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Field Notes Colors: Mackinaw Autumn

May 4, 2017

I’m continuing on my journey to write about every quarterly edition of Field Notes that I have, with a few exceptions. Last time I wrote about Just Below Zero, and for this post, I’m choosing an even older edition, Mackinaw Autumn. As usual, this post will be image- and trivia-heavy, with a summary of specs at the end. Just one post left after this: Night Sky!

Mackinaw Autumn is the fall release of Field Notes from 2009, 4th in their quarterly edition series. It sits right in between Grass Stain Green and Just Below Zero, so you know how old it is. It’s another favorite of mine, for similar reasons that I like Just Below Zero: simple design and a seasonal theme. Field Notes only made 2,500 packs of Mackinaw Autumn. And when it was announced to the mailing list in September 2009, 500 packs they set aside for their website sold out in less than 24 hours, setting a new record at the time. It’s not difficult to see why it was so well-received. It really is, as FN describes it, “like a shrink-wrapped and pressed collection of fall leaves”, with 3 different delicious hues and a name that recalls the fall foliage in northern Michigan.

Firsts

After 34 of these quarterly editions, it’s hard to wrap my head around this but Mackinaw Autumn was the first fall edition. There have been other notable fall editions people often talk about, like Raven’s Wing (2010) and Drink Local (2013), but I think Mackinaw Autumn is the most fall-like one out of them all. I mean, the suggestion is in the name itself, but even without it the three cover colors – red, orange, and brown – evoke the autumn vibe well on their own, especially with the brown ink for the text.

Which leads to the other major “first” in Mackinaw Autumn: it was the first multi-color edition in COLORS. The first three editions (Butcher Orange, Butcher Blue, and Grass Stain Green) were all 3-packs of identical books, but Mackinaw Autumn next got 3 different cover colors in its pack. Perhaps not a flashy “first” by today’s standards but it was a major one, as it paved the way for many, many future multi-color editions (see a list of them somewhere in here). In fact, according to the first COLORS recap video, the crew at Field Notes liked how Mackinaw Autumn turned out so much that they went with the same approach for the following season’s release, Just Below Zero.

Just as with the first three limited editions, Field Notes went with their favorite, Michigan-based French Paper cover stocks for Mackinaw Autumn. Pop-Tone “Tangy Orange” for the red one, Construction “Safety Orange” for light brown, and Pop-Tone “Orange Fizz” for orange. Or as Field Notes calls them “Burnt Red”, “Running-Board Brown”, and “Harvest Moon Orange”, respectively. (They never specified which is which but this is my best guess). According to the aforementioned video, Aaron Draplin, whose family is from northern Michigan, selected these colors for Mackinaw Autumn, and I think they make a very harmonious set. This might shock some fellow FN fans but I’ve never been a big fan of color orange in general. I think it’s just okay but I quite enjoy it in Mackinaw Autumn, especially the “Burnt Red” one, which I’d describe it as red-orange. There’s something about that rich but muted color that lets the wonderful fibrous texture of the matte French Paper shine through and remind me of dried, fallen leaves.

threestaples-fnc-ma-05.jpg

The rest of the features in Mackinaw Autumn are pretty “classic” as I’d like to say, that we see in several of the following COLORS editions (see my Just Below Zero post for elaboration on this). The body paper inside is the then-standard Boise Offset Smooth paper, and for the graph grid, they used the same light brown color “Double Knee Duck Canvas” that’s in the standard kraft memo books. It might seem like an underwhelming color choice for a limited edition but it’d be hard to argue that it doesn’t go well with all the warm colors on the covers.

Light brown graph grid and matte cover. Check out the texture and folds on it.

Simple white belly band with item number FN-01 and “Graph Paper” as the title.

Silver staples

Covers are colored all the way through the paper.

Overall, Mackinaw Autumn is a very straightforward edition without many bells or whistles, but that’s why I like it (see how it fares in my FN ranking here). It has all the simplicity and practicality of the original Field Notes but with the warm, rich shades that I enjoy so much in the fall season. In Mackinaw Autumn, like many other “classic” editions, colors get undivided attention, and I’d love to see Field Notes interpret the fall season with another set of colors.

Same paper (from left): Inside cover of Shenandoah’s “Chestnut Oak”, National Crop’s “Wheat”, Mackinaw Autumn (brown), Mackinaw Autumn (orange), Mackinaw Autumn (red), and Sweet Tooth.

Side Notes

A quick “first” in the COLORS subscription: Field Notes started adding two standard kraft 3-packs (one Graph and one Ruled) as bonus items to the yearly subscription starting with Mackinaw Autumn.

And a few more notes on the cover colors of Mackinaw Autumn. French Paper’s Construction in “Safety Orange” (the light brown one) is also used in National Crop (Spring 2012) much later in the quarterly edition series, in its “Wheat” book. It reappears in the fall of 2015, too, in Shenandoah’s “Chestnut Oak” book as the inner half of its duplex cover (see the photo above). I love how unrecognizable the paper color gets in different contexts, especially if the logotype is printed in a different color, as in the case of Sweet Tooth (Spring 2016) and Mackinaw Autumn’s “red” book. They both use French Paper’s Pop-Tone “Tangy Orange” but Sweet Tooth is printed with red metallic foil, while “Burnt Red” is printed with brown ink. I don’t know how other FN fans feel about it but I personally welcome seeing these old colors reinterpreted in newer editions.

Top row (from left): Nixon (2015), Ambition, Cherry Graph, Drink Local “Bock”, Tournament of Books (2016), Sweet Tooth, Mackinaw Autumn, and Tournament of Books (2015). Bottom row (from left): Arts & Sciences, Red Blooded, Ambition, National Crop “Sorghum”, Drink Local “Amber Ale”, County Fair, and Starbucks Reserve Coffee Origins “Africa”.

From left: Mackinaw Autumn, Butcher Orange, Drink Local “India Pale Ale”, National Crop “Wheat”, Mackinaw Autumn, Original kraft, and Shenandoah “Red Maple”.
 

Mackinaw Autumn (top row) compared to similar but much “bolder” colors and non-solid colors on the bottom row. From left: Expedition, DDC Irregular Issue, Workshop Companion “Electrical”, DDC Pop-Up Shop, Neon Ice Pop, Starbucks Capitol Hill, Unexposed, and TEDx. Some of these are neon, even though they don’t look like it in this picture.

Some Fun (for me) Details

  • Mackinaw Autumn is the 2009 Fall edition of COLORS, the 4th in the series.
  • Item number: FN-01 (later FNC-04)
  • Price: $9.95/pack of 3 books
  • Edition size: 2,500 packs or 7,500 books
  • Printed: according to the old official website, September 2009. Back cover says “7,500, October 2009.”
  • 500 3-packs were available through the FN website.
  • Subscriptions back then were $129, and FN started adding the bonus of 2 3-packs of kraft memo books with Mackinaw Autumn.
  • Printed by: Service Graphics, Inc., Oakbrook Terrace, Ill.
  • Covers: one of each color below, printed with unspecified brown ink:
    • “Burnt Red”: French Pop-Tone in “Tangy Orange” 100#C
    • “Running-Board Brown”: French Construction in “Safety Orange” 100#C
    • “Harvest Moon Orange”:  French Pop-Tone in “Orange Fizz” 100#C
  • Body paper: Boise Offset Smooth 50#T in “White”
  • Graph grid inside (3/16"x 3/16"): “Double Knee Duck Canvas” light brown ink
  • Edition-specific extras: none
  • Belly band: thin, white paper with black ink and title “Graph Paper”
  • Staples color: silver
  • Film: Dum Dah Dee Dum: Field Notes COLORS Subscriptions on Vimeo
  • Film: An Obsessive’s Guide to Field Notes COLORS: Part One (2009) on Vimeo
     

My Favorite “Practical Applications”

“Practical Applications” in Mackinaw Autumn are the same as the ones in the Original kraft books, but there were some suggested ones at the old website, including:

  • Sketches for award-winning Jack-o-Lantern designs
  • Lecture notes and/or Beer Pong tournament brackets
  • Planning for canning and making jams.

 

Related Links

(I can't believe all these links from 2009 still work! Yay!)

Pocket Blonde: Comparing Colors: Field Notes
A very old FN color comparison post (with Mackinaw Autumn) that makes me feel a whole lot better. I’m not alone, and I certainly wasn’t the first.

Scription: Meet Autumn
Another blast from the past but check out Patrick Ng’s beautiful photos of Mackinaw Autumn paired with leaf-shaped sticky notes.

We Love: Field Notes | We Love You So
Mackinaw Autumn was featured at this blog made for the Where The Wild Things Are movie.

Review: Field Notes Mackinaw Autumn | Super Fun Time
A review from a fountain pen user’s perspective.

We Get Mail #1: Field Notes | Flickr (by Keith Bolland)
An “unboxing” photoset of Mackinaw Autumn subscription package.

What are your thoughts on Mackinaw Autumn? And what’s your favorite fall edition from Field Notes so far?

In Field Notes Colors Tags field notes, field notes mackinaw autumn, mackinaw autumn, brown, red, orange, fall edition, graph grid, silver staples
1 Comment

Field Notes Colors: Just Below Zero

April 19, 2017

I’m continuing on my journey to write about every quarterly edition of Field Notes that I have, with a few exceptions. Last time I wrote about Shelterwood, and for this post, I’m choosing a very old one, Just Below Zero. Not quite season-appropriate but hey, it’s about time! After this, there will be only two left: Mackinaw Autumn and Night Sky. As usual, this post will be image- and trivia-heavy, with a summary of details at the end.

Edited April 20, 2017.

threestaples-fnc-jbz-03.jpg

Just Below Zero is the winter release of Field Notes from 2009, 5th in their quarterly edition series (called COLORS back then). With the 35th edition coming up in the summer, Just Below Zero feels like an ancient edition, and it might not look so buzzworthy by today’s standards, but I really love it for its simple winter theme and the “classic” features (I’ll get into these later). It’s also hard to believe that this was almost 8 years ago, and it’s astounding that only 3,000 packs of Just Below Zero were made, while recent editions easily go for 30,000 – 40,000 packs. But it’s clear Field Notes had realized the potential of limited editions (and subscriptions) by then, and JBZ’s edition size was already six times the size of the first COLORS editions (Butcher Orange and Butcher Blue, each 500 packs). Just as its predecessors, Just Below Zero did very well, and 3-packs quickly sold out by the end of November 2009. I didn’t know about Field Notes back then. I only have one pack of JBZ, which I got years later, and I still consider it one of the more special and unique Field Notes editions that I have in my collection.

Firsts

Just Below Zero is old enough that I often think of it as the first winter edition but it wasn’t. Believe it or not, Butcher Orange was released in January 2009 and is considered the 1st winter edition (Winter 2008/2009), but I doubt Field Notes was thinking about seasonal themes at that point. The COLORS series was still in its infancy after all, and it isn’t until Grass Stain Green (Summer 2009) that they even started naming the editions according to their themes, not after paper names. So I view Just Below Zero as the first edition with the cold winter season as its inspiration. And they convey it through matte covers in three “icy” colors: French Dur-O-Tone “Steel Grey”, Pop-Tone “Sno Cone”, and Construction “Steel Blue”. I should note that Just Below Zero is not the first multi-color limited edition: Mackinaw Autumn, which came right before JBZ, was the first. According to the video An Obsessive’s Guide to Field Notes COLORS: Part One, they liked the result of Mackinaw Autumn so much that they decided to do the same thing for the winter edition as well. I’m glad they did.

The insides of the light blue and the dark grey books are printed with the same metallic silver ink used on the outside covers, whereas the medium grey book is printed with a non-metallic gray ink inside.

The only other major “first” in Just Below Zero, besides the wintry theme, is that it was the first time Field Notes used metallic ink on the covers, Pantone 877 specifically. I really love how the silver ink looks on the matte covers, especially on the medium grey book (“Steel Blue”). Except, the combination of that grey paper with the silver ink rendered the smaller text on the inside cover hard to read, so Field Notes ended up going with a non-metallic grey ink (Pantone 422) instead, just for that book. Next time we see metallic ink in COLORS is County Fair less than a year later in summer 2010. It’s often not a big, defining feature in today’s Field Notes, but it definitely was in Just Below Zero, and I cannot imagine it without the metallic ink.

I like how at certain angles, the metallic ink “disappears” into the background color.

More notes on the cover stocks used in Just Below Zero. Dark grey is not so rare in Field Notes, but I don’t think we’ve seen this specific French Dur-O-Tone “Steel Grey” anywhere else (see color comparison pictures far below). As for the light pastel blue book, French Pop-Tone “Sno Cone”, we see this specific paper reused in Two Rivers much later in Spring 2015, and in Point Oh edition (not COLORS though). The third book in JBZ with Construction “Steel Blue”, the medium grey one, is quite a unique color, and to this day it’s my favorite grey Field Notes. It’s really hard to describe the color. I’ve said it’s medium grey but that’s relative to the other two colors in the pack. It could be considered a light grey, and it has a strange blue-greenish tint to it. I love it, especially with the silver ink. The only other time we’ve seen this “Steel Blue” that I’m aware of was in the J.Crew edition, which was made roughly around the same time and featured the same Pantone ink colors used in JBZ. Edit: I spoke too soon. The belly band in the 2015 edition of XOXO Field Notes seems to be made with the same “Steel Blue” cover stock.

Oh, look what we have here? XOXO 2015 (left) and Just Below Zero (right) with the “Steel Blue” book on the top.

No fancy belly band with the “Just Below Zero” name here. Just a plain white one with the title “Graph Paper” and item number FN-01.

“Classic” Features

Other features that Just Below Zero shares with many other early quarterly editions:

  • matte French Paper covers (County Fair is the first to break the pattern).
  • silver staples (America the Beautiful gets copper staples in Spring 2013)
  • graph grid (Fire Spotter in Fall 2011 gets dot grid)
  • “Practical Applications” are not edition-specific; they’re the same as the ones in the Original kraft (County Fair again breaks this pattern).
  • Innards are Boise Offset Smooth in 50#T in “White” (Balsam Fir is the first with the now-usual Finch Paper Opaque Smooth).
  • The belly band is plain white with generic title “Graph Paper” and item number FN-01 (County Fair is the first one with its own custom belly band)

Another fun fact: the Specifications in the back cover of Just Below Zero say the corners are rounded to 3/8" (6.4 mm) but the correct conversion should be 9.5 mm. You see this in many other earlier editions, and it isn’t corrected until Balsam Fir in winter 2010 (later printings of County Fair are also corrected). Edit: this 6.4 mm seems to originate from 1/4", which was the original radius Field Notes used in the very early days, even before Butcher Orange.

Silver staples

Graph grid in “Frostbite” blue-grey ink

Gray-ish graph grid comparison, counter-clockwise from top: Sciences book from Arts & Sciences (with grid in “Academy Gray”), Original Graph (“Double Knee Duck Canvas”), Snowblind (“Hoar Frost”), XOXO 2015 (“Late Season Snowpack”), Just Below Zero (“Frostbite”), American Tradesman (“Spacious Skies”), County Fair (“Babe the Blue Ox Underbelly” light blue), Red Blooded (light gray), and Coal x DDC (“Puget Sound Gray”). 

Quick color comparison, from left: Pitch Black, Night Sky, Arts & Sciences, Just Below Zero, Byline, Lootcrate, Just Below Zero, and DDC Pop-Up Edition

Quick color comparison! Top row, from left: Point Oh, Just Below Zero (both French Pop-Tone “Sno Cone”), Flight Log (French Dur-O-Tone “Butcher Extra Blue”), Flagged by Ellen (French Pop-Tone “Berrylicious”), Sweet Tooth (French Pop-Tone “Blu Raspberry”). Bottom row, from left: DDC Pop-Up Edition, Just Below Zero (French Construction “Steel Blue”), Lootcrate, and Nixon (2015).

Some fun (for me) details

  • Just Below Zero is the 2009 winter edition of COLORS, the 5th in the series.
  • Item number: FN-01 (later FNC-05)
  • Price: $9.95/pack of 3 books
  • Edition size: 3,000 packs or 9,000 books
  • Printed: according to the old website, September 2009. Back cover says “9,000, January, 2010.”
  • 750 3-packs were available through the FN website.
  • Only 200 subscriptions were available starting with Just Below Zero, at $129 each.
  • Printed by: Service Graphics, Inc., Oakbrook Terrace, Ill.
  • Covers: one of each color, printed with Pantone 877 metallic silver on the outside and inside:
    • Dark grey: French Dur-O-Tone in “Steel Grey” 100#C
    • Light blue: French Pop-Tone in “Sno Cone” 100#C
    • Medium grey: French Construction in “Steel Blue” 100#C (inside cover in this book is printed with Pantone 422 grey ink)
  • Body paper: Boise Offset Smooth 50#T in “White”
  • Graph grid inside (3/16"x 3/16"): blue-grey ink in “Frostbite”
  • Edition-specific extras: none
  • Belly band: thin, white paper with black ink and title “Graph Paper”
  • “Practical Applications” are the same as the ones in the Original kraft books.
  • Staples color: silver
  • Film: Dum Dah Dee Dum: Field Notes COLORS Subscriptions on Vimeo
  • Film: An Obsessive’s Guide to Field Notes COLORS: Part One (2009) on Vimeo

Just Below Zero embodies all the reasons that made me fall in love with Field Notes COLORS a long time ago: understated design with simply-executed seasonal theme and colors that are timeless and versatile. It’s still one of my favorite winter editions, along with Balsam Fir and Northerly. No wonder it’s in the top 10 of my Field Notes rankings. I’d love to see another edition like this, especially the “Steel Blue” color. Are you one of the early Field Notes fans that scored Just Below Zero? How do you like it now, compared to when you first got it?

In Field Notes Colors Tags field notes, just below zero, field notes just below zero, gray, dark gray, light blue, winter edition, graph grid, french paper, french paper construction, french paper pop-tone, french paper dur-o-tone, silver staples
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