Faboratory Engineering Notebook - Blank Pages

$60.00

These professional grade Engineering Notebooks are essential for recording engineering notes, drawings, and intellectual properties. With high quality, blank, sequentially numbered pages, these books are exceptionally reliable and easy to use for a variety of disciplines.

  • Made in the USA

  • 240 pages

  • 8” x 10”

  • Hardbound book with durably coated

  • Foil stamped with “Faboratory” on front cover

  • Smyth sewn -- book lies flat when open, professionally bound

  • Tamper-evident, archival quality, acid-free paper

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These professional grade Engineering Notebooks are essential for recording engineering notes, drawings, and intellectual properties. With high quality, blank, sequentially numbered pages, these books are exceptionally reliable and easy to use for a variety of disciplines.

  • Made in the USA

  • 240 pages

  • 8” x 10”

  • Hardbound book with durably coated

  • Foil stamped with “Faboratory” on front cover

  • Smyth sewn -- book lies flat when open, professionally bound

  • Tamper-evident, archival quality, acid-free paper

These professional grade Engineering Notebooks are essential for recording engineering notes, drawings, and intellectual properties. With high quality, blank, sequentially numbered pages, these books are exceptionally reliable and easy to use for a variety of disciplines.

  • Made in the USA

  • 240 pages

  • 8” x 10”

  • Hardbound book with durably coated

  • Foil stamped with “Faboratory” on front cover

  • Smyth sewn -- book lies flat when open, professionally bound

  • Tamper-evident, archival quality, acid-free paper

 

History

Leonardo Da Vinci (1452-1519) was an Italian Renaissance architect, musician, inventor, engineer, sculptor, and painter. He is widely considered to be one of the greatest painters of all time and perhaps the most diversely talented person ever to have lived. His notebooks contain diagrams, drawings, personal notes, and observations, providing a unique insight into how he saw the world.

Leonardo seems to have begun recording his thoughts in notebooks from the mid-1480s when he worked as a military and naval engineer for the Duke of Milan. None of Leonardo's predecessors, contemporaries or successors used paper quite like he did — a single sheet contains an unpredictable pattern of ideas and inventions — the workings of both a designer and a scientist.

The notebooks contain careful sketches and diagrams annotated with notes in 16th-century Italian mirror writing, which reads in reverse and from right to left. The mirror writing has caused much speculation. Was Leonardo trying to ensure that only he could decipher his notes? Or was it simply because he was left-handed and may have found it easier to write from right to left? Writing masters at the time would have made demonstrations of mirror writing, and his letter-shapes are in fact quite ordinary: he used the kind of script that his father, a legal notary, would have used. It is possible to decipher Leonardo's curious mirror writing, once the eye has become accustomed to the style.

Leonardo probably worked on loose sheets of paper (bought at one of Milan's many stationers' shops), which he carried about with him to record his observations. His papers were at some stage folded into booklets and later bound, possibly under the ownership of the Spanish sculptor Pompeo Leoni (1533 – 1608). The five notebooks in the V&A's collection are bound into three codices (a bound book made up of several pages) called the Forster Codices, after John Forster who bequeathed them to the Museum in 1876. The codices are not bound in any logical order and only one, Codex Forster I.1, carries any indication of when it was made.

 
 
Faboratory Engineering Notebook - Grid Pages
$60.00