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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: pens, Urban Sketchers, urban sketching, andrea joseph, artists tools, Add a tag

Blog: Here in the Bonny Glen (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Art, journals, sketchbook, fountain pens, pens, art journals, Midori, Handwriting, Assorted and Sundry, Paper & Desk, papery days, travelers notebook, Add a tag
It started, I think, with my commitment to a daily sketching habit in the fall of 2014. By last January, the habit was firmly established, and I only missed a handful of days all year. January is also when I started taking “kourses” at Sketchbook Skool—which exposed me to not just the lessons and work of accomplished artists, but also to their media of choice. Which is to say: they have firm opinions about pens, making them my kind of people.
Putting pen to paper in my sketchbook reminded me how much I love that feeling. Now, I have never enjoyed doing large amounts of handwriting—I can’t write my books longhand, for example. My wrist aches after a couple of pages. But I love penmanship: other people’s, mainly. My handwriting is changeable and seldom neat. I never managed to commit to one way of shaping letters, so I wind up with different kinds of I and r and k all in one line. Last night I was numbering pages in a new bullet journal and realized that some of my 4s were the pointy kind and some were not. Happens all the time. I like change, y’all.
Anyway—I can’t write volumes by hand all at once, but I adore the feeling of a good pen on the right kind of paper. Experimenting with various pens (Pigma Micron, Le Pen, Pilot Metropolitan, Lamy Joy with 1.1 nib) reminded me how much I love analogue notetaking. So while I still find apps like Workflowy useful for tracking particular kinds of tasks, in the past few months I have shifted almost entirely to written notekeeping.
Notes on paper
Bullet journaling works very well for me. I’ve always kept a notebook as an idea and memory catch-all: phone call records, tasks completed, shopping lists, story ideas, doodles—it all winds up in the notebook in a giant jumble. Adding a bullet-journal-style index and page numbers was a revelation: now I can have my hodgepodge but find things later. Perfect.
For the first part of this year I used kraft-brown Moleskine Cahiers. They’re just the right size for tucking in my bag, they’re sturdy enough to handle the beating I give them, and they fill up in a month or two which means the continual fresh start I love. Then, in August, a glorious friend surprised me with a Midori Traveler’s Notebook. It was love at first sniff. I mean, I. JUST. ADORE. THIS. THING.
A traveler’s notebook, if you don’t know, involves a cover (usually leather, sometimes cloth or vinyl) that has a sturdy elastic cord or two strung through the spine. You slip a paper notebook under the cord to hold it in place. Then you can use additional bands to hold other inserts—various types of notebooks, folders, calendars, even plastic credit-card sleeves or zipper pouches.
My Midori set-up
After playing with my Midori for a month or two, I settled into the configuration that works best for me: a weekly calendar insert, a grid notebook, and a kraft folder that holds stickers, postage stamps, notepaper, and such. I keep a monthly calendar, too, but I don’t need to carry the whole year around with me so I have begun photocopying (and shrinking a bit) the current month and clipping that to my weekly page.
The blank grid insert is my bullet journal/idea repository/casual sketchbook, replacing the Moleskine Cahier. I number the pages and use the first page as an index, just as before. I like big fat checkboxes for my task lists, which I fill in with Prismacolor pencil as tasks are completed. Color is my happy place. I also like to paste in ephemera and sometimes embellish with stamps, doodles, or washi tape. Basically, these inserts become collages of all the things that occupy my days and my mind. I seem to do a fair amount of sketching in them, too, even though I have an actual sketchbook for that purpose—I work in the real sketchbook daily but the TN grid insert is a low-pressure place to experiment, and I always have it with me.
Thanks to Lesley Austin’s beautiful Wild Simplicity Daybook designs, I discovered that a week-on-two-pages spread is an excellent space for me to do some chronicling. I’ve posted before about how I use the Daybook for recording homeschooling and housekeeping notes. I really like having a separate space (and such a beautiful one) for those things. I wear so many hats, and I need ways to keep my roles sorted. The Daybook (visible under my Midori in a photo above), like all of Lesley’s paper goods, conveys a sense of peace and serenity, and so it has become a really nourishing space for me to jot down my notes about what the kids read, did, said. I always feel so happy when I open that book.
Taking a cue from that experience, I decided to try the Midori week-on-two-pages for my TN. The version I selected (Refill #19) has the week in seven horizontal boxes on the left page, and a grid page for notes on the right. I use Google Calendar for our family appointments and schedules, so a couple of times a week I open G-Cal and add any new appointments to the Midori insert. At the end of each day, I create an entry on the weekly calendar page, filling it with notes about what happened that day. It isn’t a to-do list, it’s more like a diary. Not what needs to be done (that’s what the bullet journal is for), but what I actually did. The facing page fills up with quotes, ephemera, drawings, and notes on things I’ve read or watched.
Since these pages serve as a kind of journal, I like to decorate them with washi, drawings, and watercolors. I wind up doing the ornamenting mostly on weekends. Often, I’ll start the week with two or three colors of washi in front of me, and that will set the tone for my week. This daily decorating is relaxing, it takes only moments, and I enjoy paging back through previous weeks.
So those are the two main TN inserts I carry around: the weekly calendar for journaling (more or less), and the grid notebook (Refill #2) for everything else. Those two inserts plus the kraft folder (Refill #20) make the Midori as fat as I like it to get. I could easily come up with uses for half a dozen more inserts (the TN’s capacity for letting you compartmentalize is its genius), but I found that I really prefer a non-chunky Midori.
However! I did decide to devote a single insert to all medical and health-insurance-related notes, and this has been one of my best moves ever. Instead of having those notes intermingled with everything else, they live in their own space now, with a list of phone numbers on the first page. I can tuck THAT insert into the Midori when we’re heading to an appointment. It’s perfect.
NEED MOAR PAPER
All this notebooking served to increase the satisfaction I was finding in putting pen to paper. And I found I was thinking about handwriting a lot. My little goddaughter sent me a thank-you note, and her mother’s handwriting on the envelope—the gorgeous, familiar handwriting that graced pages and pages of letters in the years after college when Krissy and I wrote to each other constantly—gave me a little jolt of joy and nostalgia. I hadn’t seen her writing in a while, and I missed it. I told her (via text, naturally) how happy I’d been to see her writing, and she said the same thing had happened to her when she saw my writing on the package I’d sent her daughter.
Shortly after that, I read that Atlantic article that was making the rounds about how the ballpoint pen killed cursive. Fascinating stuff, but the bit that grabbed me was this: “In his history of handwriting, The Missing Ink, the author Philip Hensher recalls the moment he realized that he had no idea what his good friend’s handwriting looked like. ‘It never struck me as strange before… We could have gone on like this forever, hardly noticing that we had no need of handwriting anymore.'”
He had no idea what his good friend’s handwriting looked like. I miss handwriting, I thought. The distinct and beloved scripts of my old friends flashed before my eyes. I’d know those hands anywhere, could pick them out of any penmanship lineup. My kids probably won’t experience that. Jane has friends on the other side of the country she talks to via electronic means every single day, but they probably don’t know each other’s handwriting. I have plenty of friends myself whose writing I’ve never seen. If we met after 1995, chances are I’ve seen your handwriting seldom or never. (Tanita! What’s your writing like?)
Channeling my inner Jane Austen
The handwriting epiphany spurred me to the next phase of my analogue journey: I started writing letters again. Like, by hand. I have penpals in Denmark, France, Austria, and England, as well as various friends across the U.S.
I’m amused and a little baffled that for so many years I thought of letters owing replies as a kind of guilt-ridden chore—I always took forever to answer, always had them nagging in the back of my mind. Because the truth is: snail mail is the cheapest fun around. Sure, they’re slower to write than email; slower to arrive than a Facebook message. But that’s part of the charm: the slowing down, the taking time. Just as many of us have (re)discovered the joys of slow reading in the past couple of years, I have found satisfaction in…what to call it? Not slow writing, really, because part of the point is that instead of waiting months or even (gulp) years to answer a letter, I now try to reply within three weeks; I guess what I’m enjoying isn’t about speed (or lack of it) after all. It’s about a tactile experience. The skritch of a fountain pen on flecked paper. The careful selection of stamps. The smoothing-out of a bit of washi tape across a seal. The rustle of envelopes as they slide into the box, slumbering before their journey to places I’ll never go.
And best of all: the incoming letters. Foreign stamps, unfamiliar scripts, universal experiences. Beautifully decorated, many of them—it’s like getting mail from Griffin and Sabine. This one written at a café in Vienna; that one at a Starbucks in Portland. Kaleidoscopic glimpses of a life gradually resolving into a picture. We talk about things we could easily tell via email, but we’ve decided to let these stories take the scenic route. Some of them never arrive, or show up months later, ragged and stained. This only makes us love them more.
I’m writing to say I’ll write soon
A piece of the experience that affords me much merriment is the impulse, whenever a letter arrives, to hurry to Facebook and ping the friend who sent it. “Got your letter! Will reply soon,” I’ll write, and “Yay, can’t wait!” she’ll ping back. Never mind that the letter asks questions which could be more immediately answered via any of a dozen digital platforms. The answers will keep. Come Saturday afternoon, I’ll settle in with my cocoa, my envelopes, my wonderful new pink Lamy Safari that I got for my birthday. Which paper—the whimsical or the lovely? The fern stamps, or the Ingrid Bergmans? I’m almost out of globals, and the post office won’t have the new ones for a while. But have you seen them, the moons? I’m already imagining them on dark blue envelopes…
Our digital and analogue worlds will forever be intertwined, I believe. We’ll snap photos of our beautiful incoming mail to share on Instagram, hashtagged so our kindred spirits can find and enjoy it. We’ll trade addresses on Facebook. We’ll email to find out if that letter ever arrived. We’ll scour Etsy for traveler’s notebook inserts and stock up on ink at Goulet Pens. We’ll sign up for swaps on websites, and then anxiously check tracking to see when packages might arrive. We’ll reblog Tumblr articles about clever ways to hack a bullet journal. We’ll watch Youtube videos about how to set up a Midori and we’ll tap the heart button a zillion times during an unboxing on Periscope. We’ll link to photos of new USPS stamp releases in our blog posts.
My blog, though, is perhaps the thing that suffered this past year as my attention shifted to paper and ink. I found that when I had a few quiet moments, I was more apt to want to spend them sketching or writing a letter than blogging. After ten years of a steady blog habit, that was a bit of a surprise. In January, this blog will be eleven years old. I’ve successfully figured out how to integrate my analogue and digital calendar-keeping and task-tracking, but it did take a little while for the pieces to settle into place. I expect the same will happen with blogging.
Happy New Year, friends!
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Blog: TWO WRITING TEACHERS (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: publishing, writing process, editing, writing, process, writers, revision, writing workshop, Pens, Pencils, notebooks, mistakes, drafting, routines, risk-taking, independent writing, growth mindset, Erasing, Add a tag
When I visit a classroom, one of the first things I often say to kids is, "Today, please don't erase. I want to see ALL the great work you are doing as a writer. When you erase, your work disappears!" Often, this is what kids are accustomed to and they continue working away. But sometimes, kids stare at me as if I've got two heads.

Blog: Letters From Schwarzville (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: cats, drawing, portraits, space, drawings, fountain pens, pens, festival, galactic fete, Add a tag

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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Andrea Joseph drawings, dream, pens, AJ, andrea joseph, Add a tag

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pens, Add a tag
Just bought a new pen the brand sounds more like a international Ad agencie then a pen manufacturer (TWSBI). Haven't had time trying it out, doing commission work (that's why I shamelessly reuse an old image) and I haven't the courage switching mid stream.

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: moleskine, Pens, Add a tag
I just thought it was time for some new pens, just finished another sketchbook this being one of the last spreads finished in it.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sketches, red, ink, pens, black, Sheffield, AJ, andrea joseph, sketching Moleskine, Add a tag
I've been meaning to visit A Month of Sundays gallery by Pete McKee since it opened a year, or so, ago.Last Saturday I finally did.
Pete's work was brought to my attention by a series of coincidences which is always the best way to discover something new, I find. I loved it immediately. Whilst our styles are miles apart I think we have a lot in common. Both children of the 1970s housing estates, I relate to his humour and obsession with music.
His work seems to stand alone, it's very distinctive and individual. His little gallery is really very smart. If you are in Sheffield it is well worth a visit.Before leaving the city I also got time to make this drawing from my car. I would probably have passed this restaurant by without giving it a second look but my car was parked on the hill opposite it. I'd never have noticed it's loveliness. I bet it hasn't changed since the 80s. 70s even. I do like that kind of thing.
As I've said recently, I'm still finding my feet with this on location kind of drawing. Finding my feet in lots of ways. As I get more comfortable with these black pens I am beginning to think about adding colour. I like the results in this one. What do you think?
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: zines, pen, sharpie, pens, ballpoint, biro, zine, AJ, andrea joseph, ballpoint zine, Add a tag
I'm just rounding up the last couple of drawings for the next zine. I'm looking forward to getting a new one printed. It's been a long time.
The 'classified ads' drawings (see last post) are just about finished and I'll try to post them by the end of the week. So, if you've bought some advertising space come back to see your hand illustrated ads. In the meantime I leave you with this craziness. Who knows what I'm ranting on about in this drawing. It's very late at night, the time of night when you shouldn't really be allowed a pen and paper and a blog.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, drawings, colour, colour ballpoint, collection, pens, AJ, color ballpoint, andrea joseph, Add a tag
So, when I made the colour ballpoint pen drawing for the Pen Addicts pen review, a few days ago, I knew I hadn't finished with them. I made my first drawing of colour pens 4 and a half years ago. I'm surprised that I haven't revisited this subject since then. Yeah, I've drawn loads of pens but not the colour ballpoints. Yet, they are the most delectable of subject matter. And, I am still not finished. In this drawing, I really like the parts where two pens, and two colours, meet. I want to continue playing with that and pushing to see where it can take me. And my pens.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: AJ, color ballpoint, andrea joseph, pen addict, review, colour ballpoint, pens, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, Add a tag
Here's a little something I've been working on, and meaning to do, for some time now. I've put a pen review on the Pen Addict's fabulous site. When it came to it there was only one way for me to do a pen review - draw it!
Check out my ballpoint review HERE and don't forget to bookmark that wonderful site (I say 'bookmark it' like I know what that means). I hope this will be the first of many reviews I do for the Pen Addict. I already have the next one penned (sorry) out in my mind.
I must say that it seems that pens have become my new shoes; in that I seem to be drawing lots and lots of them. I ADORED doing this drawing. I just loved drawing these pens, so I'm most definitely finished with them yet. It's also for sale HERE.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: andrea joseph for cross pens, Cross pens, illustration, red, pen, Etsy, pens, black, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, AJ, andrea joseph, Add a tag
Some of the black and red ballpoints I am currently using. Simple as that, really.
You know the drill; click on the drawing to read all the nonsense that was going through my head while creating this one. Actually, I haven't actually read it myself. Now that's a worry.
This drawing is also for sale. You can buy it HERE.
Cheers, my dears.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: drawings, pens, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, AJ, andrea joseph, the Gherkin, andrea joseph for cross pens, Cross pens, Add a tag
Hi guys, sorry to leave you hanging there like that.
I know that I keep saying that things have been a little mad recently but things really have been a little mad recently. It's been non stop orders, sales, launches and deadlines. All of which have kept me from blogging. But, I've had some really exciting stuff on, which culminated in a fabulous evening at the the Gherkin on Tuesday at a launch for a new pen 'Spire' by Cross. If you don't know their beautiful products then take a peek at their site HERE. I know that I am forever extolling the virtues of the lowly old ballpoint but there's nothing like a little luxury from time to time, right?
You know, I've always hoped for a collaboration, of some sort, with a pen company and I couldn't have wished for a better one than Cross pens and I have the lovely ladies at their PR company to thank for that. So thanks, girls!
And, of course the experience was made all the more enjoyable for having my part time manager/personal assistant/tour manager/life organiser/best buddy with me. Cheers, mate.Anyway, I am currently deadlineless (call the Oxford dictionary I've just invented a new word) but I do have a huge bag of London underground souvenirs which should finish off my travel Moleskine nicely. Okay lets draw.......
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: red, green, pen, blue, colour ballpoint, pens, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, AJ, color ballpoint, andrea joseph, Add a tag
I seem to have been waffling on, in my posts, quite a lot recently. So, in this one I'll just let the drawing do the talking.

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pens, Add a tag
Did a swap an Image for two antique fountain pens, here's the new pens (and the two pens I had before) and some doodles trying the "new pens" out. Now the question is, when does it turn into a collection?

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pens, Add a tag
I thought it was high time for a new pen
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: collections, moleskine, pencil, drawings, collection, souvenirs, pens, ballpoint, my Moleskines, ballpoint drawing, souvenir, travel moleskine, Add a tag
Before I signed with my agent I visited her at her home and we went through all of my drawings, so that she could get an idea of where my work was at and where it might go. When she saw the many drawings of collections, that I create, she said "These drawings look like endpapers. Beautiful endpapers, but endpapers all the same". I have to agree. They do.
You see, I absolutely love endpapers. I've bought many a second hand book on the strength of the endpapers alone. They are often my favourite part of a book. Just Google image 'endpapers' and, if you are anything like me, you'll be drooling for hours.
It got me thinking that my most perfect job in the whole world would be an endpapers illustrator. Seriously, I couldn't think of anything better. So, if you hear of any endpaper-drawer jobs going please let me know. In the meantime here's a couple more from my travel Moleskine.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: pens, ballpoint, biro, ballpoint drawing, AJ, andrea joseph, pencil case, blue, Add a tag
I should have been posting this drawing this evening. The whole drawing, that is. However, earlier today, whilst washing out all the cans and tins for my recycling I made a big gash to the thumb of my drawing hand. Yeah, that's what it's known as now 'my drawing hand'.
Anyway, it's all bandaged up, which makes it a little difficult to hold a pen. Somehow, though, I'll pull through.
Blog: Imagination-Cafe Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: sticky notes, erasers, cool school supplies, cases, notbboks, diary, unique, pens, pencils, Add a tag
Cool Pencil Case offers products for any taste and style - if you can't find it here, it doesn't exist. Here's a bit of what you'll find over at Cool Pencil Case;
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~ Animal Erasers
~ Assorted Chocolate Bar
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~ Fast Food
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~ Shoe Craze - Converse Shoe
~ Youth - Plush Animal
~ Animals - Blah Fish
~ Sporty - Race Car
Pens & Pencils
~ Chop Stick Pencils
~ Popcorn Pens
~ Couple Pens
~ Musician Pencil
...and more
Desk Supplies
~ Cool Stickers
~ Pocket Diary
~ High Top Shoe Notepads
~ Sticky Notes
~ Day Planners
...and more
Not only is Cool Pencil Case the hottest supplier of all your back-to-school needs, they also offer free, fast shipping for orders over $30 and no coupon is required. Can't decide? Grab a gift certificate and let your student have all the fun.
Check out Cool Pencil Case at; http://www.coolpencilcase.com/


Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: moleskine, Pens, Add a tag
Stitch pen, embroidery made simple
Antishaker pen, the on-board gyro removes any problems with shaky lines
Sniper pen, with help of the scope you can draw smaller then ever
Thimble pen, makes it possible to draw up to 5 drawings at the same time.
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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: pens, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, Add a tag
Right then, back to business.
A bit of a crappy drawing to come back with, I'll admit, but this is my commitment to a week of posting. A new post every single day. Although, I know that when I make that kind of statement the pressure gets too much for me. Perhaps I shouldn't mention it. No, I won't say a word. If you want to see new drawings, every day for a week, then you won't find them here.

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: moleskine, Pens, Add a tag
Made on the way back from England with the bonus of a one hour delay

Blog: Elysium Rain (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: spot the difference, Christmas 2009, plates, new year 2010, dragons, cards, pens, plaques, Add a tag

There are 12 differences – have fun trying to spot them!

Last but not least, some of the latest miniatures I’ve sold on ebay. To see more please follow this link to the updated miniature section of my website. http://www.elysiumrain.com/TeenyTinyCreations.html



Thank you everyone for your support and continuing interest in my work. Merry Christmas and a very prosperous New Year to you all x

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pens, Add a tag

Blog: Mattias (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Pens, Add a tag
This pen is great for writing complicated chain mails.
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Något tips på en bra affär med schyssta reservoarpennor i Stockholmsområdet?
Nej jag köper utomlands, NK har väl pennor men mest direktörspennor
I love mine....hope it works well for you. Holds lots of ink. Love your work.