Facebook recently alerted me to 10
years using watercolors in a sketchbook.
I had to share that anniversary — it surprised me — and as a result I was
asked how many sketchbooks have I gone through in ten years. I guess between
6-8 /year!
Some are packed up tight, but I have a couple of plastic boxes I am filling as I finish journals. I recently found this bin, left, a hodgepodge of odd journals as well as what I typically use.
I both sketch/watercolor in these books, but many years back I also added journaling to them. I hated having a separate journal, when in fact I liked to pick up my sketchbooks more often. So I started journalling on the left-facing page, and making art on the right-facing page. More on that below!
Gibbs is inspecting the A5 Hahnemühle Nostalgie Sketchbook, with two Hahnemühle watercolour journals (A5 and A4) below it, right.
History & What I Want in a Journal
I started with Moleskins, which it seemed everybody used. Unfortunately Moleskin changed their paper, and did not change
it for the better. I did not get the info until AFTER an order of six A4s, sadly (they are not cheap!) What I have done with those “bad” Moleskins is use them for swatching inks, and for this they’re fine.
I tried Strathmore, Canson (both ringbound), Pentallic, Clairefontaine, Handbook, Etchr and Arches; finally deciding upon Hahnemühle, and so happy I did. Two of them were just too expensive for my wallet, though they were lovely! So they had to be affordable.
Issues with the others:
I did not want ringbound; trying the others was good for me.
I didn’t like the feel of Strathmore in my hands, though Liz Steele famously swears by them.
Pentalic was a jumping off point early on, and I loved the folding journals, but they really didn’t have a good watercolor paper. I am just finishing up a few of their accordion books, which I have used for challenges like the Sketchpack Project, shown left.
Now, I always buy Hahnemühle!
Paper is everything! It has to be supportive of both ink and watercolor/gouache (more later on the two different journals I use). I want a hardbound cover, and it has to take a beating and not become unbound. No Hahnemühle journal has never broken even when dropped!
A ribbon marker is important (all theirs do), and having a closure band on the watercolor sketchbooks is so nice. I like having a folder at the back to pop ideas in, though I add that to my Nostalgie Journal, shown above, and usually dedicate the back of the last page to testing various mediums.
I have two different needs in a sketchbook.
In the Nostalgie Sketchbook, I am truly sketching / experimenting using light watercolor/inks, and journaling. For a long time I kept my journaling separate, but years ago I realized the folly in that. I reach for my sketchbooks most often and so why not use them as a journal, so I can also see what i am thinking during the times I am sketching whatever subjects catch my interest?
Now I journal on the left-facing page, and sketch on the right-facing page, shown right and below. With 80 pages of 70 lb (190 gsm) natural white sketch paper Hahnemühle Nostalgie Sketchbook is the best.
In the others I am mostly using watercolors and inks to create art, with little or no journaling, and want strong watercolor paper for these images. I use Hahnemühle Akademie Watercolor Paper Journal or the Hahnemühle 100% Cotton Watercolor Books to handle the layers of watercolor. 60 pages of natural-white 90 lb (200gsm) paper, and a bit more for the 100% cotton! Sometimes I paint both sides of a page, sometimes I only paint the right-facing side.
I tend to swatch the colors of the medium I am using on the left-facing side, and name them so I remember, shown in the Hahnemühle watercolor journal, images 1 and 2 below. Occasionally I do it right on the page with my art, as shown in image 3.
Left is waxed paper added to the margin edge of my page. Early on my journal got wet; I had colors transfer to the opposite side. From then on I began gluing waxed paper into my journals. I run a bead of white glue; set the precut waxed paper into the glue, flatten the glue with a flat object like a pen cap, and allow it to set. I cut several A5 and A4 inserts at a time and they are stored in my journal.
Size Matters!
I switched from the A4 size long ago, shown above and in the big image below. I always have a couple in rotation for art projects that do not leave my studio, such as illustrations for a book I’m writing, and so finish maybe one a year. The A4 is not my main sketch book as it is too big to lug around, and at nearly two feet wide when open, I can’t just find an easy perch!
A6 is too small for me, above, and shown in brown below. I feel cramped trying to sketch a scene in the little itty-bitty book! But I was given some so I use them for challenges. (BTW, the brown A6 Hahnemühle below has cream-colored paper in it for sketching.)
And just like Goldilocks, A5 is just right! Fits in my purse, I can balance almost anywhere, is discreet if I am sketching a person on the sly, but is big enough to actually paint a nice watercolor.
Notice I use stickers of my own artwork (I also sell them on Redbubble) to decorate my books.
I like Hahnemühle‘s ZigZag books — their square version of an accordion journal, shown right. I was given a tiny one and a large one, and since have bought more of the large size, about 5-inches. I usually finish 1-2 a year in challenges.
Based on finishing on average seven A5s a year, I guess the number in the decade is 70! Add my A4’s and other types of sketchbooks and possibly 80/year.
I make 90% of my sketches at night, because we have a business and it is a 60-hour-a-week commitment. Imagine the number if I was not working full time… yes, I am looking forward to retirement!
If you haven’t tried them yet, do!
They are the best and I have tried them all!
(BTW, a list of tags follow where you can see the various medium brands I prefer tagged.)

☾
©D. Katie Powell
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I love reading all the information you give on paints, books, pens, paper…this post should be a keeper for anyone starting or otherwise interested in watercolor. Great info, Katie.
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I have always admired (been amazed by) your work, Kate. The waxed paper is a good idea. Not that I’m likely to try sketching, but it’s a good idea.
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