#13 in Wirebound notebooks
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Reddit mentions of Rhodia #16 Wirebound Notepad 5.8" x 8.3" Dot Pad, Orange Cover

Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Rhodia #16 Wirebound Notepad 5.8" x 8.3" Dot Pad, Orange Cover. Here are the top ones.

Rhodia #16 Wirebound Notepad 5.8
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A5 in sizePaper within the notebook is made from Clairefontaine 80 g superfine Vellum80 detachable micro-perforated sheetsUltra rigid backing to make it easier to take notes when on the goWirebound spine which is on the top of the pad
Specs:
ColorOrange
Height1 Inches
Length6 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateJanuary 2016
SizeA5
Weight0.55 Pounds
Width4 Inches

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Found 3 comments on Rhodia #16 Wirebound Notepad 5.8" x 8.3" Dot Pad, Orange Cover:

u/Tamagu_ · 7 pointsr/notebooks

Hello! I'm unsure as to what you mean by "punched," so I didn't really include that in the notebooks I'm recommending below. Sorry that none of the notebooks are exactly what you asked for, but I hope this helps out!

First off, a Rhodia Wirebound Notepad! Rhodia is well known and popular for its fantastic paper, which I must agree from experience, is fantastic. The 80 gsm paper will hold up to a lot of different mediums, and the paper is just so smooth. This notepad isn't exactly A4, but it's a pretty close size comparison. While it's not blank, the dot grid is pretty decent, making it a good alternative to a blank dotpad.

Secondly, a pretty generalized recommendation would be any sketchbook from Dick Blick. I haven't exclusively checked for A4, but these sketchbooks are pretty fantastic. Since they're for art, they're going to be fantastically thick, standing up to plenty of mediums, but they are on the pricier side. Also, only a handful of them are micropreforated, such as the Strathmore 400 Series Recycled Paper Pads and the Strathmore Windpower Drawing Pad.

The last recommendation I have is another Rhodia Notepad. This is not spiral bound, unfortunately, but it is blank, unlike the first notepad. These pages are also micropreforated at the top and has that wonderfully smooth and nice Rhodia paper.

u/DaveFalcon73 · 6 pointsr/fountainpens

The TWSBI Diamond 580AL is a great pen, piston filler and demonstrator for £58.99. That would also give you about £11 free for some ink and maybe a Rhodia dot pad staplebound or wirebound.

If you wanted to get a couple of inks and writing pad then you could go for the slightly cheaper TWSBI Diamond 580RB £46.99 leaving you £23 to spend on ink and paper.

If you wanted to push the £70 to the limit and just get a classy pen with a solid 18kt gold nib for £72.72. It wouldn't leave you anything over for ink or writing pads but it would be a classy pen.

The other option would be to go the cheap fountain route and buy 2 or 3 Jinhao X450's off Amazon or eBay, they typically sell for around £6-10 each, then you have a lot more to spend on ink and writing pads. If you go the Jinhao route then I would avoid the 250 range, they are fine nibs as opposed to the 450 medium nibs, and my experience are the fine nibs tend to be quite scratchy and I had one where the nib just wouldn't friction fit into the pen. I have 5x Jinhao X450's and not had a single problem with any of them.

u/orbdragon · 2 pointsr/Calligraphy

I use a modified Traveler pen, tiny dropper bottles for inks (they are very tiny, but wide enough to dip all of my nibs into), and a Rhodia travel pad. It's quite short compared to standard holders, and even short compared to your run-of-the-mill ballpoint pens, but it gets the job done.

The Traveler mod is just to remove the pen part from the ferrule, stuff the ferrule with a chunk of eraser, then gently wedge in the nib. I like to use the Pentel Clic erasers because they're already the right width.