It's a black hardcover. I like it. Those are Sammy's feet.
Sammy tried to help out but got tangled in the thing that I don't know what it is called that keeps the book shut.
And the cool thing is it is all graph paper baby. So I can use it for notes, sketches and dungeon layouts. Now in my mind this will be cool as hell, but in reality it might just turn out to be a huge dinosaur sized turd. But I really dig the graph paper pages.
Final shot. Just thought this would make a great book during gaming sessions as a player and a thinking journal for a GM.
Oh, that is a nice one. Guess I'll have to break down and go to the last surviving Borders locally!
ReplyDeleteI have a similar book that I got in High School and it preserves many of the oldest dungeons I drew.
ReplyDeleteUh. Want.
ReplyDelete- Ark
I agree. That is a nice book.
ReplyDeleteYou should be able to find similar books at Staples or Office Depot. I love the things.
ReplyDeleteI use blank paged ones for my DM journal...they are quite handy, though the rubber-band-like page holder on mine break down sooner or later and I end up cutting them off.
ReplyDeleteI have a graph paper one for jotting down dungeon ideas, though I'd almost forgotten about it!
Fill it up!
ReplyDeleteI'm a journal junkie. It pains me that it is very difficult to find a good hardcover one with graph paper inside. Congrats!
ReplyDeleteMy initial reaction was "Eh... so what?" Then, I saw the graph paper interior. Now I want one.
ReplyDeleteI've used these for games for years, moleskins and cheaper knock offs, and also for archeological field notes at work. Perfect for sketch maps and plan illustrations. Plus I can expense them...
ReplyDeleteThat looks like a Piccadily notebook, a brand Borders started carrying instead of (or in addition to?) Moleskine notebooks. I haven't bought a Piccadily yet, but I wish the paper in Moleskines was thicker and took ink better. The paper in the drawing notebooks is better, but isn't available with grid lines.
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