Misfill, The Good News Edition

Good News.jpg

Each week in Refill, the Pen Addict Members newsletter, I publish Ink Links as part of the additional content you receive for being a member. And each week, after 10 to 15 links, plus my added commentary on each, I'm left with many great items I want to share. Enter Misfill. Here are this weeks links:

This Artist Delivers “The Good News” With Upbeat Street Flyers (Design You Trust)

Moleskine Studio – Sparking the Imagination (Fold Magazine)

Ink Review #1274: Robert Oster Tokyo Blue Denim (Mountain of Ink)

Muji Polycarbonate 6 Colour Hexagonal Pen Review (Write Experience)

Fountain Pen Quest Trail Log – October 11, 2020 (Fountain Pen Quest)

The Birmingham Pen Company: Seriously Addicted (From the Pen Cup)

J. Herbin Vert Atlantide (Wonder Pens)

Review: Musgrave Pencil Sleeve (Comfortable Shoes Studio)

Ink Review #318: Pilot Iroshizuku Yama-Budo (Fountain Pen Pharmacist)

Diamine Aurora Borealis Ink (Writing at Large)

Papa’s Maze 3.0: father’s hand-drawn maze is his most beautifully intricate yet (Spoon & Tamago)

Greater Goods Might Be Our New Favorite Upcycling Brand (Carryology)

Baltimore Museum Will Sell Major Warhol as Part of Equity Initiative (Hyperallergic)

Working Tools 47. Ultimate Hacking Keyboard (Stuart Lennon)

An Experiment: Fountain Pen Ink in a Waterbrush Pen (No Pen Intended)

A fresh take on the pocket pen: Leonard Slattery A Se (UK fountain pens)

Ink Review: ColorVerse Purple Cosmo and NASA Blue (The Well-Appointed Desk)

Diamine German Exclusive – Penoblue (Nick Stewart)

Review: Montblanc Meisterstuck 149 Calligraphy Flex Nib Fountain Pen (The Pencilcase Blog)

Detective Work Pens… (dapprman)

That’s a Wrap Pen Wrap Review (SBREBrown)

Attention to Detail with the Esterbrook Estie (Penquisition)

Caran d'Ache Petit Neta (Hoshii Monoga-Alice Gil)

Under The Skin: Skunk Anansie At Glastonbury, 1999 (The Quietus)

Rollo London Otto Notebook Review (Notebook Stories)

Video Review: Pilot Custom 845 Urushi (Scrively)

Want to catch the rest, plus extra articles, reviews, commentary, discounts, and more? Try out a Pen Addict Membership for only $5 per month!

Posted on October 11, 2020 and filed under Misfill.

TWSBI ECO Yellow Fountain Pen Giveaway Winner

It’s difficult to beat the combination of fun and functionality that the TWSBI ECO brings to the table. It’s a favorite of many for that reason, myself included. The winner of this limited edition yellow model is:

TWSBI ECO Yellow Fountain Pen Giveaway Winner

Congrats Simon! I’ve sent you an email to collect your shipping address.

Posted on October 10, 2020 and filed under Giveaways.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Tomoe River Notebook (Light Blue Vegan Leatherette): A Review

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Tomoe River Notebook (Light Blue Vegan Leatherette): 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.)

If you're a fan of the Traveler's Notebook, you know that it's a long, thin notebook (8.3 x 4.3 inches) that can be inserted into a leather cover using elastics. Many people love the Traveler's system, because you can keep several notebooks within one cover. See my review here.

Traveler's notebooks come in many different iterations with various kinds of paper. But if you want a higher quality Traveler's-size notebook with more features, you should take a look at Pebble Stationery Company's version.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Tomoe River Notebook

The notebook comes with either a grey or light blue vegan leatherette cover. The soft, textured cover is engraved with Pebble Stationery's logo, and the cardboard is thick enough that you can use this notebook all by itself, without the need for an additional cover.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Tomoe River Notebook Logo

The corners are curved and the binding is sewn stitch bound, not stapled like regular Traveler's notebooks. The binding allows the notebook to lay flat. I love this feature, because I hate fighting with traditional Traveler's notebooks which absolutely will not stay open without clips or something weighing them down.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Tomoe River Notebook Lay Flat

Upon opening Pebble's notebook, you'll find a title page made of card stock with spaces for your name, the date, and contact information. A similar piece of card stock is at the back of the notebook. Each acts as additional backing to support writing in the notebook.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Notebook

Next is an index page printed with lines for recording entries. One index page is not enough for me. I'd like Pebble to add more index pages to the front.

Index.jpgPebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Notebook Index

The inner pages are printed with 5mm dot-grid in light grey. Each page is also numbered, which is a feature I appreciate. Yes, I can write my own page numbers at the top or bottom, but on more than one occasion I've gotten off on my enumeration and had to correct the numbers later.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Notebook Dot Grid

The notebook has two thick ribbon markers, one grey and one blue. This is another special touch that sets the Pebble version apart.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Notebook Ribbon Markers

The last page features a simple ink journal with the date, the pen you've inked, the ink name, and a box for the swatch. Again, I'd like more than one page for recording inks, and the print would be much easier to see if it were darker.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Regular Sized Notebook Ink Journal

The journal contains 200 pages (front and back) of Tomoe River Paper (52gsm). Traditional Traveler's Notebooks contain Midori Diary Paper (80gsm) but have only 64 pages (front and back).

Traveler’s, left, and Pebble Notebook.

Traveler’s, left, and Pebble Notebook.

Ink always looks wonderful on Tomoe River Paper. I tested ten fountain pens with different inks and nib sizes. As you would expect with Tomoe paper, the inks show through but there's absolutely no bleed through.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Ink Test
Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Show Through

Tomoe handles ink swabs beautifully with lots of sheen and shading. Show through was evident and slight bleed through occurred with wetter inks.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Ink Swabs
Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Swabs
Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Swab Show

I made a drawing using Robert Oster Peppermint ink and a Sailor MF nib. The dot grid made it easy to section off the space, and the paper was smooth and pleasant to draw on.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Drawing

I am thoroughly impressed with Pebble Stationery's take on the Traveler's Notebook. They have improved upon the traditional notebook in every way with the lay-flat binding, page numbers, book ribbons, and soft cover. My only suggestion is that more pages be set aside for indexing and ink journaling, but honestly, if you want more pages for these purposes you can just use the dot grid pages.

Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Writing

You can purchase the Pebble Stationery Co. Tomoe River Paper Traveler's Notebook for $17.99. Yes, this is more expensive than regular Traveler's notebooks ($5.50 for 64 pages), but you're getting more pages, Tomoe River paper, and lots of extra features.

(Pebble Stationery Co. provided this product to Pen Addict free of charge for review purposes.)


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Pebble Stationery Co. Traveler’s Notebook Pen
Posted on October 9, 2020 and filed under Pebble Stationery Co., Notebook Reviews.