I feel that way about books in general, but the OP obviously wants to write in his.
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I make notes in a Field Notes journal permanently tucked into my Cornerstone Ultrathin bible. CU paper is typically very thin but FP friendly. My challenge when making notes in the bible is usually trying to cram words into limited space. I use medium or broad nibs, so reversing the nib works very well for me.
I'm not a bible person either, but I can't imagine desecrating the pages by putting notes on it...
You find Field Notes journals work well with FP's? That's cool. I was always under the impression that they did not–lots of feathering, etc. I may have to try one.
To be honest, Field Notes journals are not the very best for FPs, but i needed thin journals that could be tucked into the bible without creating too much of a bulge.
Try Banditapple for a fountain pen friendly notebook similar to Field Notes. I use the lined PeeWee and Planner in my fauxdori notebook. No feathering, no bleedthrough, decently smooth, and cheap.
http://www.gouletpens.com/banditapple-carnet/c/27
Try Banditapple for a fountain pen friendly notebook similar to Field Notes. I use the lined PeeWee and Planner in my fauxdori notebook. No feathering, no bleedthrough, decently smooth, and cheap.
http://www.gouletpens.com/banditapple-carnet/c/27
My grandfather passed away a month ago and my dad told me last night while going through his things they found my great grandmother's old bible. It was falling apart and had notes written all through it. I can't wait to see it and read the things she thought were important enough to write down. I don't usually write in books, but I can see the value of something like this when it's left for future generations to appreciate. I'm also curious to see what kind of ink/pencil/etc she used!