Stockholm
This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 80 gsm Mohawk Superfine archival paper stitched with Irish linen thread in the linked pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts. This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.
This book’s endbands are blue and white cotton, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its spine is covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped in a 1947 map of Scandinavia.
The talisman in this book is a 1974 Norwegian 5 Øre coin, featuring the axe-wielding lion from the coat of arms of Norway.
Although Denmark, Sweden, and Norway each has a national language, all are generally intelligible to speakers of any of the three. It’s often good to be broadly understood.
This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 80 gsm Mohawk Superfine archival paper stitched with Irish linen thread in the linked pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts. This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.
This book’s endbands are blue and white cotton, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its spine is covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped in a 1947 map of Scandinavia.
The talisman in this book is a 1974 Norwegian 5 Øre coin, featuring the axe-wielding lion from the coat of arms of Norway.
Although Denmark, Sweden, and Norway each has a national language, all are generally intelligible to speakers of any of the three. It’s often good to be broadly understood.
This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 80 gsm Mohawk Superfine archival paper stitched with Irish linen thread in the linked pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts. This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.
This book’s endbands are blue and white cotton, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its spine is covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped in a 1947 map of Scandinavia.
The talisman in this book is a 1974 Norwegian 5 Øre coin, featuring the axe-wielding lion from the coat of arms of Norway.
Although Denmark, Sweden, and Norway each has a national language, all are generally intelligible to speakers of any of the three. It’s often good to be broadly understood.