Posts filed under Notebook Reviews

TRU RED Explore Journal Review

TRU RED Explore Journal Review

Traditional office supplies always make me happy, so when I had the opportunity to try out several TRU RED products from Staples.com, I was happy to put them to the test.

The Quick Dry Gel ink pens I reviewed last week are the exact definition of a traditional office supply, but does the Explore Journal I’m reviewing this week fall into that category as well? In today’s modern office, it absolutely does.

TRU RED Explore Journal

There was a time in my office heyday where not even I, the person who brought their own stationery to the office, would use a 200 page hardbound notebook for work. Nowadays, I’d consider it almost mandatory to use a notebook like this - along with a litany of other pens and paper.

TRU RED Explore Journal Inside Cover

The Explore Journal is TRU Red’s mid-size journal, designed to help you get your writing and note-taking organized, with a few helpful tips along the way. It contains 192 white paper pages, with a dot grid pattern, black hardbound cover, elastic band, and two bookmarks. The little black notebook basics, if you will. Those basics also include an 8” x 5” format, which is A5-ish, Smart Sized, or whatever non-standard name you wish to call it. I ride or die with paper-size standards, but you can’t win them all!

TRU RED Explore Journal Index
TRU RED Explore Journal Label

What this notebook offers in addition to those features are a few smaller details that office brands don’t normally add to their offerings, like a several-page index, page numbers, an Objectives list, a recap page, and a spine label for the exterior for when you’ve filled it up. There is even an insert to give you tips on various note taking and journaling styles.

TRU RED Explore Journal Insert
TRU RED Explore Journal Formats

All of these specs and features are well and good, but the real question us users have is “Is it any good?” Yes, with the standard fountain pen caveats.

TRU RED Explore Journal Writing Test
TRU RED Explore Journal Back Page

What I really like about this notebook is the stark white paper stock. It’s not ivory, not cream, not yellow. It’s white, which is a bit of an outlier, comparatively speaking. Gel, rollerball, and ballpoints work well, as do drawing pens and graphite pencils. There is no feathering or bleeding, and you can use the back side of the page easily. I did my written review with a Retro 51 loaded with a Schmidt P8127 rollerball ink refill. That is a dark, wet ink, and it worked perfectly.

TRU RED Explore Journal Rollerball
TRU RED Explore Journal Rollerball Back

Fountain pens are another story. Fine nibs were great. They were fine enough to not bleed or feather, and the paper is smooth enough for them to feel nice when writing. The feel is the same with larger, wider, wetter nibs and inks, but it’s at this point that you start to see a bit of feathering and bleed through to the back of the page. From this perspective, the Explore Journal would fall in between Moleskine and Leuchtturm1917 performance-wise for fountain pen users.

That’s the thing about perspective when reviewing products. This is a journal that is made for Staples.com and their core customer. That core is likely 90%-plus standard pen and pencil users. And that core is going to love this product, especially at $16.99. It’s honestly cool to see the commitment to this type of journal for what I would consider a store-branded product.

Staples.com has gone all-in on the Tru Red product lineup, especially on the notebook and journal side of the ledger. While the products may not crack my own personal writing rotation, what they are offering has certainly made me sit up and pay attention. And I like what I’m seeing from a broader stationery perspective.

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


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TRU RED Explore Journal Back
Posted on April 26, 2021 and filed under Tru Red, Journal, Notebook Reviews.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook (Pack of 4): A Review

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook 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.)

Fabriano is an Italian company that has been making paper since 1264. Yes, you read that correctly: 1264! Greats like Michelangelo, Beethoven, and Francis Bacon used Fabriano paper--but, no worries. You needn't paint the Sistine Chapel or write a symphony or become a philosopher in order to enjoy this paper. It'll work for bullet journaling and shopping lists.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook

EcoQua Pocket Notebook covers are made with 290gsm Sirio Tela ecological paper. This paper is thick like card stock, but has a textured surface that resists scratching. The corners of the notebook are rounded off, giving them a clean, sophisticated look. Each notebook is staple bound with two staples and measures 3 by 5.5 inches.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Texture
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Corner
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Staple

The paper inside is Bioprima Book paper in ivory. This paper is 85gsm (i.e. much thicker than Tomoe River Paper, for example). In addition, it is eco-friendly. The pulp comes from forests that are managed in accordance with specifications established by the Forest Stewardship Council. The paper is also chlorine free.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Environment

My set of notebooks are dot grid patterned (4mm), but blank versions are available. The notebook has 32 pages, and the last 16 are perforated. Be aware that the perforation is 10mm from the inside margin, so if you aren't careful some of your writing might remain in the notebook.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Dot Grid
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Perforation
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Margin of Error

I tested the paper with eight fountain pens and inks. The paper handled all of them quite well. I observed no bleeding even with the wettest nibs. There was no bleed through onto the back of the page either, although there was show through. Writing on this paper is enjoyable. It is smooth but offers just enough feedback that your nibs feel steady.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Fountain Pen Test
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Fountain Pen Close Up
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Fountain Pen Show Through

Next, I tested the paper with other writing instruments (pens and pencils), and, again, the paper worked well. Colors are bright and readable. I noticed that the Palomino Blackwing lead smudged when I ran my finger over it. Both Sharpies bled through to the other side, but no other bleed through occurred.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Other Instruments Test
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Other Instruments Close Up
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Other Instruments Bleed Through

I swabbed eight inks on the paper. All the colors are brilliant, none bled through, and some exhibited a tiny bit of sheen. Had this been a sunny day, sheen may have been much more visible. I apologize for not knowing the name of the first ink. I'm pretty sure I reviewed it long ago for Pen Addict, but neither the box nor the bottle give the name in English.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Swabs
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Swab Close Up
Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Swabs Show through

I copied a Mary Oliver poem into the notebook using my Platinum fountain pen with a soft nib and Iroshizuku Yama Budo. The ink went down smoothly and dried quickly. I wasn't worried about smudging nor did I feel like the nib was skating over the surface.

Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Poem

I have no complaints whatsoever with the Fabriano EcoQua notebooks. They are well made and the paper is exquisite. You can purchase four-packs from JetPens for $11.00 in cool colors (Black, Grey, Plum, and Turquoise) or warm colors (Red, Orange, Yellow, and Green).

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


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Fabriano EcoQua Pocket Notebook Bottom Image
Posted on April 23, 2021 and filed under Fabriano, Notebook Reviews.

Musubi Cosmo Air Light 83 Notebook Review

Musubi Cosmo Air Light 83 Notebook Review

In the conversation surrounding Tomoe River paper replacements, one name has stood out among the contenders: Cosmo Air Light. And thankfully, one of the premier notebook makers in the world has added it as an option to their popular paper notebook lineup.

Musubi Cosmo Air Light

The Musubi Cosmo Air Light 83 Notebook features 208 pages of this highly fountain pen friendly paper. The A5 sized, semi-rigid cover gives the notebook great protection, and you can choose from three different paper styles - blank, 7 mm lined, or 5 mm cross grid. The lined and cross grid rulings each have subtle added markings on the page to help you setup your page for planning, bullet journaling, note taking, meetings, and more. To top it off, these notebooks will only cost you around $25, making them one of Musubi’s lowest-priced offerings.

With all that said, the real question is this: How does the paper perform? I’ll let Daryl from Musubi start this section off:

“Originally designed as a lightly-coated paper for book printing, Cosmo Air Light's most unique quality is its surface texture, which feels a little like a velvety dry-erase board, and spreads ink out slightly instead of pooling it in a single spot. As a result, inks sheen vividly and shade vibrantly, bringing out elements of colour and contrast in ways often unrivaled even by papers like Tomoe River.”

Cosmo Air Light is great for fountain pens. The ink colors are bright on the page, and the dry time is moderate - giving the ink a chance to shade and sheen well. There is a softness to the page as the nib glides across it, with little to no feedback. It’s almost glossy, but not slick. It’s hard to explain, but it feels great with fountain pens.

Musubi Cosmo Air Light Notebook Writing

One thing I definitely noticed, and Daryl mentioned above, is that my lines seemed wider on this paper than with other papers. For example, my fine nibs left more of a medium-width line. The finer I went, the more I noticed it. My fine cursive italic Nakaya nib was not as fine I am used to, nor was my Platinum 3776 UEF.

Musubi Cosmo Air Light Ink

For standard pens and pencils, I found the Cosmo Air Light paper too glossy for enjoyable regular use. If you grab a ballpoint pen and go write on a thick magazine page, that is the feel you get. Glassy smooth, with no feedback. Same with pencils, which needs a page with texture to be enjoyable in my book. Rollerball and gel pens were passable, leaving rich-colored lines which would look great as sketches, but I’m not sure I would want to write page after page with either of those inks.

Musubi Cosmo Air Light Back Page

Fountain pens are the way to go with Cosmo Air Light. And may be the only way. That kind of sounds like Tomoe River paper, doesn’t it? This is a fountain pen only paper for the most part, and fortunately it does that part well. If you like big colors, big nibs, big ink, and big lines, then you are going to love Cosmo Air Light.

You are also going to love the construction, quality, and story of Musubi notebooks. They are the best in my book, and at around $25 for the Cosmo Air Light version, it is a great value.

(Musubi 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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Musubi stack
Posted on March 29, 2021 and filed under Musubi, Notebook Reviews.