What do you guys use for design and or sketch books? I know everyone seems to love moleskins, but frankly they've broken down on me in the past. I also like having larger size sheets of paper to work with.
The Behance dot grid books are great for layout sketches:
<a href="http://www.creativesoutfitter.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.creativesoutfitter.com/</a><p>Konigi graph paper looks decent for wireframing:
<a href="http://konigi.com/tools/overview" rel="nofollow">http://konigi.com/tools/overview</a><p>As do Whiteline books (you can buy them off Amazon):
<a href="http://www.whitelines.se/en/" rel="nofollow">http://www.whitelines.se/en/</a><p>I personally use and recommend Muji recycled ring notebooks. They're relatively cheap and excellent for quick sketches/journaling:
<a href="http://www.muji.us/store/stationery/note/recycled-paper-note-double-ring.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.muji.us/store/stationery/note/recycled-paper-note...</a><p>For me, anything that'll let me get my ideas on paper as quickly and effortlessly as possible is the way to go. As long as the notebook doesn't get in the way, it's perfect.
I bind my own. It takes some time, but the result is a notebook that has the paper I want in it, that lays flat so I can use <i>all</i> of every page (I'm a lefty), and that I don't spend too much money on.<p>Moleskines are $$ for a pile of paper. A few minutes and an upholstery needle and I have graph paper, light-weight blank, and watercolor paper bound together just the way I like it.
For the past decade I have been using (faux) leather bound, grid ruled scientific notebooks, first from BookFactory (<a href="http://www.bookfactory.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.bookfactory.com/</a>) and then from Scientific Notebook Company (<a href="http://snco.com/" rel="nofollow">http://snco.com/</a>).<p>These lab books are designed to document work for patent purposes, but I find that they are great for all manner of design and implementation writing.<p>Unlike the cheap shit you find almost anywhere else, the bindings are incredibly durable, and you can lay them flat, like a spiral notebook. You can paste printouts directly into some of the larger versions. The quality of the paper is very high. For a small fee, you can have your name embossed on the cover in gold leaf.
Just this morning I literally wandered around Staples for an hour pondering this exact question. Staples might not be the prime place to look, but it was the best I had.<p>Anyway, my requirements were thus: it had to be reorganizable (e.g. your standard three clip binder), it had to be relatively small (I want to carry it around in a small messenger bag or even better my versipack) and it had to be amazingly simple (lined paper only, no calendar, no pockets, no special latches).<p>Long story short: every notebook I looked at was absolutely idiotic in some fashion or another. The reogranizable requirement limited me to like half a dozen. The simple limited me down to basically two: a standard 1/2" binder or one of these new fangled "rolla" notebooks, which are absolutely horribly designed. I ended up going with a simple 1/2" binder, a bunch of paper, and the hope that eventually someone will solve this problem acceptably so I can have a reorganizable notebook.<p>The main benefit of the 1/2" binder is it small: keep only what you need, but keep it with you as often as possible. Insight comes at odd times, and if you keep your goals in the binder they will get revisited often, solidifying them in your mind.<p>Hope that helps.
I just use a legal pad. They work great for design, not really sketches though.<p>It really depends on what you are doing though. I use a graphpaper spiral bound book in my bag for long term ideas and designs and then the legal pad for working with people and sharing designs.
Field Notes + the Marvy Le Pen [<a href="http://www.lythastudios.com/marvy/" rel="nofollow">http://www.lythastudios.com/marvy/</a>] for walking around and making notes with.<p>Rhodia [<a href="http://www.rhodiapads.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.rhodiapads.com/</a>] and Whitelines [<a href="http://www.whitelines.se/en/" rel="nofollow">http://www.whitelines.se/en/</a>] are great for sit-down work.
I LOVE the Rediform composition notebooks. Model 53-108 60pgs. They can be had on Amazon at <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Rediform-AVE53-108-RED53108-Composition-Notebk/dp/B00007LVEH/ref=wl_it_dp?ie=UTF8&coliid=INRPKT0E08BXR&colid=26UGUDLIBPK3J" rel="nofollow">http://www.amazon.com/Rediform-AVE53-108-RED53108-Compositio...</a>
Personally I use an artists sketchbook with big pages, heavy paper and a thick cover. It's too heavy, but the contents are safe and the paper is of the right texture and unlined.<p>I generally pick them up at University bookstores where they tend to be cheap (~$10).
I just use a plain old $1 graph-paper composition book for all my notes and such. I find them to be much more durable long-term than spiral bound notebooks, which inevitably seem to end up with the cover just barely hanging on.
If you want to roll your own most full service copy shops offer several types of binding.<p>Before I got a tablet/ebook reader I would regularly print out documentation and get it 'perfect bound' with a heavy card stock cover sheet.
The best one that I have used so far is a spiral bound deck of A4 sheets of paper with a hard cover. A bit heavier paper works best.<p>Benefits:
- Cheap
- Fully customizable
- If you cannot find them then make them
I like Eureka Lab Book (<a href="http://www.eurekalabbook.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.eurekalabbook.com/</a>). Lots of variety, including waterproof and class 10 cleanroom.
Go to Borders, get the Moleskine knock-offs made by Piccadilly. I found myself migrating to the larger size instead of the roughly 3x5 inch small ones.
back in uni, engineering paper (the green with squares) was expensive so ... i made my own.<p>it's really simple, just fire up spreadsheet and resize the rows and cols respectively, then border them.