kshapero
South Florida Man
A&A camera bags. Leicagoodies' hand strap and Camera strap. T.A.'s micro soft release. Film
I've just been looking at notebooks as I'm after a nice pocket one for exposure and developing notes. Has any tried Ciak notebooks? They're the same price as the Moleskines on Amazon but unlike the current Moleskines they're made of real leather.
Incidentally, is anyone else put off by the gushing devotion that Moleskines seem to generate? Some of the pages that come up on Google on these things make the Leica fetishizing we see look positively restrained. I love well made things but I think it's a mistake to imbue them with mystical properties. The old 'it's just a tool' line really should apply.
Matthew
Well, I use them too, so you may strike them off your list now.
Mole-ess-keen-ah, I believe.
I use them because they fit in my back pocket, they have firm covers and open flat so that I can write in them with one hand and the thing on my knee if need be, they don't go floppy when sweated on, they're not that expensive when purchased online, but they cost more than wire-loop notebooks one buys at the store, so they tend not to get lost. The pages are not removable except for the last several in the back, they have a pocket for keeping business cards. I prefer the 'Ruled Reporter Notebook'.
http://www.moleskine.com
Sincerely,
A. Poseur
I used to use a notebook called an "Alwych". Cheap, just the right number of lines for 36exp film (most seem to have 16 or 17 lines per page :bang🙂. They are still available mailorder from the makers in Scotland. The big downside is that there is no elastic and the paper whislt fine for pencil, tends to let ink show through. Then a couple of years ago I discovered a range made by "Castelli". Nice false leather covers in a variety of colours, good quality paper and a sensible price. When these ran out (though I have now found them online) I tried a Moleskine. No they are not "just a notebook" and do deserve much of the hype.
For me, the paper quality is superb for pencil, ballpoint, rollerbal or even good old fasioned ink. The size for me is almost perfect, god number of pages (about 10% more than the others) and a very good cover with a pocket in the back for odd bits of paper/tables etc. If I only used one notebook, this would be it. However, I do sometimes need more than one and then I also use the Castelli's as I can "colour code" them.
Kim
Kim,
I'm sure they're a nice product and the chances are I will end up buying one or a similar notebook from the competition. All the same the hype does seem excessive (wait, isn't hype excessive by definition?).
I find that the manufacturer's site and many of the fansites make for fairly sickening reading. Some people have placed Moleskines on a very high pedestal as though they consider that their choice of stationary somehow elevates their artistic efforts to a higher plane.
Cheers,
Matthew
Dear Bill,
I respect your opinion (usually); it's just that it seldom agrees with mine.
And you are hardly alone in endorsing Moleskines. There's an old saying that if the biggest fool speaks the truth, that diesn;t stop it being the truth. Even then, I wouldn't categorize you as the biggest fool of my acquaintance, not by a long way.
Thanks for the pronunciation guide and further information.
Cheers,
Roger
Perhaps, but you could say the same thing about Leica. 😉 Or indeed about the make of a pen, a watch, or just about anything else. Over 30 years I have tried all sorts of notebooks but the Moleskine has out performed all of them for very little more. I don't know about elswhere but the Challenge books have all broken their spines, The wirebound versions are uncomfortable in the pocket and the "springs" either flatten or get caught. Others are like writing on blotting paper. Either that or as I said before, there are only 16 lines which is a PITA for a 36 exp film.
I don't agree with the hype and I don't use them because some artist in the past did in the same way I don't use a particular camera make because a certain photographer did in the past. I use them because they suit my pupose the best. Some may use them as a fashion accessory or because they think it makes their words more important. Just because they do doesn't alter their quality or attributes. 😉
Kim
Bill Mattocks, a dogsbody
Moleskin's and the look-alikes are nice, but I tend to loose notebooks and pens, so I go for the cheap stuff. Usually a reporters spiral bound one (similar to a "steno" pad). It has the advantage that you can write notes and tear them off.
Bags: I have standardized on Brady's Ariel Trout bags. You can stuff a live trout in it and keep it in water as it has a waterproof inner lining (removable), but I use it for cameras instead (no water).