Specifications
- Model - LEP192A5
- Type - Notebook
- Cover - Wibalin Finelinen, Buckram or Natural from Winter & Company, UK
- Inside Paper - 100 GSM Munken from Arctic Paper, Sweden
- Binding - Section Thread Bound with Hand Drawn Paper Back
- Fabrication - Rounded Corners, a Bookmark and an Elastic Closure
- No. of Pages - 192
- Dimensions - 148 x 210 mm (5.83 x 8.27 in.)
Description
The Limited Edition is for people who want one notebook for both writing and sketching, with a Wibalin cover from Winter & Company in the UK and Munken paper from Sweden's Munkedal mill. It's the first Cradle to Cradle Certified paper mill in the world, chosen by Sweden's Royal Family for wedding invitations and by Europe's top art schools.
The cover has a fine woven texture that feels almost textile under the fingers, with the colour going all the way through so it won't fade. Inside, the paper has just enough texture to grip pencil, graphite and charcoal, but stays smooth enough for fountain pens to glide. Because it's 100% woodfree, what you write today will still look the same in a decade.
Both materials are FSC certified. Section thread bound to open flat, with 16 perforated tear-out pages at the back, rounded corners, a ribbon bookmark, and an elastic closure.
Paper Facts
- A cover that feels like bookcloth - Wibalin Fine Linen is made in the UK by Winter & Company, a Swiss covering-materials specialist since 1892. A fine woven texture you can feel under the fingers, with the colour going all the way through the material so it won't fade or wear at the corners.
- Built to last for decades - Munken Polar is 100% woodfree paper from Sweden's Munkedal mill, made there since 1871. No acid means no yellowing over time, so what you write today still looks the same in a decade and it's one of the most environmentally certified papers in the world.
- One notebook for both writing and sketching — the surface has just enough texture to grip pencil, graphite and charcoal, but stays smooth enough for fountain pens to glide. Erases cleanly without roughing up the page.
- Mill used by artists and royalty — Sweden's Royal Family and Europe's top art schools rely on the mill for their papers.