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Quick Look: Cheap Composition Notebooks

The covers of Five Cheap Composition Notebooks, four from Norcom (Brazil, Colombia, USA, Vietnam) and one Casemate (China)

“Back to School” Means Dirt-Cheap Notebooks! Are They Any Good with Fountain Pens?

Fountain pens are wonderful. That’s a given. But because they use water-based ink, they’re really not suitable for most run-of-the-mill paper (see what I did, there?). Fountain pens aren’t very popular in the US, so most of the everyday paper found here is a poor match for pens that use water-based inks. Ballpoints and gel pens effectively make up the entirety of American daily writing instruments, so manufacturers only need to supply paper that works well with those inks…which, really, any crappy paper can do.

So that leaves us poor fountain pen users stuck buying higher quality paper, mostly imported from France or Japan. These papers are great, but they’re pretty expensive compared to the filler paper and notebooks found all over the US.

The Case for Cheap Notebooks

It flat-out stinks that we have to pay $9 to $15 for a fountain pen friendly notebook when you can pick up composition books for $0.50 at the BigBoxStore when schools are about to start up again.

Sometimes you just don’t want to waste a good Rhodia DotPad for work notes, you know? So a common question from students and other people on small budgets is if there is any cheap paper that works well with fountain pens. Most of the time, the answer is “no,” but every once in a while someone finds a cheapie notebook that surprises.

Enter Jeckyll & Hyde (a.k.a. Norcom)

Over the last couple of years, there’s been a lot of flap over Norcom composition books, which you can get for $0.50 (half a US dollar) during back-to-school time. These notebooks are very close to B5 sized, have stiff card-stock covers, come in both college and wide ruling, and have pretty durable fabric tape binding (over staples). They really make perfect work notebooks.

Due to their cheap prices and ubiquitous presence in every store in America, people started trying these Norcom notebooks with fountain pens. Some found them to be very fountain pen friendly and praised them online. Others found them to be absolutely unusable due to crazy amounts of feathering and bleed. How could one notebook yield such different results?

A Tale of Two Countries (Or Twelve)

After much discussion, arguing, name-calling, questioning, and tears, folks started to notice that these Norcom notebooks were coming from various countries, with a strong correlation between certain countries and paper quality. It was largely believed that American and Vietnamese paper were the worst, Brazilian paper was the best, and the Indian & Mexican paper were inconsistent.

I happened to be passing through a BigBoxStore while on vacation, and remembered the Norcom discussions as I passed through the back-to-school area (if you thought I could get through there without buying something, you’re very mistaken). So I picked up a sample from each country I could find, ending up with Norcom composition books from Brazil, Colombia, Vietnam, and the USA. I also picked up a Casemate (store brand) composition book from China just for fun (I liked the plastic cover).

So I put each one through several tests with various types of pens to see how they performed.

A Quick Look at the Differences

Although the Norcom books have similar covers, interior cover prints, and tape-over-staples binding, just about every attribute is different across all of them:

Norcom Brazil

In most of the posts I found online, the Brazilian books were found to be the best. Not this time, though. This composition book was the worst one I tried. And I mean it was horrid.

Norcom Colombia

I’m not sure I read any posts or opinions on paper from Colombia, so this one was a total wild card for me. (I didn’t see any notebooks from Mexico, so maybe they switched plants from Mexico to Colombia?)

Norcom Composition Book (USA)

I expected the US paper to be the worst. Imagine my surprise when it had the least amount of feathering of all five notebooks.

Norcom Composition Book (Vietnam)

I didn’t have very high hopes for the Vietnamese paper going into this. It performed a little better than I expected, but not well enough for me to consider it for use.

Casemate Composition Book (China)

Just for fun, I figured I’d throw in a Casemate composition book, too. It’s from China, so I thought it would be nice to get another country in the mix. The Casemate was twice the cost of the Norcom (a full $1.00), but I like the plastic cover and the fact that it’s college-ruled.

Final Thoughts

Honestly, except for the heinous Brazilian paper, all these notebooks can be used with fountain pens…at least ones with fine nibs. If you feel the need to use broad, wet pens, then you should probably just stick with Rhodia or Clairefontaine. But if you’re looking for a cheap notebook for work or school and you’re okay with fine-nibbed fountain pens, then most of these books can work for you.

Awards

Least Feathering: Norcom, USA

Least Ghosting & Bleedthrough: Casemate, China