Notebook Info

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 21 February 2010

Notebook Review: Daycraft Signature Notebook

Posted on 14:00 by Unknown

When I read about the Daycraft paper products that Gentian received from Hong Kong, I knew I had to get my hands (and pens) on these lovely things, so I wrote Daycraft and asked if they could send some samples to me, too. And they did. I'd like to thank Mr. Foreal Lee of Tai Shing Diary, because a week later, I got the samples, and look, I got a pink notebook! :)

Yes, I got a pink Daycraft Signature Notebook along with three Daycraft 2010 diaries, two of which have been lovingly adopted by fellow paper enthusiasts, the SO got the Vogue and my eldest niece got the orange Chromatic Days. I kept the Animaland diary, because it's got a blue elephant on the cover. :)

Daycraft Signature Notebook. It's PINK!

I really, really like love the soft pink faux leather (read: it's fine Italine PU, or polyurethane) cover of the Signature Notebook. The Daycraft Signature Notebook I received is sized A6, measures approximately 4 in x 6 in and has 128 pages of cream-colored 116g paper. I like that it is ruled, and the 6.5mm line spacing is just right even for my large handwriting.

Signature Notebook's ruled pages.

The Daycraft logo is embossed on the bottom left part of the back cover. Charming, eh? The pen beside it is my brand new pink Lamy Safari with a medium nib, brought here by the 'Friendship Express' all the way from Malaysia. :)

The Notebook's page edges are painted/printed black. (The Daycraft website says it is inkjet-printed.) Makes it unique, gives it character.

Another pic of the notebook's corner, showing the black edges.


The sad thing about the Daycraft Signature Notebook is that the pages just won't lay flat. I had to press hard on the pages to make them lay flat, but I was unsuccessful and I thought I might permanently damage the notebook's spine so I let it be. After that, I tested the notebook's paper, but that, too, was a bit daunting.


This ink test page has 15 pen and ink tests, 11 of which are fountain pen + fountain pen ink combinations. As with most of my notebooks, I used my medium-nibbed pens to test the 116g paper, which I expected to be feather and bleed resistant, but no. There is excessive feathering and bleed specially when I'm using italic and medium nibs. (Click on the photos for bigger versions.)

The picture may not show it, but there is a great amount of feathering here.

The Haolilai and Airmail/Wality pens' medium nibs just bled on this paper.

But the Sarasas are just perfect! No bleed, no feathering, not even show through! *Claps.*


And the backpage reveals how most of the fountain pen inks bled, except for the Sarasas and the fine-nibbed Esterbrook SJ. This is great! This means I could still use this notebook, but I would need to use just my fine-nibbed fountain pens, or gel pens, like the Sarasas. Hurray!


The pens and inks on the upper part of the page of the Daycraft Signature Notebook are: Franken-Lamy with De Atramentis Fuschia, Lamy Safari with the same ink, Lamy Vista with Camel Scarlet Red, and Lamy Joy with Caran d'Ache Saffron. Oh, how my Lamys bled.


Now look at the bottom part of the page. No bleed, right? Because that's the part where I wrote using the Sarasas! This means I could use most of my gel pens (or fine-nibbed fountain pens) when writing on the Daycraft Signature Notebook. :) This is great because I would love to use and keep this notebook. If only the paper is a little kinder and friendly to my fountain pens...

The Daycraft Signature Notebook is another great addition to the arena of thriving notebook brands out there. I like love it and I hope that Mr. Foreal Lee, Retail and Marketing Manager of Tai Shing Diary, makers of Daycraft noteboks, will soon offer their products here in the Philippines.

Daycraft products include a vast selection of diaries, notebooks, sketchbooks and corporate planners. Their products are designed in Hong Kong and manufactured in Dongguan, China by the Tai Shing Diary Ltd.
Read More
Posted in Daycraft Signature Notebook, notebook, writing | No comments

Sunday, 14 February 2010

Ink Review: Scarlet Red by Camel

Posted on 16:00 by Unknown
This should have been a Valentine post, but I am uncomfortable with that idea, so I postponed it for the day after V Day. And so here is my red ink for this season: a very red Scarlet Red by Camel of India.*


Camel Scarlet Red fountain pen ink has been on my collection for almost a year now. A friend of a friend from India came to visit the country for business, and kindly brought us this bottle of ink, along with a Hero 329, Hero 360 and boxes of tea. :)


Scarlet Red and other Camel fountain pen inks are made by the same manufacturers of Camlin fountain pens in India. Production of the Camel fountain pen ink began as early as 1931 in Bombay, as an alternative to the Western ink brands available in India at that time. Camel fountain pen inks are dye-based inks and contains Camli-Sol 100, which Camel claims to clean the pen as the ink flows through it. Available in black, royal blue, green, violet and red, Camel fountain pen inks also claim to write consistently and to have good storage life, which is true because for a couple of months, my bottle of Scarlet Red was on my study table which was near a big window, but the heat and light coming through it did not alter the ink's consistency, color and brightness. The only downside to this product is the ink bottle's cap. It would have been better if the cap was made of plastic rather than metal, which is what's on it now.

Camel Scarlet Red reminds me so much of the cherry and strawberry-flavored red snow cones that we used to have in my grandmother's house during summer vacations. Back then, we called them 'snow-balls', and they were served on Lola's peanut butter and jelly glasses. :) My cousins and I would run to the big mirror in the grand room and look at each other's pouting red lips. :)

Camel Scarlet Red's color is also similar to Kool-Aid's cherry and strawberry flavors, and to the unforgettable red Kool-Aid man. Who could forget him and his red, happy face? On the non-food scale, Camel's Scarlet Red is very, very similar to Pilot G2's red gel ink (see my comparison of the two ink colors in the photos below).


This side of the box has the Hindi translation of the English text written on the other side.


In the previous photos, the color of the ink inside the bottle is hard to tell - it looks black! So I placed the bottle directly in front of a lamp and here it is looking every bit red. :) The bright light also revealed the words etched on the bottom of the bottle, which says, "60ml Camel".


Here is another exposure with the bottle tilted down to reveal the redness of the ink inside.


Oh, I feel so red. :) Here is the bottle of Camel Scarlet Red ink on top of my red Scribe notebook together with my fine-nibbed Pelikano Junior. I'm so red. :)


Camel Scarlet Red is an excellent ink from Camlin. It has great flow, and made the previously dry writing Pelikano Junior a wet writer. The color is also great, perhaps not the perfect red, but an excellent red that is perfect to use for highlighting and writing short notes. Shading is not very clear in these photos, but Camel Scarlet Red has minor shading especially when used on wide italic nibs.


Camel Scarlet Red stands out as a bright red on the white Rhodia paper. There is no feathering and bleed on this paper. (My apologies for the wrong spelling of the word 'quotation' in this photo and on the next one.)


On Scribe's ivory-colored paper, the red looked a little subdued and not as bright as how it appeared on white paper. There is also feathering and bleed on this notebook.


Here is the back page of Scribe paper showing minor bleed when I used the fine-nibbed Pelikano Junior.


Camel Scarlet Red is the first ink that got me thinking, if not worried, about its drying time. I wouldn't want to smear whatever I've written using red ink, and thankfully, it dries faster than most of my wet inks at less than 15 seconds.


Camel Scarlet Red ink is not yet available in the US, from what I have heard and read, but it's not available here in the Philippines, either. The Camlin website says the inks are available in 500ml and 60ml bottles, for 56INR and 12INR, respectively.

Now for the *: I looked hard enough for appropriate quotes to go with this ink review, but my efforts failed. *Sigh*. No red, Valentine, or even love quote seemed appropriate, so I am publishing this review without a quote.
Read More
Posted in Camel Scarlet Red, ink review, Pelikano Junior, red, red ink | No comments

Monday, 1 February 2010

Ink Review: J. Herbin Orange Indien

Posted on 20:00 by Unknown

"Her nakedness was not absolute, behind her ear she had a poisonous flower with orange petals."
– Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Memories of My Melancholy Whores

Yes, it's an orange ink this time. There are no naked people or poisonous flowers in this review though.

Orange Indien. An ink color I wanted to have for so long. An ink color that has been the topic of a lot of discussions about non-black and non-blue inks. This ink, together with the bottle of Larmes de Cassis was sent to me by Exaclair's VP Karen Doherty last year as another addition to the orange stuff in my Happy Halloween post. The box did not make it for the Halloween, and came much, much later. But it's here and so I'm writing a review.


This ink reminds me of yummy sapin-sapin*, fragrant Clementines (Mandarin orange), The Body Shop's Satsuma soap bars and warm summer sunsets...


I love the fact that the makers of J. Herbin inks truly pay attention to details in their product packaging and presentation. J. Herbin ink boxes are elegantly designed, with a separate icon for each ink color. Orange Indien has an elephant icon and I love it! :)


The Herbin ink bottles are also very unique - each bottle has an integrated pen rest, but it's too small to hold even medium-sized pens. Here, my copper Esterbrook SJ barely fits into the pen rest. Despite that, the boxes and bottles are always easy to store in a box or cabinet because they are compact.


Orange Indien is another excellent ink from J. Herbin. I am very eager to try it when I received it, and I wasn't disappointed. I wrote a full page journal entry using it and the color did not hurt my eyes. Yes, the color jumps off the page at first, because of its bright color, but it's not so intensely bright that it will be difficult to read. It has excellent flow, as all Herbin inks are, and significant shading is seen when used to write with broad or italic nibs. There is even minor shading in the lines I wrote using the Parker Jotter. It may not be very visible in the photos, though.

The ink looks darker in white (Rhodia) paper than in the off-white, ivory (Scribe) paper. It is even darker in the lines I wrote using the Parker Jotter pen than the Manuscript Calligraphy pen. Shading can be seen in the lines of text written with the Manuscript pen.

On the ivory-colored paper, Orange Indien looked a bit pale, and it showed traces of yellow in the orange. The lines written with the Parker Jotter are thicker, but not darker than the Manuscipt-written text. There is more uniformity in color here, between the Manuscript (broad and italic nib) and Parker (round, medium nib)written text, but I'm not sure if that can be attributed to the paper color, or the fact that Scribe paper absorbed more ink, which explains the feathering and extensive bleed in the Scribe paper.

Orange Indien on Scribe notebook...

...and on Rhodia pad.

Here is the back page of Scribe paper with significant bleed when I used the medium-nibbed Parker Jotter. There is no feathering and bleed on the Rhodia paper, though.


Since I got another orange ink on my stash I thought of doing a comparison. Orange Indien and Caran d'Ache Saffron are two brightly-colored inks that will never fail to lift the mood of any note, letter, or card written with them. The two inks differ in their brightness and tones, as Orange Indien has more yellow to show, compared to the CdA Saffron which has more red.


Lastly, to complete this review, I tested the Orange Indien's drying time, against two slow-drying inks on medium-nibbed Parkers. I have not done this test before but I felt like doing it, so here it is. In case the text tags I added is not legible, the orange lines belong to Orange Indien, which on Rhodia paper took more than 30 seconds to dry. Next to Orange Indien, the lines belong to Diamine Burnt Sienna, written using a Parker Rialto. This ink dried in less than 25 seconds. The third set of lines belong to Private Reserve Copper Burst on a Parker 25 pen. It took almost a minute for Copper Burst to dry.

The other test I should have done but didn't is the water soak test. Perhaps I'll do one in my future reviews, but I held on for now. I don't think I need to do that yet, as my notebooks, journals and such are not that vulnerable to water and anything wet. :) I think the premise here is that if it's my Journal, or my "Notes" notebook, or my Starbucks daily planner, I am sure to take very good care of them, especially what's written inside. In a country like the Philippines where it rains for more than half of the year, I have learned how to think of ways to protect my stuff (read: laptop, notebooks, pens) from water. :) But I'll do watersoak tests in my future ink reviews.

A 30ml bottle of J. Herbin Orange Indien sells for US$10 at The Goulet Pen Company and PhP475 at Scribe Writing Essentials. (I have no affiliation with both companies, though.)


* From Wikipedia: Sapin-sapin is a layered glutinous rice and coconut dessert in Filipino cuisine. It is made from rice flour, coconut milk, sugar, water, and coloring with coconut flakes sprinkled on top. Sapin-sapin means "layers" and the dessert is recognizable for its layers, each colored separately. It has been referred to as "a blancmange of several colored layers, sweetened and flavored with coconut milk".
Read More
Posted in ink review, J. Herbin, Orange Indien | No comments
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Fountain Pen Review: Sheaffer Taranis
    Sheaffer celebrates their Centennial Year - 2013 - with a fleet of writing instruments including super limited edition pens and two new seri...
  • Pen Review: Schneider iD Fountain Pen
    I love Schneider pens. I have a huuuge stash of Schneider gel pens, fineliners, and rollerballs hoarded collected before I shifted to fou...
  • Ink Review: J. Herbin Lierre Sauvage
    It rained for four years, eleven months, and two days. The sky crumbled into storms and hurricanes that scattered roofs  and knocked down wa...
  • Review: Unlimited Notebook by Rhodia
    When I received these Rhodia UNLIMITED notebooks that Karen Doherty sent to me last year, I asked her why they're called UNLIMITED. Kar...
  • Ink Review: Diamine Majestic Blue
    When I haven't any blue I use red. - Pablo Picasso Imagine Picasso  running out of blue while painting the Old Guitarist . Or the La Vie...
  • Notebook Review: Reecovid Notepad
    'recycled, not virgin'   -  reecovid (recovered) notepads, great for emergencies!     Sometime in June, I received a comment on my b...
  • On to Happier Things…
    Now that I am slowly getting back into the regular grind of things, let me post my ‘new’ wish list. 1. Notebook. I want a Moleskine 2008 Dia...
  • Fountain Pen Review: Lamy Safari 2012 Limited Edition Green
    When I started using fountain pens in 2007, I was like any other newbie. I hoarded. I had no clear idea of what I really want and got pens I...
  • Three Songs and A Poem
    I have three songs playing in my mind right now, like a repeating playlist in my iPod mini. In order, they are: Ricky Martin’s La Vida Loca ...
  • Notebook Review: TWSBI
    When I shifted to full fountain pen use in 2008, I didn't realize that the major challenge I would have to face was to find suitable pap...

Categories

  • 1670 ink
  • 2012 Green
  • 2046
  • Aboitiz 2Go
  • Activebook
  • Agatha Ruiz de la Prada
  • Alice Wu
  • Ambre de Birmanie
  • Andy Garcia
  • aneurysm
  • Apple
  • Apple Green
  • Aquamarine Lamy Safari
  • Arthur Golden
  • asthma
  • Aurora
  • Aurora Blue
  • AV malformation
  • Banditapple Carnets
  • Bandzug
  • Baoer
  • beautiful things
  • Beijing Olympics souvenir
  • Bejewelled
  • Bench
  • Berroca
  • Binondo
  • birthdays
  • black
  • Bleu Pervenche
  • Blistex
  • blog advertising
  • blogging
  • blue
  • blue inks
  • blue notebooks
  • Body Shop
  • Books
  • Brause
  • Bridges of Madison County
  • broad
  • broad nibs
  • calligraphy
  • Camel Scarlet Red
  • Camlin Trinity
  • Caramoan
  • Caran d'Ache
  • Caran d'Ache Saffron
  • Cararama
  • Carnival of Pen Pencil and Paper
  • cars
  • Cattleya
  • Chelpark Moti
  • ChoroQ
  • Christmas
  • Chuck Taylor
  • Clairefontaine
  • Clint Eastwood
  • coffee
  • Coleto
  • Colibri
  • collecting
  • colors
  • Corgi
  • Corona notebooks
  • Cosmos Bazaar
  • Creative Zen
  • Cross
  • Daiso
  • Danitrio
  • Daycraft Juicy Notebook
  • Daycraft Notebook
  • Daycraft Signature
  • Daycraft Signature Notebook
  • De Atramentis
  • Diabolo Menthe
  • Diamine
  • Diamine Majestic Blue
  • Diamine Orange
  • Diana Krall
  • Diary
  • Dickies
  • Diesel
  • DKNY
  • dotPad
  • Eagle notebooks
  • Earl Grey
  • eBay
  • Edelstein
  • Effen Vodka
  • elephant
  • elephants
  • envelope
  • Esterbrook
  • Euro Office
  • Evanescence
  • Exaclair
  • Exacompta
  • ferris wheel
  • Field Notes
  • fire trucks
  • firetrucks
  • folder
  • food
  • Foray
  • fountain pen
  • fountain pen ink
  • fountain pen review
  • fountain pens
  • FPN-P
  • Frank
  • Fully Booked
  • G. Lalo
  • garage
  • gel pens
  • get paid to blog
  • GPW
  • Grandluxe
  • grassheads
  • Green
  • grid notebook
  • GTD
  • handwriting
  • Haolilai
  • Hard Rock
  • Haruki Murakami
  • health
  • hearbreak
  • heartbreak
  • Hero 221
  • Hero pens
  • Hero616
  • hobby
  • Ikea
  • Il Divo
  • ink
  • ink review
  • inks
  • Inoxcrom
  • iPaq
  • iPod mini
  • iron gall ink
  • J. Herbin
  • J. Herbin Rouille d'Ancré
  • James Blunt
  • James Patterson
  • Japanese ink
  • Jentle
  • Jinhao
  • Joan Chen
  • Jollibee
  • Journal
  • Kaj Stenvall
  • Karen Doherty
  • Kokuyo
  • Kramer vs. Kramer
  • Kultur
  • LA Gear
  • Laban
  • Lamy
  • Lamy Al-Star
  • Lamy Blue Black
  • Lamy Joy
  • Lamy Logo
  • Lamy Nexx
  • Lamy Safari
  • Lamy Safari Neon
  • Larmes de Cassis
  • leather
  • Lee
  • lesbianism
  • Lierre Sauvage
  • life
  • Limited Edition
  • lined notebook
  • lip gloss
  • love
  • Lynn Chen
  • Lyons
  • Mahatma Gandhi
  • Maisto
  • Majestic Blue
  • Manila
  • Manuscript
  • Master
  • Matchbox
  • Memoirs of A Geisha
  • Mesaki
  • Miami Ink
  • Michael Jackson
  • Michelle Krusiec
  • Midori
  • Midori Traveler's Notebook
  • migraine
  • Moleskine
  • MonAmi
  • Mont Blanc
  • Moore
  • Movies
  • MRA
  • MRI
  • Music
  • NaNoWriMo
  • National Bookstore
  • neon
  • new product
  • nib
  • nibs
  • Nike
  • Nokia
  • Noodler's
  • Noodlers
  • Norah Jones
  • notebook
  • notebook review
  • notebooks
  • notepad
  • novels
  • office stationery
  • office supplies
  • orange
  • Orange Indien
  • Osmiroid
  • Oxblood
  • Pablo Neruda
  • paper
  • paper review
  • Parker
  • Parker Penman
  • Parker Quink
  • Parker Rialto
  • Paulo Coelho
  • Pelikan
  • Pelikano Junior
  • pen and ink
  • pen holder
  • pen holders
  • pen review
  • pencils
  • Penman inks
  • pens
  • perfume
  • Phillips
  • Pilot 78G
  • Pilot Coleto
  • Pilot FriXion Ball
  • Pilot G2
  • Pilot GTEC
  • Pilot H32 mechanical pencil
  • Pilot pens
  • Pilot Petit
  • pink
  • planner
  • Platignum
  • Platinum Preppy
  • pocket notebook
  • poetry
  • police cars
  • polyurethane
  • Poppin
  • postcards
  • Postcrossing
  • Poussière de Lune
  • Private Reserve
  • Private Reserve Avacado
  • Private Reserve Copper Burst
  • product review
  • Pukka
  • Quiver
  • Quo Vadis
  • Quo Vadis Habana
  • reading
  • red
  • Red Dragon
  • red ink
  • reecovid
  • Retro 51
  • review
  • reviews
  • Rhodia
  • Ricky Martin
  • RJ100
  • Robert James Waller
  • Rocket Dog
  • Rotring
  • Rouge Opera
  • round corner
  • Safari
  • Saffron
  • Sailor
  • Samsung
  • San Francisco Bridge
  • Saving Face
  • scented inks
  • Schneider Base
  • Schneider iD
  • Schneider pens
  • Scribe
  • Scribe Writing Essentials
  • Scriptmaster II Series Mary Ann
  • Sharpie
  • Sheaffer
  • Sheaffer Taranis
  • shopping cart
  • shotglass
  • shotglasses
  • Siku
  • Simpsons
  • sleep
  • Somersby
  • Songs
  • Sony Ericsson
  • Staedtler
  • stamps
  • Starbucks
  • Sterling notebooks
  • Stradmore
  • stub nibs
  • stubs
  • Stypen
  • Symbicort
  • Syrah
  • Taranis
  • Tazo
  • Terre de Feu
  • Text Twist
  • The Archer
  • The Burns Sisters
  • The Graduate
  • The L Word
  • thyroidectomy
  • Timbuk2
  • TOMICA
  • TOMY
  • toy trucks
  • toys
  • turquoise
  • TWSBI
  • TWSBI notebook
  • typhoon
  • Uni-Ball
  • Uni-Ball Signo Gelstick
  • Ventolin
  • Visconti
  • Wality
  • water resistance test
  • Waterman
  • Waterman South Sea Blue
  • white fountain pens
  • Whitelines
  • Wong Kar Wai
  • Write-Now
  • writing
  • yellow
  • Youth pens
  • Zebra Jimnie
  • Zippi

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (10)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (3)
  • ►  2012 (5)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2011 (16)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  August (3)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (2)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ▼  2010 (17)
    • ►  November (2)
    • ►  August (3)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (2)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  March (3)
    • ▼  February (3)
      • Notebook Review: Daycraft Signature Notebook
      • Ink Review: Scarlet Red by Camel
      • Ink Review: J. Herbin Orange Indien
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2009 (51)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (7)
    • ►  September (3)
    • ►  August (5)
    • ►  July (5)
    • ►  June (6)
    • ►  May (5)
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (3)
    • ►  February (6)
    • ►  January (3)
  • ►  2008 (107)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (5)
    • ►  October (4)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (10)
    • ►  July (21)
    • ►  June (10)
    • ►  May (4)
    • ►  April (9)
    • ►  March (10)
    • ►  February (12)
    • ►  January (7)
  • ►  2007 (48)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (3)
    • ►  October (9)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  August (3)
    • ►  June (6)
    • ►  May (4)
    • ►  April (3)
    • ►  March (3)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2006 (6)
    • ►  August (6)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile