JetPens Kanso Noto Tomoe River notebooks, which have 160 sheets (320 pages). These are also fantastic notebooks. They're all great, and in pretty close range of one another, and we're spoiled for choice. The correct answer, of course, is to go for all three.

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


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Stalogy Notebook Cover
Posted on March 6, 2025 and filed under Stalogy, 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.

Stalogy Editor's Series 365-Days Notebook A6 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.)

The Stalogy line of notebooks have earned a reputation for being a minimalistic alternative to the Hobonichi Techo planner. The pages have an unobtrusive, grey 5 mm grid that serves as an excellent guide, but can easily fade into the background if needed. There are subtle date and hour markings along the page edges that are also easily ignored if you want to use the notebook for something other than a planner or journal.

The paper is very similar to the Tomoe River paper of the Hobonichi, with the same thin, onionskin quality and remarkable liquid ink resistance. The only ink I tested that had any bleed-through was the Schmidt rollerball refill. (If show-through bothers you, you may not enjoy this paper--nearly everything showed a little.) I've heard good reports about the use of watercolors in the notebooks as well. Markers bled through very easily. The paper is slightly more textured than Tomoe River, but it's still a bit too smooth for pencil, I think. The graphite tends to smear.

The cover is a soft cardstock. The A6 size is available in black, though the A5 comes in several fun colors. The binding feels stiff at first, but after a little bit of training (bordering on abuse), it breaks in nicely and will lie open flat. It has smooth rounded edges. It feels good in the hand--the proportions and materials feel inviting and make me want to sit down to write. It's a difficult quality to describe--but I think you folks understand.

This book can be a bit too minimalistic at times, though. If you do want to use the date and time marks, you might need to squint to see them. It also lacks any kind of pocket, bookmark, or index/info page. The 368 pages are okay for covering a year's worth of records, but leave very little spare for notes, contacts, or important info. If I were carrying this as a planner, I'd need at least one other notebook on me to pick up the slack.

As a planner, it's the absolute most very basic of planners--but it's a swell notebook. I really enjoy writing in it. It reminds me a bit of the Nanami Paper Seven Seas notebook line. The Stalogy cover and binding are not quite as nice as the Nanami notebooks, but I love the different sizes Stalogy offers. I'm excited to have found a new source for notebooks with a gazillion pages of fine, fountain pen friendly paper. I'm looking forward to trying other sizes, and hoping for some of the brighter colors in the A6 size.

(JetPens 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, which I am very grateful for.

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

Posted on March 9, 2017 and filed under Stalogy, Notebook Reviews.