I still worry about damaging the spiral but it’s actually double-spiral, so I find it quite sturdy. I may not love spiral notebooks but I think Rollbahn is one of the first notebooks since I rediscovered stationery that has convinced me that sprials can be done well. I like to use dark, muted colors, so they actually go well with the warm tone of the paper. I like non-white paper in general, so this is another positive point in my book. It’s yellow! It may be on the pale yellow side but compared to many other off-white notebooks, it’s decidedly yellow. What’s really unique about Rollbahn is the color of the body paper. I might just alternate between Rollbahn and Muji for Three Staples. I’m torn as to which notebook to use next, actually. I started using one in the “L” size (the main focus of this post) last year, and I’m on second one currently for writing my Three Staples ideas and posts. The Muji B6 notebook was also for working on Three Staples but while I like it for not being spiral-bound, I was excited to start using Rollbahn again when I finished the Muji one. Not only do they look nice, they perform very well. Rollbahn notebooks are readily available in Japan but that doesn’t seem to be the case here in the US, nor are they widely talked about, so I thought it might be nice to showcase them here. Since then, Delfonics has expanded its line-up to include many types of office goods, and has even opened up its own set of stationery shops to carry their products as well as other brands. Delfonics started in 1987 with calendar diaries. Rollbahn, which means “runway” in German, is a line of spiral notebooks made in Japan, by a Japanese stationery company called Delfonics.
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