Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Now It's Midori For Me

Now that I'm finally using my Moleskine, here's a another product that I'm determined to add to my collection: the Midori Traveler's Notebook.


Midori Traveler's Notebook, or Traveler's Notebook is described as "a simple notebook focusing on ease of writing, with a leather cover in the which the texture gets better as you use it over time." The leather covers on these notebooks, available in black and brown, are especially hand-made in Thailand, while the notebook inserts are printed in Japan, using Midori's original paper materials. Several types of notebooks (refills) are available to choose from: ruled, plain, squared. Enhancements like card files and zipper files are also available. Midori also offers repair kits and binders for the notebook refills.

I'm really drooling over this one, especially after seeing the Traveler's Notebook photoset at Flickr. Now I'm saving up to buy one. Heard that a notebook set costs a huge US$47.95! Woah. But I'll have this, or both. It'll take a while, but I'll have one.

(Photos above are from Midori's website.)

Monday, March 24, 2008

How I Started Writing on My Moleskine

Early this month, Pastor Joe Thorn wrote about setting up a Moleskine and how he uses these precious notebooks to store ideas related to his ministry work.

I love reading stories like Pastor Joe's because it reminded me of another Moleskine story, this one by Sir Butch Dalisay. I cannot find Sir Butch's article online anymore, but that story introduced me to the elite world of Moleskines. Soon after, I was smitten.

Surprisingly, my journey to Moleskine ownership took longer than I expected. At that time, the notebooks weren't offered locally here, and the only way I could get my hands on a notebook was to purchase it online. It was a frustrating pursuit. Then I got my lucky break several months after. A friend saw an online bookstore selling Moleskines, and the company is actually located in the Philippines! And that is how I got my hands on this precious notebook. Finally, I have my own Moleskine to show off. But I did not write on it until last week, six months after I bought it from Avalon.

I started using my Moleskine by using its last page to test my pens. Yup, the last page is a tester page, and that's what I do with all of my notebooks. I do that all the time to choose the perfect pen for a particular notebook. And for my Moleskine, the perfect pen is the black Pilot G2 0.5mm.

After that, I wrote my name and contact details on the inside cover page. No rewards for me, though.

Now I tied a small knot at the end of the page marker so it won't fray and look ugly.

And I started writing on it, precisely on the front face of the third leaf. To start writing an entry, I used a red G2 to write the date and day of the week. An entry usually takes up a page or two, and with the large Moleskine's 240 pages, I figured one notebook is good for three to four months' worth of letters.

Today, my Moleskine is already five entries full. When I fill it up, I'll get another Moleskine and fill it up again.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Snippets

* Weekend na. Payday na. Buy toys. And pens. Quality time (and food!!!) with family.

* Pig-out tonight on Maki rolls and sushi. And ripe mangoes.

* Palm Sunday na sa Sunday.

* Marimar ends tonight. Finally. Period.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Blogging and Earning

I got a lot of link exchange requests recently. Some of them are from friends, and some are from bloggers who are strangers to me. But for a personal blogger like I am, this is good news. It doesn't only mean that I'm gaining new friends -- my blog's visitors are also increasing. And it's also interesting to visit and read their blogs. Most of them are newbies and hopeful to be get paid to blog.

Well, newbies out there, it’s never easy to get paid for blogging. First, your blog must be interesting enough to generate a high level of traffic. And last, you must be able to sustain it. This is where my problem came in, actually. I cannot sustain a regular blog writing schedule due to a lot of reasons. Even though I’ve found several advertisers, a good service provider with regular writing assignments and pays me on time is a real blessing. I get to write about the topics that I want, and I get paid for that. Surely blog advertising is a lot of help for bloggers like I am.

Monday, March 10, 2008

My New Pen Holders

I always surprised people when I tell them that I keep two huge pen cases in my bag. Hahaha!!! I don't know, but I have always want my pens (as well as my notebooks) to be with me. So I got two pen cases and crammed all my pens inside. I noticed later on that ugly scratches appear on the pens' barrels, especially on the clear plastic barrel of my G2s.

Several weeks ago, my laundry lady complained about my denims' uncut bottoms. Because most of my jeans are longer than my legs, I need to fold them in every time I'm wearing them so dirt gets trapped inside the folds. Manang kindly volunteered to bring one of her friends who is a mananahi (sewer) to the house to cut my maongs for me. When the mananahi came over, I was in the middle of organizing my pens. All of them were on the floor as I sorted them out. Naturally, she asked about the pens. :)

In the course of our kwentuhan, I mentioned about my problem of finding a good pen holder so my pens won't get those ugly scratches anymore. She told me to buy cloth, any cloth of my choice and she'll do something about my problem. Last week, I passed by Panching's in San Pablo and bought a yard of flannel cloth. I liked flannel because it's soft and not too thick. I gave the cloth to Manang when she took my week's laundry last Saturday. Yesterday afternoon, the mananahi brought me my brand new pen holders.

Isn't it great? I got two pieces of this amazing pen holder.
Both coming from the single yard of cloth I bought.

Here's a more detailed shot:


And this is how it looks when it's bundled and tied up:

Imagine my joy when I placed every single pen into a designated slot in the pen holder. It's a brilliant creation: durable, washable, and very inexpensive!* Now my pens are happier in their new home(s).

* This pen holder can accommodate 12 pens. If anyone wants a similar piece, post a comment or email me, and I'll let you know how you can get hold of one. I promised Manang if people order any, I'll give the proceeds to her. :)

Friday, March 7, 2008

New Trucks

On my way to grocery shopping at Robinson's yesterday, I passed by the toy section and went home with three more trucks and less groceries. Hahaha!!!

Here are my new Tomy toys:

This one is a Furukawa Wheel Loader FL140, scaled at 1/79.


This is a Tadano Rough Terrain Crane Crevo 600, scaled at 1/160.
A hit among my male friends!

And this one here is an Off Road Dum, scaled at 1/119.


And then my Hot Wheels Fire Eater arrived in the mail this morning.

Could somebody keep my wallet for me? :)

My Weekend Date

I’m due for an eye check-up this coming weekend. I had one in November, and the doctor said I don’t need a new pair of glasses yet, but lately my vision has gotten terrible and it’s difficult for me to see distant subjects. Hopefully the frame of my old eyeglasses would still hold up to another change in lens. In case it won’t, then I can always order from Zenni Optical. Their glasses are inexpensive (they offer Zenni Optical $8 Rx Glasses), yet durable, not to mention stylish. Come on, eyeglasses do not look very fashionable, but when chosen right becomes stylish and even iconic. I’ve particularly set my eyes on this beautiful thing for it is one best thing found: Zenni Optical.

The frame of this pair of eyeglasses is made of metal alloy with stainless steel temples. It's available in several colors: silver, grey, gold, blue, or black. I want to try the blue frame for a change.

Zenni Optical sells a wide range of prescription glasses online. They offer single vision lens, sunsensor (potochromic) lens, tinted suglasses lens, bifocal lens and progressive lens. And they offer free services like anti-scratch coating, UV protection, and lens edge polishing and beveling. I am very impressed with their selection and recommended it to my friends. It’s really a great discovery: Zenni Optical.

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

New Shotglasses, New Toys

March is starting fine for me and my collections. Two friends kindly gave me shotglasses to add into my collection, and just yesterday, I bought my first (two, actually) Cararama, together with a new Tomy Fire Fighting ambulance.

The Mojitos shottie is from Noel, while the antique one is from Jerwin.

This one below is my 10th Tomy toy, and it's a Morita Fire Fighting Ambulance, scaled at 1/74.

And my Cararamas. These two Beetles are my first Cararama toys. The red one is a fire brigade car, and the black one is a police car. I only wanted the fire brigade car, but I had to buy the other one as well, as they came in a boxed set.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Bargain Book Finds

I'm disappointed ay my reading pace lately. Since I started reading "Love in the Time of Cholera", my pace was sluggish and I feel bad that I have not finished it yet. But as the owner (Chel) of the book said, it's not a novel that can be rushed, so I'll take my time.

Meanwhile, found these three at a Booksale shop in San Pablo last weekend:


Got them for 30 pesos each!!! Isn't that great?

Monday, March 3, 2008

I'm Not Alone

What a nightmare: Americans get too little sleep
By Will Dunham/Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With late-night TV watching, Internet
surfing and other distractions, Americans are getting less and less sleep, the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on
Thursday.

And all this sleeplessness can be a nightmare for your mental
and physical health, CDC experts cautioned, calling sleep loss an
under-recognized public health problem.

Sleep experts say chronic sleep loss is associated with
obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, cardiovascular disease,
depression, cigarette smoking and excessive drinking.

Read
more...

And all the while I thought I was the only person with crazy sleep problems.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

If it Looks Good, Collect It!

I’m really not sure how I got into collecting, but I know my love for it started when I was a young first grader. Two aunts, one from each side of my parents’ families doted on me and supplied me with little things which later became two small collections. I remember I was the only kid at school with more than a dozen unused erasers, most of them coming from my Aunt Carmela. And I will not forget my classmates’ envious looks at my colorful Sanrio pins courtesy of Aunt Susan.

Through the years, I have left and started old and new collections as my interests changed. Some of the items I collected (and later on left for some reasons) include stamps, stationery, chocolate foil wrappers, bottle caps, liquor bottles, Coca-Cola bottles, old comic books, mugs, candle holders, pencils, and flavored lip gloss tubes. Unbelievable, isn’t it? But through time, a number of items remained close to my heart.

I am particularly fond of elephants. My father, who is the only person in our family who loves watching cable programs that feature animals and everything safari, knows I will easily join him in the TV area whenever elephants are featured. In 1997, while buying a gift for someone, a small elephant figurine caught my attention and I immediately bought it. I started collecting elephant figurines and similar items since then. To date, I have 25 pieces in my collection; some are bought, but most are gifts from friends. My smallest piece is a ceramic incense holder from China, while the largest is a stack of five elephants, one on top of the other, made of Kamagong wood, crafted by a skilled Pinoy sculptor from the Ilocos region. I have elephant figurines coming all the way from Bangladesh, China, and Kenya.

My first elephant figurine, the one on the right, is made of ceramic from China. It is 0.875 inch tall and an inch long. The small one beside it is even smaller, it's an incense holder from Indonesia, brought home by Popen.


As fond as I am of elephants, I also have a keen interest in breweriana. I am fascinated by glass items like goblets, steins, and shotglasses. Back in 2006, while I was doing research for my NaNoWriMo novel, one of my friends suggested that I create a character in my novel that collects shotglasses (simply because my friend collect shotglasses). In the course of my research work, I fell in love with shotglasses the second time around. My very first shotglass is my father’s sake glass from Tokyo. It’s a gift from a friend and he wouldn’t let go, but I’ve already fallen in love with the geisha on it because it reminds me a lot of Chiyo, or Sayuri, of Arthur Golden’s Memoirs of A Geisha. In less than two years, my shotglass collection has grown to 57 pieces. And like my elephants, these shotglasses are very dear to me because most of them are gifts from friends who do not mind bringing such exquisite pieces from their travels.

See the geisha? The design is so exquisite, so beautiful, so charming!


My latest (and most expensive, so far) collection is very young, started only last January. My interest on it was born out of another idea from another friend. When a friend showed me his remote-controlled toy car, I knew I got to have one too. But I didn’t like cars. So I gave it up, until one lousy day brought me to a ToysRUs outlet. I saw toy firetrucks! There was no turning back. My first toy firetruck is a scale-model, die-cast Tomica. It’s an aerial ladder firetruck with a retractable ladder set. Again, I got hooked. In less than a month, I got nine trucks, five of which are firetrucks. Amazing.

Other small collections stored in my cabinets at home are notebooks (I have items from China, India, Korea, and Peru), Pinoy soda cans, and liquor stirrers. I also have several items with Nefertiti design and print, and one of them came all the way from Egypt, with her beautiful face painted on real papyrus. Interesting piece.

Somehow, each one of us has a collection stashed somewhere. It could be anything! I have a friend who collects market scene painting and eggs. Yes, eggs. She said she likes them because they symbolize life and rebirth. I also read about a guy who collects real firetrucks. Yes, real firetrucks. And he has asked for help a number of times because he doesn’t have a place to park all his trucks. And who could forget the creepy guy in American Idol who collects his nail cuttings? Yikes! But the point is, what looks like simple, ordinary, everyday things to others (even garbage) mean a lot to those who collect them.

My collecting habits may seem unappealing to others, and I wouldn’t be surprised if I will be branded as a hoarder instead of a collector, but what I have in my collections are not just material items that can be easily discarded later on. Each piece that goes into a collection was carefully selected, with its own memories and stories to tell. And no matter what anyone says about my collections, nothing can stop me from collecting and starting new collections later on. Right now, my eyes are set on tea and teabags. Later on, who knows? Wind chimes? Chopsticks? Tea cups? Old fountain pens? Well, I don’t know. As Andrew Zimmern said, if it looks good, collect it! (Err... I think he said eat it, right? Oh well, whatever!)

* To view photos of my collections, I have posted them on Flickr, although not all of my photos have been posted yet. It's a work in progress, so bear with me. To view them, visit my Flickr page.