I wanted to share with you some of our favorite products we love and use in our home.
(My disclaimer: postures, principles, and practices matter far more than materials. There are many great options for keeping supplies. This is not an exhaustive list, nor is it the best of the best. These are just the products that after trial and error, I have found work well for our family. I’d love to hear suggestions as well if you have them! I am always on the hunt for fun new things to try as I keep alongside my kids. Second disclaimer: links below are Amazon affiliate links. If you purchase through any of the links here, I get a small percentage from Amazon. Thanks for your support! I don’t have anything listed here that we don’t use regularly ourselves. But I know you know that. ;))
NATURE JOURNALS
This is the current kit all of my school-aged children and I have:
Moleskine watercolor journal (we have also used and linked the Strathmore watercolor journal)
Winston-Cotman pocket sketcher’s box (as well as the materials needed to “pimp our palettes”! :))
Pentel Aquash brushes (we use all three sizes, but we mostly carry around the medium)
white gel pens
drawing pencils (we have a variety of brands, in at least 2B, 2H, and a softer lead like 6B)
an erasable pen
waterproof drawing pens
a loupe
I have two zipped pouches for each kit:
one smaller one to hold the pencils, pens, erasers, etc.
and one to hold everything, including the journal!
(Note: these pouches are sold in multi-packs. They are great quality and useful for all kinds of things!)
These kits then stack neatly into a backpack so we can take everyone’s journaling supplies along very easily.
As a side note: in the past, we have used the Canson Field Sketchbook spiral-bound journals, and I still think they’re wonderful for those that mostly use colored pencil or sketch in graphite or pen.
And I love these Strathmore Ready-Cut watercolor cards. They are great if you would like to paint separately and tape into your journal. Great for the mama intimidated by painting who wants to give it a try. I like the hot-press cards because they are not as “toothy.”
RIVERBEND PRESS
I can personally recommend the products by Riverbend Press. We have purchased so many wonderful books and supplies from them. They are high quality and such a joy for the Charlotte Mason educator!
OTHER KEEPING
For the many other forms of keeping we enjoy in our home:
Smaller Notebooks for Students
These lined softcover journals are sewnbound and very good quality for the price. They lie flat and are good for commonplace notebooks. (They are also available in dot grid.)
Hygloss blank books are what my Form I kids use for topical notebooks on all kinds of things. They are currently using these for drawn narrations of Pagoo, as well as a field guide of wildflowers and a homemade Italian dictionary in their free time. They have also been My First Word Books, Mass books, Bible storybooks…the possibilities are endless really! They are perfect for all kinds of keeping and very reasonably priced. (They are also sold in a pack of 50 — which would probably be the right size for my family considering how often we use them! ;))
Currently, we use many different notebooks from the EcoQua brand:
:: large size blank staplebound notebooks for our narration notebooks — history notebooks, science journals, etc.
:: large size lined staplebound notebooks for our reading logs and Prose + Poetry notebooks
They come in a variety of colors, layouts, and sizes, so be careful you have the options you want before you purchase! These are sometimes available in a wider variety at Dick Blick.
Writing Implements
We love Frixion pens. We have the clicker kind and the capped kind in a variety of widths, and we also buy the refill inserts (because the ink goes fast when you are using them for everything!). My kids are much happier using these than pencil.
Mechanical pencils. The Pentel Quicker Clickers are the only pencils my girls use for schoolwork. (My sons press a bit harder on their pencils, so they use regular yellow #2s — less lead breakage. ;)) I also use these for all of my work. I like the fine point.
Prismacolor illustration markers are what we use for all nature journaling and art. I also use them in my commonplace book. They are waterproof, so you can paint right over them. I really like the 005, which is ultra-ultra fine. (Not the 05 — the 005. Easy to get confused in ordering!) My older kids use that size and the 01, and my younger kids use the 05 and the 08 for larger drawing. But for the teeny drawings like our Weekly Painting, the smaller nibs really are best. They just have to practice a gentle grip so as not to bend the nib.
I also have a variety of Gelly Rolls available for lettering.
For colored pencils, we have a big set of Prismacolors that we bought when my bigs were in kindergarten and are still going strong. Each of my older kids also has a personal set they can use during art lessons. (These sets go on sale at Amazon often, so wait for a good sale! They are *definitely* worth the price.)
We also like the Derwent watercolor pencils best of those we have tried. We don’t use them in our nature notebooks, but they are great fun for art projects and other creative work!
This electric pencil sharpener has been serving our home for the last couple years and is still going strong!
Paper
The Strathmore Ready-Cut cards in 5×7 are so handy to have around.
Slightly larger: watercolor postcards are a nice size also.
And we do our Weekly Paintings on Artist Trading Cards, either the Bristol or the watercolor. (Both will take watercolor without warping, but the Bristol doesn’t allow any lifting of paint. The watercolor version is definitely better for washes and such, but it is also more expensive.)
MOTHER’S KEEPING
I use the same products they do, generally speaking, so all the resources I listed above work well for me also!
My current notebooks besides my nature journal and my Book of Centuries mentioned above:
:: The smaller size blank EcoQua and a set of Moleskine Volant and Cahier notebooks make up my set of commonplace books. I prefer the EcoQua to the others — thicker paper, nice sturdy cover. It’s also the most expensive. These are all slim books I can bring along with me to book club. 🙂
:: My pre-reading journal (which I blogged about here and which is pictured above) was a splurge: a PratParis Sketchbook Notebook. (Here at Dick Blick.)