redrose: (Default)
[personal profile] redrose
I like Moleskines, but they're expensive for something made in China. The Picadilly notebooks that I'm trying out as a substitute do not seem to have very good elastic.

I find these intriguing:
http://www.ecosystemlife.com/

Made in the USA, of 100% recycled -- and recyclable -- materials, by a subsidiary of Barnes & Noble. Comparable price to Moleskines.

I've got a set of smaller lined ones, and we'll see how they go.

Date: 2010-01-06 03:48 pm (UTC)
al_zorra: (Default)
From: [personal profile] al_zorra
BTW, a marvelous depiction of this is in Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart -- the District Commissioner has to go through a variety of manuevers in order to write reports in the early colonial days of Nigeria. (Or is this from another novel set in colonial Nigeria? It's been a long time since I read TFA ....)

This is before typewriters, of course, at least in the Nigerian colonial offices. Typewriters presented their own problems in these climates, as various insect life ate the ribbons, and the climate rusted the keys.

Yes, I'd be happy to Caribbean or other tropical spot test the Eco notebook. At some point in the next 18 months a prolonged stay in Angola is being set up.

The other thing about the Moleskinnes as another commentator mentioned is that they are really sturdy. I keep Vaquero provided with the journalist short one -- and he's incredibly hard on the things. They travel with him constantly all day long, are pulled out for everything from taking notes to new acquaintances writing in their e-ddresses and phone numbers, stuffed with receipts, sketching designs, and surely other activities as well.

Love, C.

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