Site icon KenCrooker.com

Field Notes – Original Kraft Pocket Notebook Review

Mixed three-pack of Field Notes Kraft notebooks, fanned out, with the belly band on top.

This is Part 2 of my Mega Monster Review series on pocket notebooks. You can visit the main Mega Monster Review page for a listing of all the notebooks reviewed in this series. You can also open the massive Master Spreadsheet to see all the aggregated data on these notebooks. Note: This is a work in progress and will take several weeks to complete.

Field Notes Original Kraft Pocket Notebooks

Introduction:

When it comes to pocket notebooks, Field Notes doesn’t really need much of an introduction. They’re basically the gold standard against which other 3.5″ by 5.5″ notebooks are measured. Field Notes began as a partnership between graphic designer Aaron Draplin and advertising designer Jim Coudal back in 2007. They were inspired by the hundreds, if not thousands, of small, promotional memo books distributed to farmers by agricultural and farm equipment companies throughout American history.

Although Field Notes has their permanent production editions of pocket notebooks, they really made a name for themselves with their

quarterly limited edition runs. Unfortunately, the limited editions use a variety of paper types and don’t stay around forever, so I’m considering them out of scope for this Mega Monster Review. For this series, I’ll be looking at a couple notebooks from their general product line, the first of which is their Original Kraft Notebooks.

Description:

The Kraft edition was their original notebook, and has been in production all along. It sports a plain, “Packing Brown Wrap” cover stock with 60# Bright White Finch paper inside. One thing I really like about this edition is that they offer them in three different ruling types (ruled, graph, and plain). You can buy three-packs with any of the rulings, or buy a “mixed” three-pack with one of each. That’s an awesome perk! And I really love the color they chose for the ruling. They call it “Double Knee Duck Canvas,” and it is almost identical to the color of the cover. The ruling is easy to see, but light enough to stay out of your way when you’re writing.

Among fountain pen enthusiasts, Field Notes are hit-or-miss. Many of their notebooks have rather porous paper that causes ink to spread, bleed, and feather quite a bit. Other editions use papers that work much better with fountain pens.

Although I did have a couple small surprises along the way, the Field Notes Kraft edition pocket notebooks pretty much performed exactly how I expected. That doesn’t mean I wasn’t disappointed by the wild feathering going on with my fountain pens, but I knew full well going into this that the 60# paper wasn’t going to handle fountain pens very well. So I was well prepared for the inky tentacles reaching out from the letters as I wrote them down.

Pencil Results:

So, like, this edition of Field Notes was pretty much made with pencils in mind, so there should be no surprise that the Blackwing and Kuru Toga were absolutely splendid performers.

Ballpoint Results:

As with the pencils, I expected flawless performance from the ballpoints, too. And…I got it what I expected.

Gel Results:

Gel pens excel in the areas of fast writing and note-taking. The ink is smooth flowing, and the line is typically dark.

Liquid Ink Rollerball Results:

I don’t hide my disdain for ballpoint pens. But honestly, in the very short time I’ve been working with these liquid ink rollerballs, I’m starting to think that ballpoints aren’t the most evil writing utensils out there.

Fountain Pen Results:

As I already mentioned, I knew before I started that the paper in the Kraft edition wasn’t purported to be friendly to fountain pens. And after seeing how the Uniball Vision performed, whatever remained of my hopes dissipated before I picked up the Preppy.

Vital Stats

[table width=85% colwidth=”35%|65%” colalign=”left|left”] “Attribute“,”Description
Brand“,”Field Notes”
Model“,”Original Kraft”
Size“,”3.5 inch x 5.5 inch”
Price“,”$10 for 3 notebooks”
Binding“,”Staples (3)”
# of Pages“,”48”
Corners“,”Rounded”
Cover Material“,”80# French Dur-O-Tone”
Stiff Cover?“,”Not particularly”
Perforations“,”No”
Lay Flat?“,”Yes”
Jeans Pocket“,”Yes”
Shirt Pocket“,”Yes”
Paper Weight“,”60#”
Paper Color“,”Bright White”
Acid Free?“,”Yes”
Ruling Type“,”Ruled, Graph, or Plain”
Rule Spacing“,”Ruled: 1/4-inch (6.4 mm) / Graph: 3/16-inch (4.7 mm)”
Rule Color“,”Double Knee Duck Canvas (brown)”
FP: Feathering“,”Yes”
FP: Ghosting“,”Yes, but not bad with dry/fine pens”
FP: Bleedthrough“,”Some, but never touched the next page”
FP: Spread“,”Yes, especially with wet pens”
FP: 10-Sec Dry?“,”YES, with all 5 fountain pens”
Pencil“,”Excellent”
Ballpoint“,”Excellent”
Gel“,”Excellent”
Liquid Ink RB“,”Serviceable, but feathers”
[/table]

Conclusion

If you’re specifically looking for an EDC that can handle fountain pens, I’d only recommend the Field Notes Original Kraft notebook if you use fine or extra fine pens and don’t mind a little feathering. This paper does yield great dry times and very little bleedthrough, which only appears from very wet pens.

For pencils and any other type of pen, this little notebook performed wonderfully. Well, except the Uniball Vision Elite. I have my doubts that I’ll find any paper that works well with that pen. The paper in this notebook didn’t like my extra fine Preppy, but it worked well with my fine Safari. Finding a nib that’s both fine and smooth is the trick here.

Exit mobile version