Cheap Field Notes, with free shipping to boot.

I’ve worked with manufacturers/purveyors on promotions (usually review copies/products) on the pencil blog, but never on this blog in its nearly 8-year existence.  But Kishan from Maxton Men has an offer that’s too good to refuse.  Maxton Men is a new online shop featuring gifts for men that has free shipping and is just starting out.  Anyone that sells Field Notes with free shipping has a place in my bookmarks.

Buy anything from the “Office” section and use the promotion code PRAGMATIK to get 15% off until the 20th.  So what? you say?

Field Notes, brothers (and sisters), 15% off, free shipping.  They even have a few special editions and only charge $9 for regular ones.  (Also Le Pens, which seem to be making a welcome come-back.)

Go forth, and get the best deal on Field Notes I’ve seen.  And tell ‘em who sent you.

(For giving  you the deals, dear readings, one of you should send me a pack of the American Tradesman edition for home improvements at the house we’ll be purchasing in the coming months.  Just saying.)

And now for something positive.

I am off today to the National Zoo with Charlotte, for her first trip to a zoo.  We have one in Baltimore, and it’s not even far away.  But I keep forgetting about it because it’s easy to take one so close to where I live for granted.  You know how it is.

I haven’t been to the National Zoo since second grade (that would be, ahem, 25 years ago), and I am as stoked to see the giant pandas now as I was then.  Only tomorrow I get to show them to my daughter and also spoil her a little with fries, ice-cream and a stuffed toy or two to boot.

In the course of my internet meanderings, I came a cross a cool site called LunchDoodle (one word?) that you should totally go and check out.  It makes me wish I doodled more.  I especially like this one, after my eleven days (and counting) without coffee.

And my Field Notes calendar came yesterday.  Excellent.

Charlotte will find hundreds by then.

If not more.  This is a great article not just about the act of keeping a paper notebook, but also of that notebook which has been kept.  I’m running through one Field Notes notebook every 7-14 days.  Not to mention my stash of other notebooks, even from the brand of former liars.

Charlotte has some Field Notes I got her for Christmas, I mean, that Santa (wink wink) got her for Christmas.

Mine are filling with the myriad new words she says everyday now.  Sometimes I am surprised at how easily they come.

The best reason to drop Moleskines.


(Larger photo.)

There’s a lot of hoopla on the net today about Moleskine because the company is holding a contest that a lot of people find offensive and that a lot of other people find empowering.  I don’t want to join that fray.  I’m not a designer and, frankly, I don’t understand much at all about the profession.  I have my own issues with Moleskine as a company and as a book.

Read about it here.  Read Moleskine’s condescending and badly-worded response here.

But I will repeat what I’ve said before, especially in light of all of the Moleskine proselytising I’ve done on this blog.

The best reason to ditch Moleskines is that they are not the only game on the block anymore, combined with the fact that they suck

What I mean is that the quality has gone to shit.  The company makes promises it doesn’t keep and makes too many damned products to keep their staple product both cheap and “good.”  (Look what happened to the price of standard Timbuk2 bags when they started making all that other stuff, and those babies aren’t made in the USA anymore unless you get a custom model.)  Also, there are many other notebooks out there with the same features (or a better set of features) than Moleskines.  You can get recycled small m moleskin “copies” made in the USA for the same price from Ecosystem, for instance, and their paper is much, much better.

That said, having issues with a company is a damned fine reason to stop buying their shit.  That was, in part, why I stopped using Moleskines after years and years of use and mucho money spent.  Not to mention time spend fondling the damned things.

Me?  Now?  I used a lot of different books, but my current favorite is Field Notes.  I don’t pet them.  I use the shit out of them.  The company never implied that they were made where they are not, and, they tell you exactly what’s in the book.  Also, well, shit, they are more durable and have better paper.  But, hey, that’s not the only reason we choose our notebooks, right?

Preparing to leave.


A rock from Baltimore, to put onto Mr. Thoreau’s cairn or, possibly, his grave.  Though, a part of me doesn’t want to visit Thoreau’s grave if we only have one day in Concord, and a short one with a one-year-old at that.  We might only have time to get coffee downtown and visit the pond.  I’m hoping to swim there with Charlotte if we remember our suits and if the weather cooperates.  Despite The Week of One Hundred Degrees in Baltimore this week, Boston’s weather for next week looks spectacular.

Also, it seems like I work for Field Notes lately.  Damn.  But these suckers are great for trip/project planning.  And the three-pack we split will also give Mama and Papa each a nice little travel journal that’s small enough to fill up.

New Summer 2011 Field Notes.


For Fathers’ Day* this year, my wife and daughter bought me a Colors Subscription to what’s become my notebook of choice: Field Notes.

I am at the end of my current book and have been waiting impatiently for them to get here. Today, my wife walks in carrying packages saying, “Looks like Santa came!”  I’d also gotten a set (separately) for a good friend of mine who spent all day one Saturday helping me move, a buddy who’s a fan of good notebooks and American-made products in general and of Field Notes in particular.

They’re here, and they’re beautiful.  The cover is blue, with a vertical striping and slight texture.  The ink is silver and has a nice matter sheen.

They also come with a red carpenter pencil and an instruction card on the best way to sharpen one (while keeping your fingers and thumb intact).  Getting American-made pencils of any kind is hard enough these days.  Bright red carpenter-type pencils from the USA is a super score.

The inside covers are white, with red ink. I’ve actually been filling out my covers in red ink lately; so this is stellar.

It’s one patriotic little notebook, and I have six of these bad-boys to last me the summer. I also picked up a set of the Massachusetts states editions, for the trip we’re hoping to take to our old haunts this summer — something we can pass down to Charlotte, whom I hope to take swimming in Walden Pond in a few weeks!

*(Not “Father’s Day,” which only leaves room for one father.)

Also: larger photos on Flickr!

Broke in grad school.

“Also, sidenote: People who are not broke in graduate school are suspect. Because everybody else is broke.”
(Mrs. P., 06.17.2011)

Said my wife on our last — and kinda bitter — night in The Old Building.

We have a walk-through late this afternoon. And then. That’s it. Our five-year relationship with a building we’ll walk past fairly often is over.

I feel badly for nearly-voluntarily moving away from Charlotte’s first home. Then I remember the broken windows, the leaking walls, a few two-faced people there. And I think to myself, “Fuck ‘em. We’re moving up in the world.”

Whatever “up” means.

I love Field Notes, and I want to write about them more.


I keep meaning to write something awesome and meaningful about Field Notes, after waxing sexual about Moleskines for so long. But I’m too busy filling them up. And, well, I think I poured my heart out a bit in my reviews on PR on the notebook and the pencil. The good folks at FN did link to them, though. I want to give them something awesome to link to again. But I don’t know where to start, damn it. Or where to begin.

Why I don’t really use Moleskines anymore.


Mind you, I’d been using them almost exclusively for nearly 8 (EIGHT!) freakin years.  That’s a lot of notebooks!

It started two years ago, when I got tired of searching for the perfect pen for Moleskines.  I say “for Moleskines” because that thin and crappy paper worked best with bad ballpoints.  As Stephanie from Biffy Beans puts it, it’s “Like trying to write on dead leaves” sometimes.  Nice and inky ballpoints would transfer to the other page when I wrote on the back.  Same for pencil.  Forget anything really and truly inky.  But, I realized that, for better or worse, I really liked them.  And that was that.

Well, it actually started a few years before that, when I wished that Moleskines were a little greener.  There were no green moleskine (small m) books back then, not that I could find.  Not like now.

Anyway, the pen search was annoying.  I know I’m not alone, either, and on blogs and Flickr and Facebook, people searched for something that would work in these over-priced books with lies on the covers.  Then, this summer, I lost my shit a little one day over my BRAND WHOREDOM.  I recovered, and the company that owns Moleskine, meanwhile, promised greener cover materials.

Yeah, not only are they not made of recycled paper, and not only are they kinda made in China, kinda made in Italy, kinda taken on a whole trip around the world before you pay too much for them (must be where that get all that “nomad” crap from).  They are also covered in freakin PVC.  People who were laser-engraving these things had to stop because burning PVC creates dangerous fumes.

WARNING : DO NOT LASER ENGRAVE MOLESKINES WITHOUT THE PROPER FILTRATION SYSTEM. BURNING THEM CREATES HIGHLY TOXIC GASES INCLUDING PHOSGENE AND CHLORINE GAS. THE HYDROCHLORIC ACID PRODUCED WILL CORRODE EVERYTHING IT CONTACTS.

PVC can make fire-fighters sick when it’s used in building materials and burns.  One of my favorite people in the world is a fire-fighter.  I feel like I shouldn’t contribute to the PVC market, especially when I can easily just, you know, not do it.  Most companies are taking it out of their products.  Many did a long time ago.  Again, someone from the company that makes Moleskine products promised greener cover materials in August in a comment to this post.  Last August.  No word on that.  That only that, but they won’t publish even the most innocent “hey, got a date on them there covers?” comment on that post.  I’m going to pass on talking about how they destroyed one of the coolest blogs on the internet by just making Moleskinerie a badly-written ad.  But censoring comments from people who leave a real email address and URL and who have had previously-published comments is just bullshit.

Also.  Yes.  The last three Moleskines I bought had to be replaced by the company.  They actually only replaced two.  One had every page ripped, and another had a BUG in the paper.  Yes, a dead bug.  They sent one to replace them.  Thanks.  Then they wrapped one of those fancy “passions” journals so badly in its unnecessary plastic that the pages barely opened from the bend-job they got on the book’s trip around the world and to my doorstep.  After three emails and at least six weeks, they replaced that.  It smelled like, as someone else put it, jet fuel also.  It sits and is not used near food.

I felt like a jack-ass already, not only for how many of those damned things I’d bought and filled, but for how many I caused other people to buy.  And how many I gave as gifts.  Etc.

Then, this summer/fall, I scored some better books and haven’t looked back since.  I can use whatever pens I want to.  Some of them are made of green materials, using green processes.  None of them have lies printed all over them and never have.  And, playing to my own weakness, none of them are prone to idolatry or fetishization from me — that I can tell.  Except Field Notes, but I, frankly, just write and draw in them, beat the shit out of them, and start a new one when it’s full.  I haven’t gotten batty about them.  Not yet.  If I do, I’ll quit using them, no matter how nice the paper is.

(This thing is FULL of Moleskines.)

But this made me poop in my own cereal.  Not only is Moleskine now just a brand for over-priced Notebooks.  It’s a brand for all kinds of shyte.  Check it out:

Writing, Travelling and Reading. The new Moleskine collections include bags, pencils, pens, reading glasses, computer cases, a rechargeable reading light and an e-reader stand. A series of accessories, clip-ons and holders are perfectly compatible with the notebooks, ensuring the greatest range of uses and thus forming the ideal kit for the modern-day nomad. Designed by Giulio Iacchetti, the new collections are bound to the Moleskine’s very make-up in their functional and aesthetic traits: the elastic band, the rounded corners, the black color, the simple design.”

Moleskines are, officially, ruined for me.  I remember when they were actually made well (I don’t care what the company says, the quality has gone to hell in the last 2-3 years, with some exceptions like my 2009 planner), when they were still kind of esoteric and hard to find, when they felt special and practical — when a Moleskine was a notebook, not an over-branded pack of sticky-notes.

And, yet.  Still.  I totally want The Little Prince edition.  And, jeepers.  I find myself drawn to them sometimes.  I can’t say why. I readily admit that a large part of why Moleskines were such an issue for me relates to my own personality. They became like a woman who was really bad for me, but whom I really liked to involve myself with. In the stationery department, I mean.

Before you’re tempted to send pro-Moleskine hatemail, read the post title again.  No one’s taking away your planet-killing notebooks.  Just your money.

Thoreau’s surveys.


Thoreau was a practical man  Aside from his work in pencil making, he was an accomplished surveyor.  When a friend of mine took a class on surveying a few years ago, I thought of Thoreau and an excuse to be outside in the winter and was pretty jealous. Sometimes I wonder if it’s too late to go back and try a trade/craft/skill like surveying or carpentry.

But, if Walden teaches us anything, it’s that I really could, so long as there were sacrifices I’d be willing to make. That’s a whole other story.

The Concord Free Library received some money from AT&T to scan and host actual hand-drawn maps from Thoreau, with his notes in pencil (his own?) and ink, in his very…difficult handwriting.

Here is the master list of the surveys you can view and download.  I’m not going to steal or borrow an image here.  You really should go and view them yourself.  Anything I can say about them would fall short of looking at them as they’re drawn/written — even in digitized format. This might be the next best thing to actually handling the charts themselves.

Viewing tips here.