Posts Tagged ‘most popular’

Habana: the new artist series

Posted January 13, 2011 by
in Announcements, Beautiful Creations | 31 comments »

Speaking of cover designs, I’m excited to announce a new addition to our Habana family… a suite of “artist series” notebooks with artwork on the covers. First in line are these darling “Haring Habanas,” as we call them, that feature the art of Keith Haring! We’re importing them from France, and they should be available later on this year. I’ll post more info on the timing when we have it, but in the meantime, here are the specs:

• 85g fountain pen friendly ivory paper
• Lined
• Expanding pocket
• Elastic closure
• Black ribbon bookmark

There’ll be four designs and two sizes in total.

“Baby,” above, comes in small (4×6) and large (6-1/4×9-1/2). Continue reading »

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Agenda planning: your week at a glance

Posted February 16, 2010 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities, Pens, Paper & People | 4 comments »

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As long as we’re revisiting old Quo Vadis ads, I figure I might as well retell the story of our most popular planning format…

Though it seems like one of those things that must have been around forever, the idea of weekly time management—at least as it applies to planners—didn’t exist until 1952. The inventor? A French doctor named F.G. Beltrami, who invented the “one week on two pages” planner format when he stamped a grid onto the white pages of a notebook. (Up till then, appointment books were like diaries, with one day per page.)

Dr. Beltrami called his invention the “Agenda Planning Diary.” His friends and family were so enthusiastic about it that he eventually decided to switch careers and form his own company to manufacture his creation. In 1954, Editions Quo Vadis was formed in Marseilles, France—and has been turning out new Agendas ever since.

Curious about the name “Quo Vadis”? Read Karen’s post about the topic.

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Vintage Quo Vadis ads

Posted February 5, 2010 by
in Beautiful Creations, Cabinet of Curiosities | 5 comments »

QV ad

I found these images recently when I was straightening up my desktop (New Year’s resolution: keep my files better organized).

Karen sent them to me years ago, and it’s just madness that I’ve never blogged about them, because they’re totally interesting. Here, for example, is a montage of old print ads (click through to see a larger version):

Old ads

And here’s an office display that seems to have been set up for a trade show booth or something:

Office display

Here’s a simpler trade show display:

Continue reading »

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Where the paper comes from

Posted January 29, 2010 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 3 comments »

Quo Vadis uses Clairefontaine paper for most of our agendas. (The recycled paper used in the Equology line comes from another French company.) Clairefontaine is famous for its exceptionally white and ultra smooth paper.  It is the best paper in the world for writing.

The paper used for Quo Vadis planners is made at the main Clairefontaine mill  located in the Vosges region of France. It is situated 90 km from Strasbourg in the Meurthe river valley. Strasbourg is the capital and principal city of Alsace in north-eastern France.

In 1858, Jean-Baptiste Bichelberger chose the small town of Etival-Clairefontaine in the Vosges mountains to set up his paper mill.  It is in the heart of a region with a long-standing tradition of paper-making. Clairefontaine was established on the site of a paper mill built in 1512.

Taking advantage of the rags supplied by the local textile industry, Clairefontaine quickly became one of the most important mills in the area. The mill has been making paper since 1858 and stationery products since 1890.

Clairefontaine paper is shipped in rolls from the mill to the Quo Vadis manufacturing plant in Hamburg, NY.  The paper is different colors and weights for the different books: most are bright white, but some are ivory and others tinted a very light mint green. The planners made at the Hamburg plant are destined for the U.S, Canada, Australia and the U.K.

Read about Clairefontaine’s environmental commitment here.

Learn more about the different Clairefontaine mills here.

Who is Claire Fontaine?

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Quo Vadis North American Meeting

Posted May 26, 2009 by
in Editorial | 16 comments »

I will be heading to St-Laurent, a suburb of Montreal, Quebec on June 3rd for our annual corporate meeting.  Representatives of Quo Vadis Canada, the United States, and our parent company in France will gather for a day and a half of presentations and discussions on the past year, the present, and where we want to go in 2010 and beyond.  The meeting focuses on product development and manufacuturing, but also includes sales and marketing.  quebec-flag

As part of marketing, I raise a number of product requests and criticisms we have received from U.S. Quo Vadis users throughout the year; i.e., the new Trinote format, more room on Sundays, additional Club cover color choices for ABP1, etc. and see what is possible to change or implement before the next print run for 2012 planners.  2010 planners will start to appear in stores in July, and films for 2011 planners have been completed. 

Any final requests as I prepare my report for Montreal? Are we missing any features you would like to see in your planner or notebook? Are there any different cover colors or bindings we should consider? Any holidays we should add? How can we improve Quo Vadis for you?

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Fashion and ecology: an interview with Susan Cianciolo

Posted March 23, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People, Where to Go? | Add your comment »

susanciancioloSusan Cianciolo is an artist and designer–and a fan of Quo Vadis planners–who treated us to a night of eco-friendly fashion a couple of weeks ago. I caught up with her via email to learn more about her work…

I understand you’ve been working with recycled, organic, and eco-friendly fabrics since 1995. What prompted you to seek these materials out—ecological principle or simply aesthetics?
I seek out these types of fabric because it was what I found and what was available, damaged materials I could make special with silk screening and natural overdyes, also going into the woods and finding materials that we untreated and turning them into prints by hammering onto organic fabric that was always very simple and fun to make it your own, as well as using yarn and wools from local mills and farms in New England where I am from.

Does each piece of fabric inspire its own design, or do you first come up with a design and then look for fabrics that will help you realize it?
Both the fabric and the sketch come at the same time, i have just now begun next season and i am sketching my ideas from recent inspiration, and i have already received organic hand dyed hand woven fabric from japan -kyoto from hinaya who i collaborated with this season and the last six years, so inspired by them is happening while being inspired by new ideas for shapes and patterns, forms and conceptual development.

It was great to see your drawings at the fashion show last month. Do your drawings often translate into actual items of clothing, or do you see them as a separate endeavor?
Yes, my drawings are the first step, for all aspects that follow, meaning the clothes and the set design.

What materials do you use to sketch?
I use recycled paper to sketch my drawings.

Any particular kind?
Whatever I have in my house: blank pages from old notebooks, blank pages in books, the backs of old documents, etc.

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Writers on writing: an interview with Jeff Abbott

Posted February 10, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People, Planning Tips | 1 comment »

As readers of this blog already know, Jeff Abbott, bestselling author of suspense titles Panic and Fear, uses Clairefontaine notebooks to sketch out his works in progress. Here, Jeff answers a couple questions about his methodology.

On your blog, you mentioned that you use notebooks to keep track of ideas that occur to you while writing, to sketch scenes, outline plot points, and so on… is this something you do systematically, or just whenever inspiration strikes? Do you organize your notebooks according to project (i.e., a specific novel or screenplay) or by theme (characters, research, plots)?

Each novel starts in its own Clairefontaine notebook, and serves as a catchall for ideas as they come to me. I don’t try to organize it overmuch (with separate sections for characters, plot points, etc.), except I do keep a running list of research issues and questions. If I do need a separate section I mark it with a durable index tab from Post-It. Those are easily labeled and removed when I don’t need them any more. But pretty much, ideas get written into the notebook as they come to me. So one page might be the initial sketch for a character’s background, and the next might be an idea for a scene that involves a different character. That’s okay. This approach provides a map or diary to see how the book evolved. For other projects that aren’t books, I keep a small pocket notebook with me all the time, and notes about those ideas, or any ideas non-book-related go in there. If an idea evolves into a bigger project (such as writing a film treatment for a studio), then the project graduates to its own Clairefontaine notebook. I label the front of each notebook so I know what’s covered inside at a glance. Right now I have active notebooks for the new novel I’m writing, one for short stories, and for a film project I’m involved with.

I don’t want to “overorganize” the notebooks—there is a lot of value in flipping through the pages, revisiting ideas as the book evolves, and seeing what I originally planned and how the book turned out.

Continue reading »

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Where is Santa Now?

Posted December 24, 2008 by
in Editorial, Where to Go? | Add your comment »

The North American Aerospace Defense Command-or NORAD-which monitors air and space threats against the U.S. and Canada is in charge of the annual Christmas mission to keep children informed of Santa’s worldwide journey to their homes.

According to NORAD, Santa began his latest flight early Wednesday at the International Date Line in the Pacific Ocean. Historically, Santa visits the South Pacific first, then New Zealand and Australia. NORAD points out that only Santa knows what route he is going to take.  Find Santa here. santa3.jpg

Last year, NORAD’s Santa tracking center answered 94,000 calls and responded to 10,000 emails. About 10.6 million visitors went to their website, which can be viewed in English, Spanish, Italian, French, German, Japanese and Chinese.

NORAD’s holiday tradition can be traced to 1955, when a Colorado Springs, CO newspaper printed a Sears, Roebuck & Co., ad telling children of a phone number to talk to Santa.  The number was one digit off, and the first child to get through reached the Continental Air Defense Command, NORAD’s precedessor.

Col. Harry W. Shoup answered.

Shoup’s daughter, Terri van Keuren, said her dad, now 91, was surprised to hear that little voice on the other end thought he was Santa.

“Dad thought, ‘What the heck? This must be some kind of code,” said van Keuren, 59.

Shoup, described by his daughter as “just a nut about Christmas,” didn’t want to break the boy’s heart, so he sounded a booming “Ho, Ho, Ho!” and pretended to be Santa Claus.

Enough calls followed that Stroup assigned an officer to answer them while the problem was fixed. But Stoup and the staff he was directing to “locate” Santa on radar ended up embracing the idea. NORAD picked up the tradition when it was formed 50 years ago.

The task that began with no computers and only a 60-by-80 foot glass map of North America now includes two big screens on a wall showing the world and information on each country Santa Claus visits.

Everyone, adults included, can now follow Santa’s path online with a Google two-dimensional map or in 3D using Google Earth, where he can been seen flying through different landscapes in his sleigh.

NORAD offficials are hesitant to list all the potential sites Santa will visit with certainty.

“Historically, Santa has loved the Great Wall of China. He loves the Space Needle in Seattle. He of course loves the Eiffel Tower,” Maj. Stacia Reddish of NORAD said. “But his path is completely unpredictable, so we won’t know.”

Merry Christmas to all!  Joyeux Noel!

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One country, many faiths

Posted October 4, 2007 by
in Editorial | 15 comments »

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We received this review for our Exaplan planner the other day:

Product: Exaplan

Rating: 1 stars

Review: “I loved your planner until I started filling out my dates and saw Muslim holidays listed. I have nothing against another nationality/religion, but in all good conscience I can not keep this with so many Americans dying at the hands of radicals from this religion – I am returning the book, and if it is not taken back by the store there will be several returned as being unsaleable due to damages. Sorry, as an American made product you should be more sensitive to something so horrendous – the product is wonderful – the choice of content really very despicable.”

Since these comments were submitted as a product review, I was unable to respond directly to this person. They did not include a name, town, or any contact information. However, if I could, this is what I would have told them… Continue reading »

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Quo Vadis?

Posted June 12, 2007 by
in Where to Go? | 4 comments »

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A lot of people ask us “What does ‘Quo Vadis’ mean?” They have some recollection of a book by Henryk Sienkiewicz and a movie of same name starring Robert Taylor, Deborah Kerr, and Peter Ustinov as the Emperor Nero. The film was released in 1951 and the planning diary format was invented in 1952. Perhaps there is some unconscious connection – who knows?

“Quo Vadis?” derives from an early Christian legend in which the Apostle Peter, leaving Rome because of the fierce persecution of Christians, had a vision of Christ walking down the road towards him. Peter asked, “Quo vadis, Domine?” meaning, “Where are you going, Lord?” and was told, “I am going to Rome to be crucified in your place.” After that Peter retraced his steps and returned to Rome.

While visiting Rome, the author Henryk Sienkiewicz became acquainted with this legend. A painter friend of his showed him the inscription, “Quo Vadis?” chiseled on the pediment of a roadside chapel.

F. G. Beltrami, a doctor, was about 35 years old when he invented the Agenda Planning Diary using a notebook and a ruler. His invention became so popular with friends and family that he gave up his medical practice and started a company to market his invention. He named the company “Quo Vadis” – Latin for “Where are you going?” His original design – still going strong almost 60 years later – enables people to plan and see their week at a single glance.

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