2005-10-25

Of Moleskines and Men...

It was a bit over a year ago that I first read reference to the Moleskine notebook online. I was going through a fit of productivity porn, doing some online research trying to refine an organizing system to replace the defunct PDA that had broken on me the previous year (that's another topic). I had basically decided that I wasn't going to replace it and was using a paper/notebook system. At the time I was using a government issue memoranda book shamelessly pilfered from a filing cabinet most likely twenty odd years ago (I'm a recovering pack-rat). Quite simply, I was using it because it was there and at the time I was quite pleased to have a use for it after all those years.

Pretty much all my life I'd used various flavors of pocket notebooks. Mostly they were just any old notebook; some pocket sketchbooks, some of those sillly spiral ones from the grocery store, the $2 weaved ones from Chinatown, or whatever happened to be in the office supply cabinet. Occasionally I'd get a fashionable one that looked pretty. One thing I noticed about all of them, however, was that they never got filled. At some point I'd loose interest, or I'd start a new one, or I just wouldn't keep it with me and I'd forget about it. Basically there was nothing about them that really grabbed me or satisfied me.

Enter the Moleskine which quite immediately hooked me. (Ok that's not quite true, the first Moleskine I bought was the accordian file one, which I was disappointed in because it didn't hold enough index cards elegantly.) At first glance it doesn't look like much but I soon marveled at some things about it that I either never noticed or never cared about:
  • The paper is nice. I was impressed how viscerally pleasant writing was even with a cheap ballpoint pen.
  • The binding allows it to open completely flat. Book bound notebooks, even the sewn ones, don't open completely flat. Spiral bound ones have the annoying gap, and the springs tend to bend in my pocket.
  • The elastic band is just a really nice add-on to keep it shut and compact. It has a silk bookmark too.
  • The envelope in the back cover is very convenient.
  • It's just the right size. Fits in my back pocket, and I can stuff post-its and index cards in there.
  • I really do like the simple non-pretentious black design, with the pages flush against the edges. The rounded corners are smart too, makes it easier to slip into my pocket. The "moleskine" oil-cloth cover has a nice feel to it.
At last! Something I think they got right. And I will confess, I was completely taken in by the incredible marketing hype with references to artists and writers of old. But more than the actual hype was the community of new amateurs, artists, and hobbyists who used these books for incredible things and posted them up on the web. It all rekindled the old creative artistic side of me that had long been buried, suppressed, and zapped by grad school. Yes, I was completely taken in. I admit it.

Even though a low quality substitute could in theory do the same job, I immediately realized that it was worth it to me to spring a bit more for these and continue to do so. Reason: With any task tools do matter; good tools facilitate or encourage a task or behaviour more than bad ones. What's more is that unlike the cheapy random notebooks of old... these things will be more than just a organizational and journaling tool; I consider them keepsakes. And because of that, I am more inclined to be faithful and diligent in my use for them. I do very much lament that these notebooks had not been available to me long ago.


3 comments:

Anonymous said...

What happened to Fat Freddy Krueger's cat?

Anonymous said...

Ah... TofU, we have indeed talked much about the Moleskine. Although you believe your artistic endeavors to be subpar, you ARE mistaken. We have talked about being "robbed" of our creativity. I do not believe you ever lost yours. It has only been lying dormant, and is now reawakening...

Anonymous said...

You've convinced me. I went out and bought a moleskine. My thing is that I've always treated my sketchbooks as kinda like a trash recepticle of ideas. Just the barest of sketches to work out an idea in my head and nothing more than that. ugly, ugly drawings. more like a 'proof of concept' rather than an actual art piece. never felt the need to flesh them out on the sketchbook cuz, hell it's just a trashy sketchbook.

Maybe that will change.

And hey, judging from that drawing you've still got it.