Posts Tagged ‘journaling’

Visual writing

Posted July 26, 2011 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 1 comment »

From my French counterpart, Murielle, come some things that I thought were worth sharing: a short film about dingbats by typographer Lucy Brown, and the wonderful website of London publisher Visual Editions, where they “think that books should be as visually interesting as the stories they tell; with the visual feeding into and adding to the storytelling as much as the words on the page.”

It strikes me that this isn’t dissimilar to the sort of visual journaling that some of our you do… finding new ways to represent things, exploring different visual concepts, etc.

What do you think?

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Guest post: Nostalgia

Posted April 12, 2011 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 9 comments »

Guest blogger Kate Marshall takes a trip down memory lane with a post on Mead’s iconic black-and-white composition books…

Regular readers may know that I’ve been journaling for a long time. I started out using Mead composition books and Parker Vector “cartridge” pens. After a few years I switched to all sorts of random books. A few weeks ago, though, I used a regular composition book for the first time in about 15 years. The paper was not that much fun to write on. Had it always been like this when I was an awkardly-dressed middle-schooler who clearly didn’t know better about paper quality? Or had copybook paper quality just deteriorated since the early ‘90s?

Well, I did some lazy experimenting and found: it’s a little of both. My current pens (“quality” stuff like Lamys and Pelikans) were not big fans of my 1993 and 1994 journals: feathering, bleeding, and the writing experience just felt scratchy. Then I found some Parker Vectors on eBay and tried them in a new copybook, along with the “fancy-pants” pens. Aaannd it was not great. It’s like writing on cheap copy paper: lots of show-through because the paper’s thin, some feathering, etc. It made me sad. When I was little, I never worried about how the ink interacted with the paper or the nib wasn’t playing nice with the ink. As much as I love using good tools now, I sometimes wonder if it’s possible to write twenty pages on a scratchy legal pad with a 99-cent ballpoint and not care.

Nah :-)

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Travel writing

Posted January 12, 2011 by
in Pens, Paper & People, Where to Go? | 7 comments »

Do you keep a travel journal? I ask because we’ve noticed some travel stores carrying Clairefontaine for the purpose, and we’re curious about people’s habits.

Do you keep a separate notebook just for travel? If so, what do you look for in the notebooks that you use?

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Joan Didion, Elena McMahon, and Clairefontaine

Posted October 21, 2009 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities, Pens, Paper & People | Add your comment »

Didion

I was reading Joan Didion’s 1996 novel, The Last Thing He Wanted, the other day (not as good as Play It As It Lays or A Book of Common Prayer, but still gripping), when I came across the following passage:

Dream, the notebook entry is headed, all in caps. The notebook, a spiral-bound Clairefontaine with a red cover and pale-gray three-eight-inch graph paper inside, was one kept by Elena Janklow during the months in 1981 and 1982 immediately before she left the house on the Pacific Coast Highway and once again became (at least for a while, provisionally) Elena McMahon.

“I seem to have had an operation,” Elena Janklow’s account of the dream begins. Her handwriting, all but the last entries made in the same black fine-point pen.

Oh, and speaking of dreams, thanks to Diane Fennel for letting us know that Carl Jung’s Red Book recently arrived in New York City! You can see it at the Rubin Museum on 17th Street until January 25.

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Why Keep A Journal?

Posted July 28, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 7 comments »

Several years ago, I asked my son, Robert, a question that was puzzling me: Why do you keep a journal, when you do everything from your cell phone and laptop?  In high school, college and beyond Robert kept in touch and communicated via his cell phone, Facebook page, Skype and email. But he also continued to write in his journal. His journal was a blank Forum with a “Leonardo” cover. He found it when he was working as a stockroom boy at Exaclair during high school. leonardo-thedp

That old Nostalgie has been with him from junior year in high school, through college in Oregon, law school in New York, and travels and living stints in Italy, Greece, England, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Tibet and Japan.  He must have filled six or several books since then. I have offered him other types of notebooks but he  sticks with his original.

Here’s what he told me in answer to my question: “A journal is personal.  I can play with margins, draw doodles, and make corrections in my own way.  When I go back and look at my marks on the page, I can even follow the train of thought that led to the changes. The paper is mine, and I can skip pages or even fold them. Words pour from the heart to the brain through the hand and pen onto the paper. This is the process of writing. Palm pilots and computers are excellent for logical order, planning and things, but not the free flowing emotion that is the centerpiece of a journal.”

What is your experience of keeping a journal?

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