doane paper

Doane Paper

A previous post mentioned a successful stationery shopping trip. One of the brands I picked up was “doane paper”. I had definitely heard of these fine folks via The Pen Addict. The Addict uses doane paper in all his reviews. It may be an addiction. The paper’s grid combines traditional lined ruling with squared (graph paper) ruling.

While the doane paper website offers online ordering, the economics of their flat rate shipping to Canada aren’t too appealing to potential customers who just want to try a pad of paper. It may make sense for large orders.

So count me lucky in that I stumbled across one of their few brick and mortar retailers – Laywine’s in Toronto. I picked up packages of the 8.25″x11.75″ and 5″x8″ paper pads and the 3.5″x5.5″ stapled notebook. (1″ = 25.4mm, and I’ll continue to use Imperial measurements here because they turn out to be integral to the product format.)

Doane Paper

The paper immediately struck me as appealing in design, as well as offering a nice heft. What I wasn’t so pleased with were the thin cardboard backing and the bright shiny blue top section. The thin back means the pad can only be used on a desk or other solid surface, and the super glossy blue section struck me as being a distraction.

Doane Paper

While the paper and layout are very nice, there are a lot of elements that are so “just right” that I have to presume they are the results of careful and thoughtful design.

The paper pattern in based on 1/8th inch squares rendered in fine blue ink. The small pad is 36 squares wide and 54 squares long.

Doane Paper

Let’s note two paper design items here:

First, the smaller squares are almost unique. 5mm squares are a stationery norm, from high end Clairefontaine and Rhodia to generic office supply store paper, and the 1/8th inch (about 3.2mm) squares, with fine line rendering, have much more of a precision engineering look and feel.

Second, the squares are contained, and don’t bleed to the edges (see the top two photos). This addresses another problem – quadrille/square/graph paper almost always has the issue of randomness of the application of the ruling pattern. Even Exacompta Record Cards have this issue. (Japanese manufacturers such as Correct seem to have solved the problem, and can consistently apply the square pattern across a given paper format.)

What this means is that is that the grid layout looks more centered and even more precise than almost any other paper most of us typically handle. The doane paper pad appears so precise and exact because it uses smaller squares, and because the squares don’t bleed to the edge.

Next, every third horizontal line is thicker – these are the normal horizontal rules of most paper. The number of vertical squares (54) is of course is divisible by three, so that there are 18 normal ruled sections created by the 17 thick rules.

Doane Paper

The pièce de résistance is the thick red vertical margin rule. Something in me says it should be six squares in to balance the three squares of the thick horizontal rule section in a 2:1 ratio. But of course it shouldn’t be! It is five squares in – for a 5:3 ratio, approximating the golden mean.

The 5×8 pad in particular, which has 50 perforated sheets, with a detached sheet being 5×7.25, really is a compelling offering.

The large pad, which I also like, is 62 squares wide and 84 squares long. The margin line is seven squares in.

Doane Paper

The above stated, I’m neither a designer nor a design critic. I was taken with the paper and wanted to try and learn what elements made it so interesting and special. I hope some or much of the analysis is correct.

Doane Paper

The ‘utility notebook’ was less interesting to me. The cover is very thin, making it unideal as a travel companion. As well, the graph bleeds to the edge and there are no red margin lines – all the elements which seemed most interesting in the pads are absent in the notebook.

Doane Paper

There are other formats as well, but I didn’t see them at Laywine’s.

Now the paper itself seems to handle graphite really well. The sturdy bright white paper and blue lines combine very well with graphite – either ceramic or polymer. A super high quality pencil like the Tombow Mono Mark Sheet just pops on the paper.

Doane Paper

I recently used the small pad to help prepare for a presentation, and I found the format to promote conscious, organized note taking. Speaking to an audience, where content and time management are parallel tasks, was a challenge ably addressed by this format. I said to myself, “Content goes on the lines, timing and technical notes on the grid”. I really didn’t have to think about it – it just worked.

For many readers of this blog, I think doane paper is well worth examining. Have you seen it?

Pencil review: Derwent Graphic

It is a bit of a shock to realize that this website has existed for so many years without offering a single article on a product from this particular manufacturer. With a location near the original Borrowdale graphite mine and the beginnings of the lead pencil industry, as well as offering a broad and internationally distributed line of premium pencils, Derwent is one of today’s top manufacturers.

Derwent was established in Keswick in 1832. This is in the region of the mine where graphite was discovered. (See Petroski’s The Pencil for further information.) The location cannot be random, and it seems reasonable that there is some link back to the original mine.

The company today is owned by global conglomerate ACCO (originally “American Clip Company”), who have wisely left the brand unaltered. The ownership has continued to invest in production as well as support the company history and heritage through the sponsorship of the Cumberland Pencil Museum. Contrast this with how Sanford has treated acquisitions!

Derwent today offers over a dozen full lines of artist oriented pencils, plus many other media and accessories. They have all the traditional media in woodcased pencil form – graphite, wax colour, charcoal, and chalk pastels. Plus they offer all of these in a huge number of format permutations.

In woodcased graphite pencil form, the following are offered:

Graphic – a range of hexagonal pencils in twenty degrees, from 9H to 9B. We’ll look at the HB today.

Sketching – HB, 2B, and 4B round pencils with oversize cores. Very waxy, we’ll look at these another day. I think many people will like them!

Watersoluble Sketching – HB, 4B, and 8B round pencils with oversize water soluble cores. They seem drier than other watersoluble pencils I have tried.

Onyx – a new line, apparently very dark and saturated.

Lakeland Graphite – a student range which I’ve unfortunately never seen.

Cumberland Graphite – a general purpose range.

Rexel Office Pencil – the Derwent website says, “It does the job you expect it to.” Again, I haven’t seen this pencil.

Do you know any of this range? Do you live near the Lake District?

Derwent Graphic pencil

Name: Derwent Graphic.

Full name and model no: Derwent Graphic.

Manufacturer: Cumberland Pencil Company, part of ACCO UK Ltd.

Background: See above.

Weight: 3.7g – possibly the lightest modern quality pencil.

Dimensions: Rounded hexagon with finished cap. Standard (~175mm) length.

Derwent Graphic pencil

Appearance: The pencils are hexagonal and sharpened. The pencil finish is black, with white imprints and a geometric orange stripe. The lacquer seems very light. The basic black colour scheme may contribute to this appearance. Different pencils purchased at different stores seem to vary, but the lacquering generally seems quite “bargain” rather than “premium” to me. The stinginess with the paint might be an aspect of the pencil’s light weight.

The pencil is marked:

England Derwent Graphic HB

Other notes: The minimal marking on the pencil and absence of a bar code are a nice change of pace.

Grip: It is a fairly standard pencil.

Sharpening: Using cedar (less common in 2010), the pencil offers a superior sharpening experience.

Writing: There are a lot of possible reasons for choosing a pencil. Some criteria, such as reaction to atmospheric humidity – which I do see as a reasonable measure – require either specialized equipment or years of study to detect. I can’t comment on these aspects. But as a smooth writer with dark precise lines, it just doesn’t compare with a pencil like the Mitsubishi Hi-Uni. Against the Castell 9000, it seems possibly better in some ways, and worse in others. So it belongs in the graphite pencil Formula 1 season, but won’t win pole position most days.

Erasure: On Rhodia paper, a Pilot Foam erased very well. A Factis Extra Soft ES20 has a couple of challenges.

Derwent Graphic pencil

Overall: I’m glad that Cumberland and their Derwent brand are thriving. Yet as a potentially top-tier pencil, I find the lead of the Graphic not quite good enough. Industry officials have stated that a pencil’s core may be 10% of the cost and the finish 33% of that cost. The Graphic already has a very modest finish – barely acceptable, in fact. Cumberland should put some of their lacquer/paint savings into the graphite/clay/wax core. Globalization is the challenge, and there are some very good competitors out there.

Weblogs suggest there are a number of UK readers who may know Derwent – what do you think?

Palimpsest

Please take a look at Palimpsest, a blog with the the subtitle “On Writing Instruments”.

With many interesting posts on writers and literary subjects, pencils are a regular subject matter.

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

The pencil talk laboratories took delivery of some Ito-ya pencils just over a year ago, and discovered that they were excellent for a house brand pencil. Of course the world’s largest stationery store is no ordinary “house”!

Ito-ya’s jumbo pencil is more than just a variant of the standard sized version.

Available in five very rich solid metallic finishes, the pencil presents itself very well.

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

To start with, the cap is a metal attachment painted black, not an eraser. I am so used to the regular sized pencils that I kept trying to use it as an eraser!

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

In a Faber-Castell rubberized Contour sharpener, sharpening this pencil is a joy. (And this is not the best sharpener.)

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

The cedar is just super straight grained, soft, and easy to sharpen. The pencil isn’t cheap, and the choice of wood must have been part of the cost equation.

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

The lead isn’t that of the regular pencil – it is a super dark and rich lead (a bit hard to erase) that might have some darkening ingredients apart from graphite.

Jumbo Ito-ya pencils

All in all, a superb example of a jumbo or oversized pencil.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

These pencils aren’t aimed at writing, yet they are all superb at the task.

Sold to students facing multiple choice exams, they are specialty test pencils. These specific ones are made in Japan, and called “Mark Sheet” pencils.

Of course, test taking isn’t the only possible use, and today we’ll take a look at them from a writing perspective.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

The pencils are:

Mitsubishi Uni 100 Mark Sheet pencil, HB
Pentel CBM10 Mark Sheet pencil, HB and B
Tombow LM-KMS Mono Mark Sheet pencil, HB

All are hexagonal with finished caps, and sold unsharpened.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

The Mitsubishi is grey, with a black dipped end and blue ring. The lettering is white, and the pencil states, “Hi-Density Lead for Mark Sheet.” The cap is stamped “HB”.

The Pentel is navy blue, and has the slogan, “the best quality for OCR sheet marking.” The blue is offset by two silver rings and silver lettering. The HB has a marigold cap, while the B grade sports red.

The Pentel has a vivid bright blue finish, with a matte silver dipped end and silver ring. The lettering is in white.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

All three pencils have nice finishes, and sharpen easily.

Certain pencil/paper combinations really shine (a subject for a future post), and on a Maruman Mnemosyne notebook, all three pencil brands are exceptional in their non-crumbling adherence, smooth application, and dark rich black lines. The best? For me, the Pentel, and especially the B grade version, stood out as a super-smooth writer.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

Specialty pencils of course have specialty erasers, and the Uni Mark Sheet eraser does a great job. The formula seems somewhat different than other familiar erasers from Pilot or Tombow – more crumbly, but possibly even more effective.

Mark Sheet pencils from Japan

(Pentel also make a “mark sheet eraser”, but I haven’t seen it in person.)

All are first rate, but writing with the Pentel CBM10 Mark Sheet pencil in B is an experience I especially recommend to all pencil users!

See also:

Pentel Mark Sheet Pencil – pencil talk, August 2008
LM-KMS – Lexikaliker, June 2009
MONO Mark Sheet Pencil Set – On the desk, at any time, March 2010