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threestaples-fn-ccomp-yellow-01.jpg

Field Notes Color Comparison: Yellow

April 30, 2015

Yellow is not an uncommon color for Field Notes memo books. Almost every year, there’s been a yellow Field Notes from the COLORS series, starting with Packet of Sunshine in 2010. Can you name all the yellow Field Notes so far?

COLORS Editions

Here they are:

  • Packet of Sunshine (Spring 2010)
  • County Fair (Summer 2010)
  • National Crop “Corn” (Spring 2012)
  • Drink Local “Pale Lager“, “Pilsner”, and “India Pale Ale” (Fall 2013)
  • Unexposed (Fall 2014)
  • Two Rivers (Spring 2015)

This is a longer list than white, isn’t it? 

I realize “India Pale Ale” from Drink Local (far left, pictured above) is borderline yellow, being very close to light brown, tan, or even orange but I thought it was close enough to “yellow” that it’d be fun to include. Two Rivers is also included because of its base color, even though it is the only one that’s not completely solid yellow. Again, I thought it shared enough similaries with other yellow books that it deserves to be included. I think that some of these can easily belong in other color groups, so don’t be surprised to see them again in future comparison posts!

threestaples-fn-ccomp-yellow-02.jpg

Texture-wise, I can divide the yellow books into two groups: matte and soft-touch coated. Drink Local and Unexposed covers belong in the latter group, and the rest make up the matte group. County Fair is the only one with the linen texture, with Neenah Sundance Linen as its cover. The other three matte covers, Packet of Sunshine, National Crop’s “Corn,” and Two Rivers, all use French Paper Pop-Tone in “Lemon Drop” in 100#C. I find these Pop-Tone covers pretty special because they’re not simply white stock printed with yellow ink, like in other yellow covers. If you look at at them from the side, you can see that the paper is yellow all the way through.

The three books on the far right are all French Paper Pop-Tone in “Lemon Drop.”

The three books on the far right are all French Paper Pop-Tone in “Lemon Drop.”

Color-wise, I would pick County Fair’s yellow as having the most rich, matte, yellow color, closely followed by the three that use French Pop-Tone. Drink Local’s “Pilsner” is on the dull side for me, and “Pale Lager” looks the lightest. I think of “banana cream” when I look at it. :) The Unexposed’s yellow? That’s like a slap-in-your-face, bright, fluorescent yellow, and I like it the least among the COLORS yellows.

I swear, I happened to be eating that chocolate while taking pictures.

I swear, I happened to be eating that chocolate while taking pictures.

Yellow covers with extra text and graphics on the back. County Fair is the only one printed in gold but it doesn’t look particularly metallic.

Yellow covers with extra text and graphics on the back. County Fair is the only one printed in gold but it doesn’t look particularly metallic.

Other note-worthy differences:

  • Drink Local, National Crop, and County Fair all have “extra” graphics and text, on top of the usual logotype and texts. 
  • All have silver-colored staples, except for Drink Local (gold) and Two Rivers (copper).
  • Soft-touch coated covers have darker inside covers: dark purple in Unexposed’s yellow and dark brown in Drink Locals.
  • Unexposed is the only edition with reticle grid. The rest are regular graph grid.
  • The body paper in all yellow editions have the same weight but Packet of Sunshine is the only one with Boise Offset Smooth 50#T in “White.” The rest use Finch Paper Opaque Smooth 50#T in “Bright White.” (Older editions tend to use the Boise paper). 
  • The most “yellow” graph grids are found in Packet of Sunshine and Drink Local; the rest are either gray or light brown.
threestaples-fn-ccomp-yellow-11.jpg
Neon Ice Pop (top) and Summer Camp (bottom).

Neon Ice Pop (top) and Summer Camp (bottom).

Non-COLORS Editions

The only other yellow Field Notes in my possession are:

  • Neon Ice Pop (First printing, January 2010)
  • Summer Camp (First printing, May 2011)

They are both from neon, summer-themed editions! I would categorize these as pretty straightforward: outside and inside covers are the same color with no extra graphics or texts, silver staples, and white 50#T innards with graph grid. They both fit in the matte group but their covers are noticeably thinner (French Smart White 80#C printed with yellow inks). And their neon color gives them a much cooler feel, almost light green compared to the rest of the yellow covers. Certainly very different from the “flourescent” yellow from Unexposed, which is warmer and just screams yellow. What I find special about these neon editions is that the body paper is gridded in light blue called “Summer Sky Blue.” Summer Camp is actually one of my favorites, and if it were a COLORS edition, it would place very high in my Field Notes ranking. I might even do a separate post on the subtle differences between Neon Ice Pop and Summer Camp in the future.

From left: Summer Camp, Neon Ice Pop, and Unexposed.

From left: Summer Camp, Neon Ice Pop, and Unexposed.

The only other edition that’s yellow that I am aware of is Capsule Show’s 5th anniversary edition from 2012. I WANT IT. It’s debossed, for goodness sake. *sigh* Well, if you know of any other yellow editions, do chime in!

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Inside covers, not yellow in Drink Local and Unexposed.

Innards, from left: Two Rivers, Unexposed, Drink Local, National Crop “Corn”, County Fair, Packet of Sunshine, Neon Ice Pop, Summer Camp.

Adding Original kraft on the far right!

Adding Original kraft on the far right!

Do you like yellow Field Notes? If so, which is your favorite? For me, it’d be a toss-up between Packet of Sunshine and County Fair. Packet of Sunshine for its sunny-ness (heh) and County Fair for its linen texture. Hm... I wonder if there’ll be any more yellow this year.

In FN Color Comparison Tags field notes, color comparison, national crop corn, silver staples, not COLORS, national crop, copper staples, gold staples, colors, french paper, french paper pop-tone, graph grid, reticle grid, sappi mccoy, new page sterling premium, soft-touch coating, french paper smart white
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Field Notes Colors: National Crop

August 3, 2014

Edited February 3, 2015 to include paper weight information in the Details section.

National Crop Edition is one of my top favorites from Field Notes COLORS. It is a tribute to America's agricultural landscape, with each notebook dedicated to one of the leading crops in America. Considering that Field Notes were originally inspired by promotional memo books that used to be given out to farmers by agricultural companies, it can’t get any more Field Notes-y than National Crop. Field Notes even made a film called From Seed where Aaron Draplin, co-founder of Field Notes, talks about his inspiration and showcases his collection of vintage agricultural memo books. It is a must-see for any Field Notes fan. You can even see some of those memo books that they scanned (30–40K DPI!) in this special archive. And the National Crop fits right in, literally.

Thankfully, one of the local stores had National Crop in stock, so I didn’t have to put too much effort in finding them. I used up all of them, back in 2012 (in order!) and can’t wait to use another set soon.

Would this be enough?

Silver staples

Firsts

National Crop is not the first COLORS edition to come in different colored covers. Mackinaw Autumn, Just Below Zero, Packet of Sunshine and County Fair all had 3 different colors per pack. But National Crop is the first edition that came as a 6-pack. Usually subscribers received two of the same 3-pack, but with National Crop they received one 6-pack. The retail version was no different, and you had to pay more, obviously, than you do for the typical 3-packs, because math.

Six crops: corn, soybeans, hay, wheat, cotton, and sorghum.

Six crops: corn, soybeans, hay, wheat, cotton, and sorghum.

On top of having a different color, each notebook has its own logo on the front representing one of the six crops, and the outside back cover is neatly designed with tons of information and stats on that crop. Much like County Fair, a lot of research went into these! You expect this level of detail from Field Notes, but every time it impresses me no less. I hear that Steve, of Field Notes, did all the research again. Appreciate!

Details everywhere

Details everywhere

Another first for National Crop is that it came packaged in a box. A regular belly band wouldn’t do for all six notebooks! According An Obsessive’s Guide to Field Notes COLORS: Part Four video, this custom “clamshell” box was difficult and costly to make, so they ended up printing more to make it more cost effective. I do remember seeing these on fab.com for awhile… And I managed to get an additional box when I went back to the same local store and found they still had it in stock.

Besides the custom box, this edition came with a fold-out map in matching color and a triangular embroidered patch with the crop logos. Very neat extras, if you ask me.

Hay, wheat, cotton and sorghum

Bottom of the box

National Crop is also the first to get a different item number from the previous COLORS editions. Have you noticed? Earlier editions are simply labeled “FN-01”, which is the same as the Original kraft graph paper 3-packs. But National Crop gets a fancy “FNC-14”, which makes so much more sense because it is indeed the 14th edition in COLORS series. Ever since National Crop, every seasonal edition has been labeled “FNC-##”. Maybe I'll write a separate post on this.

I personally love all six colors used in National Crop (seven if you include the box and the reference map). Something about the combination of the brown ink with the matte texture really hits the spot for me, too. Field Notes went back to using French Paper, and they are my favorite type of Field Notes covers. They just seem more straight-forward, more Field Notes-y, for lack of a better word. Free of any embellishments that are cool or ironic, like Aaron Draplin described the vintage memo books in the film. I don't know, maybe I’m becoming “nostalgic” of the older Field Notes. Anyway, all I’m saying is, these are way up there in my ranking, and I like the colors.

French Paper Co.’s Construction paper samples + Field Notes

French Paper Co.’s Construction paper samples + Field Notes

The specifications in the back inside cover don’t include the exact colors (probably not enough space to do so) but ah ha! I happen to have paper sample booklets from French Paper from years ago, so I was able to identify the names (see below for more details). I was pretty giddy comparing colors and imagining my own custom Field Notes covers while I browsed the samples… as you do.

Some fun (for me) details:

  • National Crop (Spring 2012) is the 14th edition in the COLORS series.
  • Item number: FNC-14
  • Edition size: 7,500 boxes printed April 2012
  • There are 6 books per box, all in French Paper covers, in 6 different colors. They are numbered as follows (I’m guessing the paper weight but I’m 90% sure):
    1. Corn (yellow): French Pop-Tone in “Lemon Drop” (100#C)
    2. Soybeans (light green): French Pop-Tone in “Sour Apple” (100#C)
    3. Hay (beige): French Speckletone in “Natural” (80#C; this cover definitely feels thinner than the rest!)
    4. Wheat (tan): French Construction in “Safety Orange” (100#C)
    5. Cotton (white): French Speckletone in “Starch White” (100#C)
    6. Sorghum (brown): French Construction in “Brick Red” (100#C)
  • Covers: printed in “Our Soil, Our Strength” brown Toyo ink
  • Graph grid inside: “Amber Waves” light brown soy-based Toyo ink
  • Paper inside: Finch Paper Opaque Smooth 50#T in “Bright White”, the usual
  • Extras/Add-ons:
    • “Clamshell” custom box manufactured in Brookston, Indiana by Jessup Paper Box, covered in French Paper Construction in “Factory Green”

    • Fold-out reference map, in the same French Paper’s “Factory Green”
    • Embroidered 3" logo patch
  • Text printed on the inside covers including “Practical Applications” are the same across all six crops.
  • Belly band: none
  • Staples color: silver
  • Film: From Seed ⬅⬅⬅ watch it!

My Favorite Practical Applications:

  • #04. Scarecrow Concepts
  • #16. Secret Fertilizer Formula
  • #21. Corn Maze Diagrams
  • #29. Crop Circle Hoax Ideas
National Crop’s “Amber Waves” light brown grid vs. Original’s “Double Knee Duck Canvas” light brown grid. National Crop is slightly darker, I think.

National Crop’s “Amber Waves” light brown grid vs. Original’s “Double Knee Duck Canvas” light brown grid. National Crop is slightly darker, I think.

You guys, I spent hours on this gif. HOURS.

You guys, I spent hours on this gif. HOURS.

Which crop is your favorite? I think I like Wheat the best. Have you used the embroidered patch? Is your reference map hanging next to your fancy computer right now? :)

In Field Notes Colors Tags field notes, national crop, yellow, green, beige, orange, brown, tan, white, spring edition, graph grid, french paper, silver staples, extras, map, embroidered patch, red, no belly band, national crop corn, national crop soybeans, national crop hay, national crop wheat, national crop cotton, national crop sorghum, french paper construction, french paper speckletone, french paper pop-tone
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February 2015 was HUGE for me, you guys. I got some shout outs directly from Jim Coudal and Field Notes.

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