Here are some handy tips on making an already useful Moleskin notebook even more useful - my favorite "Pencil sharpener. Two pieces of sandpaper, couse for wood, fine to sharpen the lead to a nice point. Sticky back tape the sandpaper to the back of your notebook." Link.
Moleskine notebook hacks
Here are some handy tips on making an already useful Moleskin notebook even more useful - my favorite "Pencil sharpener. Two pieces of sandpaper, couse for wood, fine to sharpen the lead to a nice point. Sticky back tape the sandpaper to the back of your notebook." Link.
Recent Entries
- Make: Holiday Gift Guide 2009: Mischief Maker's Gift Guide
- Grounding tips for mixed signal PCBs
- Virgil England's fantasy-land
- Novation Launchpad teardown
- Laptop Etch-a-Sketch via Arduino & Processing
- iPhone macro lens carousel
- New in the Maker Shed: OLLO kits
- BlueSMiRF found in credit card sniffer
- Mystery iPhone musical instrument - World's most expensive ocarina
- Stained glass d20s
Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
Leave a comment
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!
Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.
$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)




































Shame they couldn't get the name of the notebooks right.
It's Moleskine, with an 'e' on the end.
Reply to this comment
My first thought was "Moleskin covered notebook? Interesting mod. But that can't be a good idea, having a pair of devices to create pencil shavings attached to your notebook." The last thing I want getting into the guts of my notebook is highly conductive dust.
Then I read TFA and realised that it was not about notebook computers but analog note books. (i.e. the ones made from a stick an' a log).
Yes, using sandpaper as a pencil sharpener is a good idea, but methinks the term "Hack" is a bit of a stretch in this instance.
Reply to this comment
That's actually how the brand name is spelled, smartypants.
Reply to this comment