Souvenir Guide · Stationery

Hobonichi, Midori & Traveler’s Notebook —
Japan’s Cult Notebooks and Which One Is Yours

The Planner Cult · MD Paper · The Leather Journal · Where to Buy


Why People Fly Home with Notebooks

Japan’s notebook culture produced three objects with genuine global cults — each answering a different question about what a notebook is for. All three cost meaningfully less in Japan, come in Japan-only editions, and make the kind of souvenir people use every day for a year.


📔 Hobonichi Techo — The Life Companion

A page per day on featherweight Tomoe River paper that takes fountain-pen ink like a dream; part diary, part planner, part shrine of tiny daily drawings. The cult runs on the cover ecosystem — hundreds of fabric and collab designs — and the January-start editions sell from September. Buy at Loft, Itoya, or the Hobonichi flagship spaces; Japan-exclusive covers are the flex.

📓 Midori MD Notebook — The Paper Purist

No branding, cream MD paper, lies flat, costs little: the notebook as perfect tool. The A5 grid is the standard first buy; the cotton-paper MD Cotton variant is the connoisseur’s. Midori’s brass pens, clips and rulers extend the aesthetic — the giftable “desk of a calm person” starter kit.

🧭 Traveler’s Notebook — The Romantic

A slab of Chiang Mai leather, an elastic band, refillable inserts — designed in Tokyo (Traveler’s Company, ex-Midori) as a journal that ages with its owner. The Traveler’s Factory stores (Nakameguro flagship, Tokyo Station, Narita) sell exclusive charms, refills and station-stamp culture; the Nakameguro shop alone justifies the pilgrimage — fold it into a Nakameguro afternoon.


Which One Is Yours?

Daily-ritual people: Hobonichi. Fountain-pen and minimalism people: MD. Travel-journal and patina people: Traveler’s. Buying for someone else and unsure: MD A5 — nobody has ever resented perfect paper.

Where to Buy

Loft and Itoya stock all three (see the store guide); Traveler’s Factory for the exclusives; airport branches for the forgotten-gift save. Tax-free applies over ¥5,000 — a threshold this category clears with frightening ease.

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