I had a chance to take the new pocket size Moleskine Reporter Watercolor Sketchbook for a test-drive, and here are my first results. I did these first few pages along the lines of my Alchemy Notebook that I have been working on in my Classic Moleskine Sketchbook, and I am happy with the results.
The pages in the Watercolor Sketchbook are naturally an entirely different experience from the Classic Sketchbook pages. The watercolor paper is 25% rag, so handles a little differently from the 100% rag paper I am used to working on, and has a nice cold pressed surface that is toothy but not too rough. The weight is 200 grams per square meter, and seems comparable to 90lb watercolor paper (although I haven't done the math).
I did these paintings using liquid acrylic inks diluted to watercolor consistency. I haven't painted with actual watercolor paints in this notebook yet, that will be the next test I do. I went with the liquid acrylics because that is what I have been working with most lately, so I felt it would make for the most immediate comparison. I found the results to be very good, and I find the surface of the paper to be very pleasing to work with. The sizing is good without being too stiff, so the paper is absorbent without bleeding the colors. There was no bleed-through to the other side, so you will have the option of painting on either side of the page, especially if you don't intend of removing the pages for framing.
The pages curl a bit and buckle when they dry. This is a common behavior for watercolor paper, but I found that this could be easily fixed by inserting a few sheets of scrap paper on either side of the painted page (as blotters) while the page was still damp, and putting the closed notebook (with blotter sheets inside) under a stack of books until the page was dry. As this watercolor sketchbook fills up it will have a nice worked-in feeling, with slightly rumpled pages giving it a bulk of having something interesting inside.
As I said in my earlier post, this sketchbook is not the same animal as the Classic Sketchbook. You will find a place in your work-style for both these formats, so there isn't any real one-to-one comparison to be made between these two sketchbook styles. This little pocket Watercolor Sketchbook begs to be taken out with a set of traveling watercolors, and will provide a lot of creative freedom for painting in any location. I will continue to use my Classic Sketchbook for all the things I have been doing, but the new Watercolor Sketchbook will be a great creative companion as well.
I have added these new pages to the NWD Moleskine Gallery, and you can see larger versions of the individual pages by clicking HERE.
Recent Comments