Ah, the simplest things can be a cause for excitement.
When I saw that the Rhodia Webnotebook (Webbie) was coming out in a landscape orientation my heart went pitty-pat, and I was thrilled when I received one from Exaclair, Inc. (Thank you, Exaclair, Inc.!). Exaclair, Inc. is also letting me host a giveaway-now closed.
Specs
Cover: Italian leatherette with Round corners – orange (also comes in black)
Paper: Clairefontaine brushed Vellum, 90 g (24 bl) ivory paper, acid-free & pH neutral
Size: A5 - 21.0 cm x 14.5 - 8 ¼" x 5 ½"
No. Sheets: 96 sheets
Format: blank (also comes in ruled)
Binding: Sewn
Extras: Matching bookmark and elastic closure
So what exactly is actual difference between the landscape and the portrait webbies?
Look & Feel
Although the paper is labeled as ivory, it seems more of an off-white to me. It is smooth, but not slick to the touch. It is very thin and flexible.
The pages lie flat. In the middle of the book, there is a bit of slope, but it flattens with very little pressure so you can draw or color right to the seam with no problem, and two-page spreads can be created.
The Rhodia Tree Logo is the only marking on the cover. The frontispiece and backpiece pages are in matching orange. On the very first blank ivory page, there is some light gray writing in French at the bottom, 'Papier Velin Veloute 90 g/m2 fabrique en France par Clairefontaine'. It's very light, and was easily covered when I painted on the page.
The book is put together with & *signatures and sewn binding, making it sturdy and very flexible.
(*one method of bookbinding is to fold several sheets of paper in half, stack them inside one another, and sew them together through the fold. These are called signatures. Traditionally, you would stack 8 sheets together, and sew them for 16 page signatures, though nowadays that number can vary considerably. To create the book, you sew or glue several signatures together and then sew or glue them to a cover)
You can fold the covers, of the Webbie, all the way back if you intend to use it while traveling. The Italian leatherette covers do pick up creases when you do this, though you can usually get away with folding it a few times before it does (I base this on past experiences with Rhodia Webbies).
I noticed that the signatures aren't aligned as evenly with each other as they are with my other Webbies, and this is where that shorter binding, that I mentioned above, comes in.
With the binding along the shorter edge, there is more paper weight per stitch. The signatures have a little more give, and might lie a bit differently each time you close the book. This is an issue with every landscape oriented book I've encountered, unless the pages are made of heavier weight paper. It's never been an issue for me, but I suspect it would bother some.
Performance
In order to keep this post from being too long, I'm going to show you one example today, and then each day this week, I'll share another one done with different medium(s).
Fountain Pen
My goal with this example was to see how fountain pen friendly this paper is. I already knew, pretty much, from past experience but you never know when manufacturing might change, so I test as thoroughly as I can.
I used a variety of fountain pens with varying sized nibs, from extra fine to broad. Most of my inks are J. Herbin, but they differ in their texture, some being very 'wet' such as the Vert Olive, and others dryer.
There was no feathering, or skipping. Drying times were fairly standard for fountain pen friendly paper--in other words, slower than they would be on papers that soak up the ink so it bleeds through to the back.
There was very little show-through and then only where I saturated the page.
The metal nibs of the fountain pen can cause debossed lines or divots in the paper. Even though, I worked heavily in many spots, I had no debossing.
You can see the pinpoint nature of the bleed-through on the back. These occurred in the areas where I added more ink to ink that was still wet. Doing that with metal nibs will weaken any paper a bit. It isn't something you normally do with writing, so I would expect little to no bleed-through if you write, unless you pause with the pen pressed to the paper for a while.
And now for the giveaway info!
Giveaway Now Closed
Disclaimer
I received this A5 Rhodia Landscape Webnotebook from Exaclair, Inc. for the purposes of reviewing and hosting this giveaway. I received no other compensation. All opinions expressed are my own and are as honest as I can make them.
Good luck, everyone!
When I saw that the Rhodia Webnotebook (Webbie) was coming out in a landscape orientation my heart went pitty-pat, and I was thrilled when I received one from Exaclair, Inc. (Thank you, Exaclair, Inc.!). Exaclair, Inc. is also letting me host a giveaway-now closed.
Specs
Cover: Italian leatherette with Round corners – orange (also comes in black)
Paper: Clairefontaine brushed Vellum, 90 g (24 bl) ivory paper, acid-free & pH neutral
Size: A5 - 21.0 cm x 14.5 - 8 ¼" x 5 ½"
No. Sheets: 96 sheets
Format: blank (also comes in ruled)
Binding: Sewn
Extras: Matching bookmark and elastic closure
So what exactly is actual difference between the landscape and the portrait webbies?
- The logo is debossed for landscape reading
- the elastic band and matching ribbon bookmark are sized for width not length
- If you wish to draw in portrait, the opposing page will be at the top, like a notepad
- The bound edge is shorter than the length of the pages. I'll talk about this a bit later.
Look & Feel
Although the paper is labeled as ivory, it seems more of an off-white to me. It is smooth, but not slick to the touch. It is very thin and flexible.
The pages lie flat. In the middle of the book, there is a bit of slope, but it flattens with very little pressure so you can draw or color right to the seam with no problem, and two-page spreads can be created.
The book is put together with & *signatures and sewn binding, making it sturdy and very flexible.
(*one method of bookbinding is to fold several sheets of paper in half, stack them inside one another, and sew them together through the fold. These are called signatures. Traditionally, you would stack 8 sheets together, and sew them for 16 page signatures, though nowadays that number can vary considerably. To create the book, you sew or glue several signatures together and then sew or glue them to a cover)
You can fold the covers, of the Webbie, all the way back if you intend to use it while traveling. The Italian leatherette covers do pick up creases when you do this, though you can usually get away with folding it a few times before it does (I base this on past experiences with Rhodia Webbies).
The book has rounded corners, and the cover extends past the paper. All of the corners are tucked and sewn in neatly, except for one bulge (shown in the photo below). With my other webbies, the folds have always been neat and flat, and since only one corner had a bulge, I'm suspecting it's a one-off. I don't know that for sure, however.
With the binding along the shorter edge, there is more paper weight per stitch. The signatures have a little more give, and might lie a bit differently each time you close the book. This is an issue with every landscape oriented book I've encountered, unless the pages are made of heavier weight paper. It's never been an issue for me, but I suspect it would bother some.
Performance
In order to keep this post from being too long, I'm going to show you one example today, and then each day this week, I'll share another one done with different medium(s).
Fountain Pen
My goal with this example was to see how fountain pen friendly this paper is. I already knew, pretty much, from past experience but you never know when manufacturing might change, so I test as thoroughly as I can.
I used a variety of fountain pens with varying sized nibs, from extra fine to broad. Most of my inks are J. Herbin, but they differ in their texture, some being very 'wet' such as the Vert Olive, and others dryer.
There was no feathering, or skipping. Drying times were fairly standard for fountain pen friendly paper--in other words, slower than they would be on papers that soak up the ink so it bleeds through to the back.
There was very little show-through and then only where I saturated the page.
The metal nibs of the fountain pen can cause debossed lines or divots in the paper. Even though, I worked heavily in many spots, I had no debossing.
You can see the pinpoint nature of the bleed-through on the back. These occurred in the areas where I added more ink to ink that was still wet. Doing that with metal nibs will weaken any paper a bit. It isn't something you normally do with writing, so I would expect little to no bleed-through if you write, unless you pause with the pen pressed to the paper for a while.
And now for the giveaway info!
Giveaway Now Closed
Disclaimer
I received this A5 Rhodia Landscape Webnotebook from Exaclair, Inc. for the purposes of reviewing and hosting this giveaway. I received no other compensation. All opinions expressed are my own and are as honest as I can make them.
Good luck, everyone!
I'd love to have one! My email is: theflyingshetlands@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for a great contest!
Shya~
wow! That looks fabulous! what a wonderful gift! Thank you for sharing your creative soul with us. <3
ReplyDelete~Nancy Roth, littlemisssewitall@gmail.com
In case the giveaway includes a Canadian, I am entering! We're going on our 25th anniversary to Italy this summer! Would love to win this to journal our trip! My email is purchased1994@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for the opportunity! I would love to have this classy looking sketch book.
ReplyDeleteSusan Art,
susan.templeton.art@gmail.com
You know I love those :) woolgerbj@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveaway. I so enjoy your posts and reviews. It is helpful to understand the pros and cons of a product before you splurge on buying something. Keep up the great posts!
ReplyDeletecharmedlife2006@yahoo.com
I would love to win this. I'm a paper junkie! So fun to get new products.
ReplyDeleterelklaf(at)aol(dot)com
I don't have anything landscape at this point so I would love to win one and give it a try. I'm very appreciative of your review and always enjoy your artwork. creative.i@verizon.net
ReplyDeleteOh how fun!! I love your art! I would LOVE to try out that Rhodia notebook myself! Thanks for always sharing such thorough and well planned out review. It's so very helpful! ha[dot]designs[at]yahoo[dot]com
DeleteI try to read as many of your posts as possible. Unfortunately, not as many as I I would like. This looks like a nice addition to anyone's collection whether they use it for writing or art work. dwilka(at)gmail(dot)com.
ReplyDeleteSorry the email is incorrect. should be drwilka. Everything else is accurate.
DeleteWhat a beautiful drawing pad! (Email on blogger account)
ReplyDeleteLove those Rhodia notebooks. Thanks for the chance to win.
ReplyDeleteanalogwriter at outlook dot com
It's a good looking notebook. Thanks for having this giveaway. jegross275@yahoo.com
ReplyDeletewhat a lovely giveaway ! Hope to win :) wedding1105 at gmail
ReplyDeleteWhat a pretty notebook. Tacatshenan @ hotmail . Com
ReplyDeleteLove Rhodia products and I am also a paper junkie...thanks for the chance to win
ReplyDeletePTCHWRK@comcast.net
DeleteOh my heart be still! Landscape! A chance to win! Thanks! Sconniry@coastaccess.com
ReplyDeleteWould love to add this journal to my collection! Thanks
ReplyDeleteI would love to own this journel! I love your daily posts and your work. Thanks! 2011ducnator@gmail.com
ReplyDeletelove this sketchbook!!!! thank you for introducing these rss22@suddenlink,net
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a versatile notebook. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteLooks like a great sketchbook!
ReplyDeleteCount me in!
soulcomfort@gmail.com
Always looking for a solid journal. Count me in debra at roundpond dot net
ReplyDeleteThank you for all you do! This journal is lovely. cat.trask@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for this very well written and thorough review. I found it very helpful and would love to be entered. Stevemarty@msn.com
ReplyDeleteI appreciate your in depth testing and comments. Thank you! ahrendt715 (at) yahoo (dot) com.
ReplyDeleteI really enjoy reading your blog. I have learned so much seazenings@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThanks.
I really enjoy your reviews and artwork! I would love to have one of these books. My e-mail is beckilmiller@att.net
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy reading your blog! This landscape journal sounds terrific and I would love to win one. Thanks for all the products you review! lemler_00@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteI'd love a chance to win this. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI always NEED a new journal to play in. Please add me to the list of people who NEED this journal :) jeanbobbob@aol.com
ReplyDeleteThese look cool! I love the beautiful golden color. Also love your art :D Andrea2000 AT gmail DOT com
ReplyDeleteI think you know how I love your art Sandra (in all its incarnations)! These Rhodia Journals look like beauties, and I'd love to be able to use one to document my artistic journey.
ReplyDeletesrobinson48mi@gmail.com
As a pen, ink, paper and all things ART JUNKIE, I can never have too much of a good thing! Love the Rodia Journals!
ReplyDeleteOOPS, my email is patsyintx@aol.com!!!
ReplyDeleteI'm happy to have found your blog! I use Rhodia pads, but I'd love to work with a webnotebook. My email: rdcalhoon at rocketmail dot com Thanks for the chance.
ReplyDeleteThis is an amazing offer!
ReplyDeletemgunning51@yahoo.com
This journal looks amazing. Thank you for the opportunity to win one! I enjoy your reviews and artwork examples. s-boggs@sbcglobal.net
ReplyDeleteSuperbly informative & thorough in your inimitable fashion. I can always rely on your reviews to say how it is.
ReplyDeleteYes, I'd love one of these orange wonders with a touch of delicate kumquat about it.
Paula (PEP)
Peprcfp at aol dot com
PS should the orange transform itself into black I'd be equally delighted.
Deleteoops - just realised giveaway only for US - sorry, but my comment re your informative reviews still applies.
DeleteHope you're having good weekend.
i love rodia products, and would like a landscape notebook, so count me in!
ReplyDelete3214 s 68th st
tacoma wa 98409
I would absolutely love one of the notebooks! Any and all colors! They look marvelous. Thank you for the opportunity! Your work and blog are spectacular!
ReplyDeleteMy email address is critrcre8r@yahoo.com
Oh yes please! Sconniry@coastaccess.com
ReplyDeletewonderful review-- love seeing the 'limitations' you find to work around! nytetyger@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteBeautiful artwork! Thanks for the chance to win the Rhodia notebook. My email is cardsbydruth@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThis would be wonderful to use for my art journal. Thank you for such a thorough review. dayzieday@gmail.com
ReplyDeletei would love to win - love2craft64@yahoo.com thanks
ReplyDeleteI really like the landscape orientation. cherokee410@kc.rr.com
ReplyDeleteI have never used the books but always pick them up in the store and wish I could afford them. Thanks for always being so good with your reviews.
ReplyDeleteTammy Rapp entry.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteI've had my eye on the Rhodia Webnotebooks for a while and I think the landscape orientation is brilliant. Thanks for your review and the chance to win! jduff.cs@gmail.com
ReplyDelete