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[80]Business
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Moleskine Mania: How a Notebook Conquered the Digital Era
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“Do you know there’s a section of our customer base that buys a fresh Moleskine
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every time they come into a store? We have no idea what they do with them”
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[81]August 30, 2024August 31, 2024 - by [82]Roland Allen[83]Roland Allen
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Updated 16:06, Aug. 31, 2024 | Published 11:22, Aug. 30, 2024
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[84]A stack of filled moleskin notebooks on their sideBarry Silver / Flickr
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In the summer of 1995, Maria Sebregondi was mulling over a knotty question,
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sailing with friends off the Tunisian coast. At thirty-six, she had already
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enjoyed a fruitful career, translating Marguerite Duras, Samuel Taylor
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Coleridge, and Vladimir Nabokov into Italian. She was particularly intrigued by
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the French pair of Georges Perec and Raymond Queneau, who wrote novels and
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poetry using formal constraints as a spur to creativity. Perec had written an
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entire novel, La disparition, without using the letter “e”; in Exercices de
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style, Queneau told the same simple story in ninety-nine versions, using a
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different prose form for each one. They called their playful genre Oulipo, an
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acronym derived from the French for “workshop of potential literature.” So
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Sebregondi was accustomed to the generation of ideas within set parameters, and
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on this particular sultry evening, she was presented with just such a
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challenge.
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Her holidaying shipmates included Francesco Franceschi, a friend whose company
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Modo & Modo sold designer gifts, and that night, he shared a problem. His
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business depended on other people conceiving and manufacturing products for him
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to sell, which kept profit margins low. What, asked Franceschi, could Modo &
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Modo manufacture themselves and thus sell more profitably? The group exchanged
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ideas long into the night, discussing emerging trends like cellphones, email,
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and cheap flights. They decided that the consumer they wanted to target with a
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hypothetical new product belonged to this new era: creative, free spirited, and
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mobile. Sebregondi labelled their design-conscious customer the “contemporary
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nomad.” But before any of the party could work out what to manufacture for
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them, the holiday was over and she had returned home with her children to Rome.
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• [85]Indigo May Have Lost the Plot
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• [86]The Case for Never Reading the Book Jacket
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• [87]How Do You Even Sell a Book Anymore?
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The question nagged at her for weeks, and she toyed with ideas, including a
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traveller’s toolkit containing exquisitely designed pens, bags, T-shirts,
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penknives, and so on. Nothing met the requirements of Franceschi’s brief, which
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demanded a product that would be easy to produce yet offer wide commercial
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potential. Then she came across two passages in the book she was reading for
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pleasure: The Songlines by Bruce Chatwin, a global bestseller since its
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publication eight years before. In the novel, a lightly fictionalized version
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of Chatwin explores the Australian outback, coming to understand that its
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aboriginal culture offers an insight into the origins of human culture—and
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perhaps into the restlessness of human nature itself. Conspicuously “creative,
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free spirited, and mobile,” Chatwin himself seemed a perfect fit for the
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“contemporary nomad,” and two passages in his novel triggered Sebregondi’s
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memory:
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“Do you mind if I use my notebook?” I asked.
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“Go ahead.”
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I pulled from my pocket a black, oilcloth-covered notebook, its pages held
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in place with an elastic band.
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“Nice notebook,” he said.
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“I used to get them in Paris,” I said. But now they don’t make them any
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more.”
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“Paris?” he repeated, raising an eyebrow as if he’d never heard anything so
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pretentious.
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Then he winked and went on talking.
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Later in the book, Chatwin expands on the story.
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Some months before I left for Australia, the owner of the papeterie said
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that the vrai moleskine was getting harder and harder to get. There was one
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supplier: a small family business in Tours. They were very slow in
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answering letters.
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“I’d like to order a hundred,” I said to Madame. “A hundred will last me a
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lifetime.”
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She promised to telephone Tours at once, that afternoon.
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At lunchtime, I had a sobering experience. The headwaiter of Brasserie Lipp
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no longer recognised me. “Non, Monsieur, il n’y a pas de place.” At five, I
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kept my appointment with Madame. The manufacturer had died. His heirs had
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sold the business. She removed her spectacles and, almost with an air of
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mourning, said, “Le vrai moleskine n’est plus.”
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This passage had struck many of Chatwin’s readers; its intimations of mortality
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seemed to foreshadow the author’s premature death only a year and a half after
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the publication of The Songlines. But to Sebregondi, it meant something more
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personal, because she recognized, from her time as a student in Paris, the
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notebooks Chatwin described. Indeed, she still had several. Digging them out of
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old boxes, she looked at them for the first time in years—and with new eyes.
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Why had Chatwin become so attached to this particular model that he would order
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a hundred rather than risk running out? How could such a utilitarian object
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assume such importance? Then it struck her that she might have hit upon a
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solution to Franceschi’s challenge—a simple product, easy to manufacture,
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appealing to creatives and imparting promises of travel, of glamour, of
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discovery.
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Phone calls to France confirmed Chatwin’s account (a sensible move: Chatwin
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always preferred a good story to the literal truth), and Sebregondi’s hunch was
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confirmed by serendipitous sightings of le vrai moleskine in other contexts:
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exhibitions of Matisse’s and Picasso’s sketchbooks, a photo of Hemingway at
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work. This product, she realized, already had a pedigree. More to the point, it
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had commercial promise, for millions around the world had already read
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Chatwin’s endorsement. It even accorded with the classic principles of Italian
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design: like an espresso, a pair of Persol sunglasses, or a Prada dress, le
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moleskine was minimal, functional, and assertively black.
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And yet, miraculously, no one made it anymore.
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Sebregondi took the idea to Milan, where Franceschi realized that she was on to
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something. With Chatwin having already solved the thorniest problem faced by
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anyone marketing a new product (what to call the damn thing), the pair entered
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what became a two-year process of product design, which resulted in the classic
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Moleskine notebook.
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You don’t need me to tell you what a Moleskine looks like, but you may not have
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considered how insistently its design sends messages to the contemporary nomad.
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The minimal black cover looks, at first glance, like it might be leather:
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robust but also luxurious. The non-standard dimensions, a couple of centimetres
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narrower than the familiar A5, let you slip the notebook into a jacket pocket,
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and the rounded corners—which add considerably to the production cost—help with
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this. They also stop your pages from getting dog-eared and, together with the
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elastic strap and unusually heavy cover boards, confirm that the notebook is
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ready for travel. The edges of the board sit flush with the page block,
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ensuring that your Moleskine can never be mistaken for a printed book. In use,
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it lies obediently open and flat, and the pocket glued into the back cover
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board invites you to hide souvenirs—photos, tickets stubs, the phone numbers of
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beautiful strangers. Two hundred pages suggest that you have plenty to write
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about; the paper itself, tinted to a classy ivory shade and unusually smooth to
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the touch, implies that your ideas deserve nothing but the best, and the ribbon
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marker helps you navigate your musings. Discreetly minimal it may seem, but the
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whole package is as shot through with brand messaging as anything labelled
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Nike, Mercedes, or Apple—and, like the best cues, the messaging works on a
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subconscious level.
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But in case those cues alone were not enough, Moleskine spelled out its brand
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values in the small folded leaflet which the notebook’s new owner would
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“discover”—as Sebregondi tellingly puts it—tucked in the pocket. The leaflet’s
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copy has evolved over time, and more and more languages have been added to it,
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but the central message has changed little from the early, Italian-only,
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version:
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The Moleskine is an exact reproduction of the legendary notebook of
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Chatwin, Hemingway, Matisse. Anonymous custodian of an extraordinary
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tradition, the Moleskine is a distillation of function and an accumulator
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of emotions that releases its charge over time. From the original notebook
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a family of essential and trusted pocket books was born. Hard cover covered
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in moleskine, elastic closure, thread binding. Internal bellowed pocket in
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cardboard and canvas. Removable leaflet with the history of Moleskine.
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Format 9 x 14 cm.
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The leaflet opened with a lie (the new Moleskines were not “exact reproductions
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of the old”) then immediately veered toward gibberish, but that didn’t matter.
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Pound for pound, those seventy-five words proved themselves among the most
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effective pieces of commercial copywriting of all time, briskly connecting the
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product’s intangible qualities—usefulness and emotion—to its material
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specification, thereby selling both the sizzle and the steak. Sebregondi and
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Franceschi picked an astutely international selection of names to drop: an
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Englishman, an American, and a Frenchman encouraged cosmopolitan aspirations.
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“Made in China,” on the other hand, did not, so they left that bit out.
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Modo & Modo ordered the initial production run of 3,000 notebooks in 1997, and
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the new Moleskine first went on sale in Milan, in a small bookshop on the Corso
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Buenos Aires. It sold through its consignment in days. Avoiding traditional
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stationers, the company targeted design retailers and bookstores: the strategy
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worked, and in 1998, they sold 30,000 notebooks. From 1999, they used their
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existing networks to distribute around Europe and then across the Atlantic.
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Within ten years, the American chain bookseller Barnes & Noble had become the
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brand’s largest retail partner. Just as Franceschi had hoped, the high profit
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margins transformed Modo & Modo’s fortunes. In 2006, a private equity firm
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bought him out, and sales continued to grow.
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In 2013, the Moleskine SpA launched on the Italian stock exchange, and in 2016,
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a Belgian car distributor bought the company outright, for half a billion
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euros. Small wonder that the story is now taught in business schools as a
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textbook example of successful product design and marketing. In 2017, the story
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came full circle when Moleskine and Chatwin’s publisher struck a deal to
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publish a new edition of The Songlines, bound in the now-familiar black boards,
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complete with elastic closure, rounded corners, ribbon markers, and pocket. You
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bought it shrink-wrapped to a blank journal, embossed—in a gesture which
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Chatwin would surely have recoiled from—with the motivational boost “Enjoy your
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travel writing.”
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Sebregondi herself stayed relentlessly on message for two decades, giving
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scores of interviews whose recurring theme was that the Moleskine was “first of
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all, an enabler for creativity.”
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Having stayed with the business through its various incarnations, she stepped
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back in 2017 and currently gives her time to the charitable Moleskine
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Foundation, which aims to drive social change, especially in sub-Saharan Africa
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and Eastern Europe, through—naturally—creativity. She also remains involved
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with Oplepo, the Italian offshoot of Oulipo. Her most recent translation is of
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Queneau’s One Hundred Thousand Billion Poems, in which the reader randomly
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generates sonnets from the book’s thousands of rhyming lines, constraints
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proving creative.
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I bought my first Moleskine during the early years of that boom and, a while
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later, found myself working for a book publisher keen to share in the
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Moleskine-driven growth of the upscale stationery market. Notebooks, we
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reasoned, had no words and no pictures—the tricky, expensive things that make
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“real” books so difficult to profit from. How hard could it be to cash in? So
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we created a range of notebooks, brightly designed and packed with gimmicks,
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and placed a substantial order at the printers. I was charged with visiting
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Barnes & Noble’s Fifth Avenue head office to present our wares, and I suggested
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that our colourful product could supply healthy turnover if racked alongside
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Moleskine in their stores.
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The buyer eyed me skeptically. “Along with the Moleskines,” he said. “Do you
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know there’s a section of our customer base that buys a fresh Moleskine every
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time they come into a store? Once a week, some people. We have no idea what
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they do with them.”
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I showed off my samples, stressing the cream paper, the ribbon markers, and the
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striking cover designs that supposedly set our brand apart. He shook his head
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and handed me a familiar black notebook in response. “See this?” he said. “We
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make them ourselves, own brand. The same size, the same number of pages. We use
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the same paper, the same boards, we make them at the same plants in China.
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They’re every bit as good as a Moleskine, and we ask half as much for them.” He
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paused for effect. “And Moleskine still outsells us. And you’re asking me to
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take shelf space away?”
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I was learning a hard lesson about the power of the brand. Others, however,
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made a better go of it. From 2005, Leuchtturm, whose specialty had been stamp
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collectors’ albums, took on Moleskine, matching them for quality while
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offering—the vulgarity!—a range of colours; older companies like
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Clairefontaine, Rhodia, and Paperblanks refreshed their offerings. Western
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hipsters, always alert to high-end Japanese design, started to import notebooks
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from companies like Midori, Hobonichi, and Stalogy, which bested any of the
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European brands with their exquisite papers and bindings (Moleskine and
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Leuchtturm both use mainly Taiwanese paper). In the US, Field Notes struck a
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utilitarian chord with a mid-century aesthetic. All presented a fresh spin on
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the basic product, and all benefited from the product building that Moleskine
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had done. If you cared for upmarket stationery, the 2010s were a golden age.
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At the same time, the Moleskine became a potent status symbol. Tech CEOs toted
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them, as did the designers, journalists, and writers whom Sebregondi had
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envisaged—and even more people whose aspirations perhaps outran their actual
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creativity. Spotted in your local Starbucks, these characters were easily
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mocked: the satirical website Stuff White People Like made hay with their
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accessorizing, as did the right-wing politician Karl Rove, who once told his
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audience at Yale that he knew them to be pretentious by their Moleskines. The
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mockery did nothing to hurt sales.
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Neither did a growing interest, from psychologists and lifestyle gurus, in the
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notebook’s practical effectiveness. Sebregondi herself suggested that the
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notebook’s minimal form made it a perfect creative tool, talking of it in the
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same terms as Queneau’s deliberately constrained work: “a simple object,”
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giving her the “sense of extraordinary possibility born from small things.” The
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productivity guru David Allen recommended making lists in notebooks, as did
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neuroscientist Daniel Levitin; the journalist David Sax wrote a book, The
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Revenge of Analog, which depicted paper notebooks (along with vinyl LPs, board
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games, and film cameras) mounting a spirited resistance against digital
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replacement. It became commonplace to contrast the old technology with the new.
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The original Moleskine had launched at the same time as the Palm Pilot, the
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first hand-held digital organizer, and had, from day one, faced competition
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from increasingly powerful devices. The laptop, the BlackBerry, the iPhone, and
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the iPad all seemed to offer far greater functionality than their paper
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antecedent, but a stubborn constituency of users refused to move over into the
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digital sphere, and numerous peer-reviewed studies soon showed that their
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obduracy made sense. Something about the act of writing by hand, and the
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production of a physical object, makes the older technology more effective than
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the new. Sebregondi had, unwittingly, prompted serious inquiry into the
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workings of the human brain.
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My own interest in notebooks had also progressed beyond the commercial. I read
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Samuel Pepys, loving the unfettered way in which he documented work, home,
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leisure, his urban environment, and his sex life; then I discovered my
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grandfather’s eye-opening pre-war diaries, just as wide ranging, although much
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briefer. So I started keeping my own journal in 2002, and each year added to a
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steadily growing heap of battered notebooks.
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Writing a diary made me happier; keeping things-to-do lists made me more
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reliable (which, in turn, made those around me happier), and I learned never to
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go to a doctor’s appointment, or a meeting of any kind, without taking notes of
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what I heard. But there appeared to be creative benefits too. Every artist I
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met seemed to have a sketchbook to hand, as did graphic designers—and even web
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||
designers, whose product was entirely digital. Authors all kept notebooks, as
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did journalists, critics, and other creative types—and the more assiduously
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they used those notebooks, the better their work seemed to be. The same applied
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to my colleagues’ work: playful lists, diagrams, and sketches regularly
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disgorged surprisingly good ideas.
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When notebooks appear on the scene, interesting things happen. To open up to
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the blank page and interact with it takes energy and sometimes a little
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courage.
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But the rewards may surprise.
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Excerpted from [88]The Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper by Roland
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Allen. Copyright © Roland Allen 2024. Excerpted with permission from
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Biblioasis. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without
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permission in writing from the publisher.
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[89]Roland Allen
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[90]Roland Allen
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Roland Allen lives in Brighton, England, and works in book (and notebook)
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publishing. He has written books on bicycles and bread, has kept a diary for
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decades, and enjoys stationery a little too much.
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Tagged[91]audio[92]books[93]excerpt[94]history[95]homepage
|
||
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[44] https://thewalrus.ca/moleskine/#content
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[45] https://thewalrus.ca/
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