WTCCN: Romance Large 21X13cm LH Blank, RH Ruled, 192 Pp EUDR: Waverley Scotland Tartan Cloth Commonplace Notebook/Journal
Synopsis
The Romance large notebook, with page size 21 x 13 cm, is bound in genuine tartan cloth woven in mills in Great Britain. The tartan cloth is supplied by and produced with the authority of Kinloch Anderson Scotland, holders of a Royal Warrant of Appointment to King Charles III. It is one of a series of 192 page hardback notebooks (left hand age blank; right hand page ruled), with edge staining, elastic closure, pen loop, ribbon marker, eight perforated end leaves, and expandable inner note holder. It contains a removable booklet about the history of clan tartans, and a bookmark that gives information on the tartan. The binding is high quality. We use 80 gsm cream paper for notebook 'insides'. All paper components are FSC and EUDR compliant. We protect finished products with biodegradable film bags. The film is made from resin which is derived from corn or other starch/sugar sources. These bags compost fully into CO2, water and biomass. This Romance tartan is a pink/lilac pastel coloured tartan to give a gentle, attractive and soft feeling. It is part of the Scottish Traditions tartan notebook series and represents the many unique features of Scotland and its people. History, clans and tartans, the landscape of Scotland - hills, glens, mountains, lochs and rivers guarded by the many castles and strongholds of Scotland, some ancient and ruined, but each one full of history, with a story to tell. In this notebook the soft shades of pink, sky blue, light green and purple evoke notions of floral sweetness, heathers, open skies, windswept fields and noble enchantment. Kinloch Anderson has created its own exclusive range of tartans which are available to all. They are based on the sett of the Clan Anderson tartan. The name Anderson means son of Andrew and Kinloch means head of the loch. Romanticism in Scotland was an artistic, literary, musical and intellectual movement that developed between the late 18th and early 19th century. Commonplace notebooks date back to the Scottish Enlightenment. Many thinkers and writers used a Commonplace notebook for writing down ideas and knowledge. Adam Smith, Robert Burns, David Hume, and later, writers such as Sir Walter Scott, Arthur Conan Doyle, and Virginia Woolf used commonplace notebooks.
Publisher information
- Publisher: The Gresham Publishing Company
- ISBN: 9781849345767
- Number of pages: 192
- Dimensions: 210 x 130 x 18 mm
- Weight: 336g
- Languages: English
