More fun than going to Rite Aid and getting a Five-Star notebook. Photo: courtesy of the retailers In the same way that going abroad and getting lost in the candy aisle is so much fun, getting lost in a foreign stationery store can be equally exciting.
$34 Buy at Amazon Buy $34 Buy at Amazon Buy Midori Brass Ballpoint Pen Also from Midori: a collapsible brass pen, which writer Mark Byrne keeps in the coin pocket of his jeans. $2 Buy at Amazon Buy $2 Buy at Amazon Buy Tombow MONO Dust Catch Black Eraser Founded in 1913, Tombow is well known for making high-quality pens, markers, and art supplies. The company produces a wide range of erasers, but this one is particularly popular because it’s designed to be mess-free: The eraser bits clump together and rub off in thin rolls. Plus, the black color will still look nice and clean even after frequent use.
$11 Buy at Amazon Buy $11 Buy at Amazon Buy Midori Folding Aluminum Ruler We had to include one more from Midori. An aluminum ruler that folds into itself, making it easy to store in almost any pen case. And with the small dial on top, the ruler can measure angles and double as a protractor. $19 Buy at Amazon Buy $19 Buy at Amazon Buy Life Bank Paper Pad There’s an interesting story behind this pad of paper: “Bank paper,” which was made exclusively for Japan’s Mitsubishi Bank, was taken off the market but reintroduced in 2007 by the stationery company Life. The super-high-quality paper is manufactured in the same Mitsubishi paper mills as the original.
$14 Buy at Amazon Buy $14 Buy at Amazon Buy Rollbahn Pocket Memo Writer Hannah Morrill on her favorite notebook: “The paper stock is thick enough that felt-tip pens don’t bleed through, but not so luxe to feel precious, like you’re jotting your Time Warner account number onto the Magna Carta.” $19 Buy at Amazon Buy $19 Buy at Amazon Buy Artline Pens, Set of 16 A rainbow of pens from Nagoya, Japan–based Artline.
$13 Buy at Amazon Buy $13 Buy at Amazon Buy MT Washi Masking Tape MT is the premier maker of Japanese washi paper tape , which can be used in so many crafty ways. $11 Buy at Amazon Buy $11 Buy at Amazon Buy Kokuyo Harinacs Japanese Stapleless Stapler Managing editor Maxine Builder wrote about being a “stapleless stapler” convert thanks to this device from Kokuyo Harinacs. “It’s not magic, but some origami-inspired paper-folding,” she writes. “It works by punching a hole, then tucking the loose paper flaps through a thin slit,” creating a staple-less bind that Builder says is “surprisingly” secure.
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