Misifll, Do or Do Not Edition

Baby Yoda

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:

”Do or Do Not" Notebook by Skylab Letterpress + The Well-Appointed Desk (Tools and Toys)

Why Use A Fountain Pen? (An Inkophile's Blog)

Field Notes 5e Character Journal Hands-On Impressions (Game Rant)

Tools for drawing pictures on notebooks (Travelers Diary)

PREVO the Zine: The Thoreau Set. (Pencil Revolution!)

Review: Pencil Revolution The Zine (Comfortable Shoes Studio)

A stick of plastic with a nib on the end (UK fountain pens)

Handwriting with the Esterbrook Estie Journaler Nib (Gourmet Pens)

Worth the Hype? A Close Look at a Montblanc Writers Edition (Virginia Woolf) (The Gentleman Stationer)

Shimmer inks don’t just do fancy handwriting (Nick Stewart)

Leonardo Officina Italiana Cuspide Fountain Pen Review (SBREBrown)

Fountain Pen Quest Trail Log – November 8, 2020 (Fountain Pen Quest)

Working Tools 49. Timeblocking (Stuart Lennon)

Instant Lettering: A Letraset Database (swissmiss)

Ink Review #1299: Robert Oster Barossa Gilt (Mountain of Ink)

Nigel Shafran's Notebooks (Notebook Stories)

What's Up with the Platinum Carbon Desk Pen? (The Well-Appointed Desk)

A Big Walk, Book Success, Work as Protest (Roden Explorers Archive)

Deadlines, Challenges and NaNoWriMo (Writing at Large)

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 November 8, 2020 and filed under Misfill.

The Sketchnote Ideabook: A Review

The Sketchnote Ideabook: 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.)

The Sketchnote Ideabook is made by AirshipNotebooks.com for Mike Rohde, who wrote two books (The Sketchnote Handbook and The Sketchnote Workbook) on how to take notes using the Sketchnote method.

The notebook is A5 size (5.8" x 8.3") with a polyurethane hardcover in gray. The cover is soft to the touch and adorned with icons, Sketchnote and Airship branding, and the "Ideas Not Art" logo.

The Sketchnote Ideabook Review

It has a band closure in teal, two book ribbons (one teal, one orange), and a back cover pocket.

Sketchnote Ideabook Review

The 160 gsm blank paper (128 pages) is almost as thick as card stock. The pages are sewn with a lay-flat binding and the corners are rounded. The last four pages are perforated. The first two have large boxes for icon drawing reference, the third has small boxes, and the last is blank to use as a blotter. I forgot to take pictures of these pages, but you can see them on the Ideabook website.

Sketchnote Ideabook

The front and back end pages contain a brief introduction to the Sketchnote method, including the five basic elements of drawing and Sketchnoting patterns. Having easy access to these instructions is helpful.

Sketchnote Ideabook Patterns

The design of the "This Book Belongs To" page isn't appealing, with the "Reward for Return" (as if) and the drawing of Mike Rohde. Sorry, Mike. I'm sure you're a great guy, but I don't really want your likeness in my notebook.

Sketchnote Ideabook Title Page

Although the paper is thick and smooth, it's not meant for fountain pens. In my tests with eleven pens and inks, I found that, although the ink didn't bleed through much, it did feather.

Sketchnote Ideabook Fountain Pen Test
Sketchnote Ideabook Feathering
Sketchnote Ideabook Feathering 2

Ink swabbing also demonstrated that this paper isn't meant for fountain pens. The colors of the eight inks I tested are crisp, but the paper absorbs the ink and doesn't exhibit any sheen or shading. Plus, the inks bled through slightly, and the paper puckers. Although the Ideabook website says, "You'll love this paper," I don't love it--not for fountain pens, anyway.

Sketchnote Ideabook Swab
Sketchnote Ideabook Swab Bleed

I tested a variety of non-fountain pens. The paper handled them well, with the exception of the Sharpie Magnum, but no one expects mega-Sharpies not to bleed. The fine point Sharpie didn't bleed through at all.

Sketchnote Ideabook Pen Test
Sketchnote Ideabook Sharpie

I used my Lamy 2000 (fine nib) inked with Iroshizuku Kiri-Same to try my hand at Sketchnoting. First, I practiced the five basic elements of drawing.

Sketchnote Ideabook Notetaking

Then I watched a YouTube video by DAS Bookbinding on how to case bind a hand-sewn book. For the first two-page spread, I used the Radial Notetaking method. My pages turned out pretty messy, and I had to stop the video several times to write down the details I wanted. The Sketchnote method didn't hinder me. Rather, the instructions in the video were given too quickly for me to keep up. During lulls in the video, I added little pictures of the tools required and utilized some of the recommended drawing methods.

Sketchnote Ideabook Two Page Spread
Sketchnote Ideabook Notes

I varied my note taking methods during the course of the video. On my third page, I used the Vertical Notes method.

Sketchnote Ideabook Page Three

For the fourth page I used the Path Notetaking method.

Sketchnote Ideabook Page Four

I've always been a visual notetaker. I doodled in the margins while taking notes in school, but I never thought to incorporate doodles into the note taking itself. The Sketchnote method combines note taking with simple drawings to create a visual result. This is especially helpful when you're trying to retain information because drawing and writing create pathways to your brain.

I am, however, very much tied to words, and the Sketchnote method emphasizes writing only the main points, not all the details. I can't take notes that way. I need the details, such as the measuring formulas given in the video I watched. With practice I think I could let go of writing full sentences and focus more on using key words and drawings. I'm going to continue using my Ideabook while watching bookbinding videos to practice sketchnoting. But I will switch to a ballpoint pen or pencil instead of a fountain pen.

You can purchase the Sketchnote Ideabook at Airship Notebooks for $24.00 plus shipping.

(Airship Notebooks provided this notebook free of charge for Pen Addict to review. This post also contains Amazon affiliate links.)


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Sketchnote Ideabook
Posted on November 6, 2020 and filed under Sketchnote, Notebook Reviews.