I’m making a big blick order and I’m curious as to what everyones favorites are… my go-to is a softcover moleskine with a 0.3 hybrid technica
Non Sequitur
Apr 5, 24 7:25 pm
6mm 9b graphite stick in an unpolished maple wood holder and whatever scraps of paper happen to be around.
graphemic
Apr 5, 24 8:23 pm
The pens I like that are available in my supply room are the 0.5mm Uni-ball Roller and the Paper Mate Medium Flair. Both in red.
For paper I've also kept to Moleskine for most things but recently tried out the Postalco Snap Pad with the micro-graph paper. Big fan of being able to re-sort pages so far.
bennyc
Apr 6, 24 9:19 am
Rhodia or Moleskine products for paper, lamy pens, precise v5 or v7, or uniball vision
Donna Sink
Apr 6, 24 11:09 am
I'm promiscuous when it comes to sketch books and pens.
Currently I'm using a spiral bound with cardboard covers that my husband's business produced as swag for a conference.
curtkram
Apr 6, 24 11:49 am
you guys are using gel pens and roller pens? i need to retire and just not. almost all of my note-taking or sketching is digital. i have a remarkable 2 tablet. if i do write on paper it's usually a papermate felt tip pen, fountain pen, or alvin draft/matic pencil, and typically on post-it notes. i recommend field notes notebooks for convenience too.
Non Sequitur
Apr 6, 24 12:56 pm
I have 5 fountain pens next to my sketch book.
JonathanLivingston
Apr 6, 24 5:56 pm
Framing Pencil on OSB
Orhan Ayyüce
Apr 6, 24 7:18 pm
I usually have half of these people with me , what I do with them varies. I am not a good drawer but getting what I want from the drawings make me happy.
TIQM
Apr 7, 24 5:34 am
I’m a fountain pen guy. I have hundreds of them. With good fountain pens, you have use special paper, Moleskine won’t work, it’s too absorbent. I prefer Rhodia or Clairefontaine.
I use the Rhodia A5 dot grid Goalbook as my standard journal.
TIQM
Apr 7, 24 5:36 am
By the way, Orhan. I see pencil extenders in your photo. I love them! We used to see how far down we could sharpen our pencils and still use them. Pencil extenders were very important. :)
proto
Apr 7, 24 12:32 pm
I just like the uneven line of a fountain pen
i once ran a meisterstuck thru the wash & ruined the nib…it curled up like a frond. Tho I could have just replaced the nib, lamy safari seems a better choice now…i have a few each loaded with a different color ink.
I like off-color inks: not quite blue; not quite red; not quite brown…only issue with the fancy colors is they’re not permanent so spilling tea erases masterpieces. OTOH, they’re watercolors…win some, lose some.
b3lla_baxter
Apr 7, 24 3:42 pm
b3la's favorite pen note!
gwharton
Apr 8, 24 2:12 pm
I prefer black Staedtler Lumocolor F-nib pens, both permanent and water-based inks, and use them for pretty much everything. The line quality is perfect on paper or trace. I use the water-based when coloring with markers, since the lines won't run with the marker ink (Pentel Sign Pens are great for this too). The permanent ink versions will write on nearly any surface. The S, B, and M nib versions are good too, but the F is more generally versatile.
Chad Miller
Apr 8, 24 6:50 pm
I like the 6" x 9" from CO ONWARD ARTS and a Pilot Precise Extra Fine. I'll add in some colored pencil if the subject matter is worth it.
I’m making a big blick order and I’m curious as to what everyones favorites are… my go-to is a softcover moleskine with a 0.3 hybrid technica
6mm 9b graphite stick in an unpolished maple wood holder and whatever scraps of paper happen to be around.
The pens I like that are available in my supply room are the 0.5mm Uni-ball Roller and the Paper Mate Medium Flair. Both in red.
For paper I've also kept to Moleskine for most things but recently tried out the Postalco Snap Pad with the micro-graph paper. Big fan of being able to re-sort pages so far.
Rhodia or Moleskine products for paper, lamy pens, precise v5 or v7, or uniball vision
I'm promiscuous when it comes to sketch books and pens.
Currently I'm using a spiral bound with cardboard covers that my husband's business produced as swag for a conference.
you guys are using gel pens and roller pens? i need to retire and just not. almost all of my note-taking or sketching is digital. i have a remarkable 2 tablet. if i do write on paper it's usually a papermate felt tip pen, fountain pen, or alvin draft/matic pencil, and typically on post-it notes. i recommend field notes notebooks for convenience too.
I have 5 fountain pens next to my sketch book.
Framing Pencil on OSB
I usually have half of these people with me , what I do with them varies. I am not a good drawer but getting what I want from the drawings make me happy.
I’m a fountain pen guy. I have hundreds of them. With good fountain pens, you have use special paper, Moleskine won’t work, it’s too absorbent. I prefer Rhodia or Clairefontaine.
I use the Rhodia A5 dot grid Goalbook as my standard journal.
By the way, Orhan. I see pencil extenders in your photo. I love them! We used to see how far down we could sharpen our pencils and still use them. Pencil extenders were very important. :)
I just like the uneven line of a fountain pen
i once ran a meisterstuck thru the wash & ruined the nib…it curled up like a frond. Tho I could have just replaced the nib, lamy safari seems a better choice now…i have a few each loaded with a different color ink.
I like off-color inks: not quite blue; not quite red; not quite brown…only issue with the fancy colors is they’re not permanent so spilling tea erases masterpieces. OTOH, they’re watercolors…win some, lose some.
I prefer black Staedtler Lumocolor F-nib pens, both permanent and water-based inks, and use them for pretty much everything. The line quality is perfect on paper or trace. I use the water-based when coloring with markers, since the lines won't run with the marker ink (Pentel Sign Pens are great for this too). The permanent ink versions will write on nearly any surface. The S, B, and M nib versions are good too, but the F is more generally versatile.
I like the 6" x 9" from CO ONWARD ARTS and a Pilot Precise Extra Fine. I'll add in some colored pencil if the subject matter is worth it.