Planet Earth Notebook
There is something quietly arresting about this notebook. The cover is plain black hardback no title, no branding, nothing to distract. Just a circular cut-out, punched cleanly through, revealing a full-colour photograph of Earth as seen from space. The effect is immediate: you are looking through a window, and on the other side is the whole world.
It is the kind of object that stops people mid-reach and makes them pick it up. Which is, of course, exactly the point.
Designed by Yee-Ling Wan, a Central Saint Martins graduate with years of product development experience across London and Hong Kong, the Planet Earth Notebook is part of Suck UK's Orbit collection a series of space-themed stationery that takes the cosmic seriously without tipping into novelty. The design is restrained. The idea does the work.
Inside, 192 grid-lined pages offer a versatile, well-considered writing surface. The grid format suits everything from structured note-taking and project planning to sketching, bullet journaling, and margin-heavy reading notes.
At A5 (148 x 210mm), it sits comfortably in a bag or on a desk - large enough to be genuinely useful, compact enough to travel with you.
The paper is fully recycled, and the product is entirely plastic-free, packaging included. These aren't afterthoughts bolted on for optics Suck UK builds sustainability into the material specification at the design stage. The cardboard cartons are produced from partially or fully recycled paper and are fully recyclable.
This is a notebook that rewards being used. The cover image Earth rising against the dark has a way of putting things in perspective each time you open it. It makes a considered gift for someone who appreciates good design, thoughtful stationery, or simply the view from 400 kilometres up.
Specifications:
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Format: A5 hardback (148 x 210mm)
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Pages: 192 grid-lined pages
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Cover: Black hardboard with circular die-cut revealing Earth photograph
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Paper: Fully recycled
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Packaging: Plastic-free, fully recyclable
- Designed by Yee-Ling Wan for Suck UK, London