Paul Rubens Watercolor Journal, 100% Cotton 140 lb (300 GSM) Hot Pressed Watercolor Paper, 20 Sheets Sized 3.8’’ x 5.2’’ Travel Art Journal for Beginners and Experienced Painters (Pink)








Key features
- •Artist Quality 100% Cotton Hot Pressed Watercolor Journal: It's a 140 lb (300 gsm) watercolor notebook. Adopted 100% cotton, it is acid-free and designed to endure, perfect for beginners and experts.
- •Perfect and Compact Size Watercolor Paper: Total 20 sheets included, sized 3.8 inches by 5.2 inches makes it compact enough to put in your pocket and backpack, which can keep your memories alive long after the trip. It's convenient to take this watercolor journal with you wherever you go.
- •Dual-sided Watercolor Paper Notebook: Each sheet of this watercolor paper features a double sided texture, so it offers you up to 40 pages to use. It's also a thread-stitched notebook which makes it possible to remove the middle thread and use it as a larger page, so you can do the wide range painting and panorama on it.
- •Portable & Convenient Design: You can easily tear a piece of paper and put it in the pocket inside back cover. Elastic band attached to back cover keeps journal closed.
- •Satisfaction Guaranteed: We prides ourselves on the high quality of our products, and customer satisfaction is very important to us, so contact us if you have any issues or are unhappy with the product and we will guarantee a resolution.
Paul Rubens Watercolor Journal, 100% Cotton 140 lb (300 GSM) Hot Pressed Watercolor Paper, 20 Sheets Sized 3.8’’ x 5.2’’ Travel Art Journal for Beginners and Experienced Painters (Pink)
List Price: $19.38$17.44DEALYou Save: $1.94 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.5
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
40%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
fun to use
janice Woods✓ Verified Purchase•September 4, 2023
I like it
Accepted glazing, pen work, sealed from leaking, lifting. Overall quality is good!
Kimberly Crick Art✓ Verified Purchase•August 24, 2023
Surface accepted multiple layers of watercolor, technical pen (like micron, with needle-sharp pen tip glided smoothly across the hot-press surface) and lifting (scrubbing/erasing paint) without damage. The rubber type sealing around the edges protects the bottom pages from leaking, but does not keep the paper flat with wet washes. There is a small gap at the top by the binding for you to slide a thin object to separate the sheets later, and I was concerned it might leak there. I did not pay attention to it as I put down a VERY wet wash. The paper underneath was totally clean, so no problem. It handled high water loads very well considering hot press is typically better for detailed low-water applications.
Sadly I am removing one star because this honestly could have been a little better made. The top sheet had a lot of little defects including messy sealant around the edges and some markings here and there. I also do not think the curved edges were a good idea, because the corners should be decently protected by the hardcover anyway. Now I just have more to be careful about trimming away if I want to frame the art later. You barely have a few milimeters to spare when you trim away the curved edges and sealer mess to end up with a picture frame 5"x7" size rectangle.
If you travel, paint during transportation or do urban sketching than this is pretty nice to have. The hard book style surface allows you to even balance a small travel palette on the open flap in your lap if you were tight on space. The paper is hard to remove from the next sheet without a very thin object, not so sure a credit card would not scrape the next sheet, so I used a thinner razor blade. A plastic razor blade would be a safer option and compact enough to throw into your travel pack.
Refill note: I bought the small paper block which I haven't been able to find the Paul Rubens brand refill for in size nor in hot press. However, I did notice that the cold press version of their paper block (also on amazon) could fit into the larger size cover once empty. They are glued in, so you'd have to get to the last page then glue in a new pad. No real easy way to reuse these, though the cover is very nice like a hardbound book. Overall the price is reasonable even if you just replaced the whole thing now and again.
Sadly I am removing one star because this honestly could have been a little better made. The top sheet had a lot of little defects including messy sealant around the edges and some markings here and there. I also do not think the curved edges were a good idea, because the corners should be decently protected by the hardcover anyway. Now I just have more to be careful about trimming away if I want to frame the art later. You barely have a few milimeters to spare when you trim away the curved edges and sealer mess to end up with a picture frame 5"x7" size rectangle.
If you travel, paint during transportation or do urban sketching than this is pretty nice to have. The hard book style surface allows you to even balance a small travel palette on the open flap in your lap if you were tight on space. The paper is hard to remove from the next sheet without a very thin object, not so sure a credit card would not scrape the next sheet, so I used a thinner razor blade. A plastic razor blade would be a safer option and compact enough to throw into your travel pack.
Refill note: I bought the small paper block which I haven't been able to find the Paul Rubens brand refill for in size nor in hot press. However, I did notice that the cold press version of their paper block (also on amazon) could fit into the larger size cover once empty. They are glued in, so you'd have to get to the last page then glue in a new pad. No real easy way to reuse these, though the cover is very nice like a hardbound book. Overall the price is reasonable even if you just replaced the whole thing now and again.
Small yet functional
Qigong Pro✓ Verified Purchase•August 20, 2023
At approx 5.25" x 4" I knew the journal would be small and is not a problem as I want to keep it inside my purse or fanny pack to be able to capture a quick urban sketch on the go.
The paper inside is heavy and has a slight texture that I'd say is somewhere between cold pressed and hot pressed. It takes water well, both sides can be painted on without bleed-through, but it needs to be "worked" a bit first to get each page to lay down flat if you plan to work inside the journal rather than removing individual sheets to work on. I had to go to each page and spread it wide open, forcing it back a bit to lie flat in both directions. Some of the pages had glue that seeped in between them where they attached together making this even more difficult to do. At first I was concerned that the cover might come loose from the signatures from my pressing down and back on the pages and glue, but the paper is held really securely (sewn together and glued) to the book and the pages now lay nicely flat while open.
The pages are perforated to tear them out, which is convenient I guess, but given a choice I'd rather not have them perforated and just work inside the journal and keep it intact.
There is an expanding pocket inside the back cover which is convenient for slips of test paper, color chart, removed pages, etc.
All I need is to add a few watercolor pencils; a water-filled brush; mechanical pencil; and waterproof pen in my fanny pack with the journal and I'm ready to go. Or can keep it all together in a small zip lock plastic bag in my purse.
Three Cons:
-- The pages do not lay down flat and they need to be really "worked" to get them to stay flat. Without doing that first you can't work inside the journal. Journals are meant to be worked inside of without having to tear the pages out. So it's not really a journal, as it is, in my opinion, and the craftsmanship, and excessive glue between pages, leaves much to be desired.
--The first and last pages are partially glued to the inside flap pages, so one side of those pages is not fully usable. I figure I'll use those sides for testing mixed paint colors, or as scratch paper, but not good that two page sides are just wasted like that in such a small journal.
--There's also a ribbon used to mark the spot where you are in the journal. Unfortunately the pages it was placed between have a messy embossed impression where the ribbon was folded back awkwardly inside the journal. The impressions will definitely show up when you apply pigment to the pages. Hopefully it can be camouflaged when I paint on those pages. I don't think the ribbon is necessary and should probably be left out of the journal all together since it has only 20 pages (40 if used double sided).
Overall, I would recommend this since it's pretty inexpensive, a convenient pocket size with a rugged hard cover, and has good 100% cotton paper. When done with it, I can also remove the pages and easily glue my own signatures inside of the cover for a custom-made journal with my preferred paper. I would probably buy it again for myself if it goes on sale, but not as a gift.
The paper inside is heavy and has a slight texture that I'd say is somewhere between cold pressed and hot pressed. It takes water well, both sides can be painted on without bleed-through, but it needs to be "worked" a bit first to get each page to lay down flat if you plan to work inside the journal rather than removing individual sheets to work on. I had to go to each page and spread it wide open, forcing it back a bit to lie flat in both directions. Some of the pages had glue that seeped in between them where they attached together making this even more difficult to do. At first I was concerned that the cover might come loose from the signatures from my pressing down and back on the pages and glue, but the paper is held really securely (sewn together and glued) to the book and the pages now lay nicely flat while open.
The pages are perforated to tear them out, which is convenient I guess, but given a choice I'd rather not have them perforated and just work inside the journal and keep it intact.
There is an expanding pocket inside the back cover which is convenient for slips of test paper, color chart, removed pages, etc.
All I need is to add a few watercolor pencils; a water-filled brush; mechanical pencil; and waterproof pen in my fanny pack with the journal and I'm ready to go. Or can keep it all together in a small zip lock plastic bag in my purse.
Three Cons:
-- The pages do not lay down flat and they need to be really "worked" to get them to stay flat. Without doing that first you can't work inside the journal. Journals are meant to be worked inside of without having to tear the pages out. So it's not really a journal, as it is, in my opinion, and the craftsmanship, and excessive glue between pages, leaves much to be desired.
--The first and last pages are partially glued to the inside flap pages, so one side of those pages is not fully usable. I figure I'll use those sides for testing mixed paint colors, or as scratch paper, but not good that two page sides are just wasted like that in such a small journal.
--There's also a ribbon used to mark the spot where you are in the journal. Unfortunately the pages it was placed between have a messy embossed impression where the ribbon was folded back awkwardly inside the journal. The impressions will definitely show up when you apply pigment to the pages. Hopefully it can be camouflaged when I paint on those pages. I don't think the ribbon is necessary and should probably be left out of the journal all together since it has only 20 pages (40 if used double sided).
Overall, I would recommend this since it's pretty inexpensive, a convenient pocket size with a rugged hard cover, and has good 100% cotton paper. When done with it, I can also remove the pages and easily glue my own signatures inside of the cover for a custom-made journal with my preferred paper. I would probably buy it again for myself if it goes on sale, but not as a gift.
Beautiful Paper!
Mary Brown✓ Verified Purchase•August 16, 2023
This was my first water block I have purchased. I have since ordered 2 more. I am a cold pressed paper girl, but the smoothness and bright white of this paper is gorgeous. If you have thought of trying Paul Rueben's blocks , do so. I am a huge fan.
I love these
IndigoJane✓ Verified Purchase•August 14, 2023
I really like these Paul Rubens watercolor paper blocks, with the pink cover. The paper is excellent quality 140 lb cotton hot press watercolor paper. I'm guessing it is made by Baohong. The cover is just beautiful, which I find motivating, and I don't have any problems knowing how to remove each sheet of paper -- there's a little unglued edge right in the middle of the top of the paper block, next to the spine of the cover. You just slip a letter opener or butter knife or palette knife in that opening, below the top page, and then carefully slice through all the "glued" edges (they aren't really glued, but that's what they are called). The price is extremely reasonable for the quality! I am a repeat purchaser, and I hope the company doesn't stop selling these.
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