Saturday 18 January 2020

Stalogy cover

In fairness, I didn't really need a cover for my Stalogy as it wasn't going to be anywhere other than my desk, but... well, you all understand!

I had a browse on Etsy and found a seller who made plain, simple leather covers. I don't need any bells and whistles for the cover, just something sturdy and nice. Anyway, the seller was whpdesign and they do a range of colours/leathers etc.

I ordered a brown leather cover:

Front
Back

Friday 17 January 2020

Stalogy 365


Sorry for the LONG delay in posting. I've been up to my neck in editing and that has stolen all my time! There may be some light at the end of that tunnel in March.

Anyway, for 2020, I decided that my journal would be a B6 365 by Stalogy. I've used various diaries (as journals) over the years and fancied something a bit different.

For those of you who haven't come across Stalogy yet, they make a series of excellent notebooks. Some of my favourite B5 writing notebooks have been the Stalogy 016, but the 365 series is a little different. They come in a variety of sizes (B6, A6, A5) and the A5 come in different coloured covers and also a half-year option.


They are simple little things. There is little branding on the front, no 'bells or whistles' (so, no ribbons, no back pockets, no pen loops...), just some great quality, super-thin paper. The B6 and A6 sizes have 0.5 mm squared paper; the A5 has 0.4 mm squares. In both cases, the squares are in such a faint grey, you could probably ignore them if you so chose. At the top of each page, again in very faint grey (and in almost microscopic font) there are the days of the week, the months and the numbers 1-31 so you can circle them to note the date. Down the left-hand side of each page are time points. In the B6 they go from 7 in the morning to 11 at night. In the A6, the times go from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. (I don't know what the layout is in the A5 as I don't have one). Again, this is so faint and in such a small font, you could easily ignore them if you didn't want to use them.


Some people think of them as a cheaper Hobonichi, but I think they are very different beasts. To me, the Hobnichi has a lot of duplication with monthly, weekly and daily spreads. I don't find the layout of the Hobonichi very flexible, either. I think the Stalogy wins for me because it can be used as a day-per-page diary (as I am - see below) or as a bullet-journal, with whatever layout you want. The lines and notes are so faint, they can be ignored, but are there if you do want to use them. They're also a lot cheaper at ~£17 (for a 368 page books - not bad!). I like the B6 size -  big enough, but not too big.

How I'm using it...
I have a time-log on the left of each page and my journal entry for the day on the right. I'm also trying to use more colour and decoration than I usually do, though this doesn't appear to come naturally to me! Along the bottom of each page I'm logging various things, but they're too personal to share - hence the image being trimmed.


I've also bought a cover for it... more on that in the next post.

The paper is super-thin, but takes most pens well. There is a bit too much show-through/ghosting for me to want to use a fountain pen in it, but that's because I have a huge aversion to ghosting.

So far, I'm really enjoying using it!

Anyone else out there a Stalogy 365 lover? How do you use it?