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I confess I'm an office supply geek, particularly with fountain pens. I was pleased to find that there are communities of like-minded people out on the Internet (let's face it: what community is not represented on the Internet?).
I've been carrying around an A4 Clairefontaine notebook around for two years to take notes at work, and am about out of pages. Today I've bought it's replacement: a Rhodia spiral-bound notebook, also A4 sized.
One thing I wonder about as I write is how much ink do I use. I don't write a lot at work, so it doesn't accumulate a lot. However, a blank notebook offers an opportunity. I'm going to try to weigh the ink.
My methodology is to weigh the notebook empty, then weigh it again over the course of its use. Today, it weighed in at exactly 500 grams.
My methodology is probably not as rigorous as the Mythbusters, but to get a rough order of magnitude, it is probably adequate. The first gap is that I won't be using the same pen and ink. While I will use fountain pens 99% of the time, my pens tend to vary from broad to fine points, wet to dry writers (and the odd pencil thrown in for good measure). While it won't create an exact pages-per-gram measure that would be reliable, it would create an average.
My past notebook has a bunch of notes clipped in, post-its, etc. I will try to control for that by not putting on stickers (as I am want to do, and, prior to weighing in, remove any notes. Likewise, I will avoid tearing pages out of my book. I was able to do this with the Clairefontaine notebook.
The other thing that could throw off the experiment is that I'm not doing anything to protect it from environmental factors. It will collect any dirt, rainwater, or other things it may encounter being hauled everywhere. I could control for this by either carrying a second notebook around, keeping it blank save for the environmental factors, or to keep the notebook in home, in a sealed box, save for writing. As this is something I'm using for function first, I'll accept that error.
As a benchmark, I weighed a Lamy Safari with a loaded converter, as well as an empty one (typically, cartridges and convertors hold about 1 mL of ink, though it varies). The loaded pen came in at 18g, and the empty one came in at...18g. It's probably beneath the resolution and accuracy of the scale. Hopefully, 80 pages of notes will show some data.
I'll check in every few months, and post results (the new weight, how many pages were used, and an average number of words on a random sample of pages).
I had a major mess last night.
One of the things on my to-do list that never seems to get any closer to completion is "clean my desk." I'm putting in a dent this morning. One thing I found was a binder of business cards. Most were over ten years old, so I doubt they would be valid. A few were interesting.
For instance, here is the business card from my the group I danced with when I did Irish dancing. This evolved into the group my wife is still with.
I found a card of another pen collector. On the back was a reproduction of an advertisement for a Parker Lucky Curve pen.
One other thing I found was an old, forgotten CD case. At my old job, we had a group of us who liked working together--we called ourselves "Aardvark Labs." Inside, I found a disk we made as our "toolbox"--a collection of random software and drivers we would take around with us. Doing this today, it would all be on a USB flash drive.