Happy National Pencil Day to our American friends!
To celebrate the USA’s National Pencil Day I want to reheat some of the previous content:
You might remember the link to Staedtler’s Mandala creator from the bestselling Noris blog post. Unfortunately, the shapes available have nothing to do with stationery, so I put some circles and hexagons together to make them look like pencils, plus something that is supposed to be a fountain pen nib. In case you really want to colour this in, here’s a link to the PDF.
Description: A mug with a Shakespeare quote – outside red and inside white.
This is how the other side of the mug looks like.
Price: Unknown
Material: Ceramic
Further information: My employer has an Open Day today, so I’m at work [1]…instead of being at home marking the assignments I have to return on Monday 8^/ and have just noticed that the table next to ours has pencils as freebies (we have luggage tags, ball point pens etc) that are presented in a nice mug.
I think I read about the Ingersoll version of the Field Notes notebooks in the past, but I only really paid attention to them after Jinnie retweeted a tweet from ROY . Tempting. I had a quick look on the web, but wasn’t able to find out what paper is being used for these ..and ordered anyway. BTW, Ingersoll is a watch company.
£9.95 or $9.95?
I can’t tell you what I paid yet. I’ll need to wait for the credit card bill. When I ordered it first said £9.95, then $9.95. the price has since been raised to £10. I then got an email telling me I got charged £8.29. I guess there’s a glitch in their online system.
£8.29?
The notebooks only took a few days to arrive. Here’s a little video.
Well, it turns out the paper in the Ingersoll is nearly the same as the paper in the original Field Notes: Finch Paper Opaque, but instead of 50#T “Bright White” it’s 60#T “Bright White” (Update:Mark Cohen let me know that this is the same paper as used in the Shenandoah notebooks). I think I like all other Field Notes papers I know more than the Finch Opaque, so this came as a bit of a disappointment.
Overall this is more or less a black version of the Original Field Notes, but the staples are white, the paper is thicker and also seems whiter and less yellow than Original. I am not sure whether I am imagining this, whether this is down to age, whether the paper change over time or whether this is down to ‘natural’ tolerances (both papers are called “Bright White” after all, so the same name implies they are the same colour.
There’s one way to find out: Check and compare the papers. As usual, I use R to do that (R is free). For a change I show you the commands I use.
To test it I followed the usual procedure explained here: The pencil lead used has a nominal diameter of 0.7mm and an actual diameter of 0.68mm (more info about nominal vs actual diameters can be found here). This is equivalent to a surface area of 0.36mm². A force of 1.5N is used, which, in this case, is equivalent to 4.17 MegaPascals for this surface area.
I convert the sample to numbers using this function.
vioplot is like the original violplot, but is not so demanding when it comes to how data is formatted [1]After comments on Facebook from Logan Lay and others I have changed to colour of the violin plots from the default magenta to green..
As you can see the 60#T Ingersoll paper is whiter as the violin plot starts higher (Y axis top is white, bottom is black), but lead leaves a darker line. This is so different for a paper that you’d expect to be more similar that I wanted to take a new sample in an old Original Field Notes with 50#T Finch Opaque paper. In the plot labelled as “Opaque 2”.
In the next plot this new sample is labelled “Opaque 2”.
Mean and quartiles of the new sample on old 50#T paper were more similar to the original sample than to the Ingersoll 60#T paper sample, but the tails are much longer, meaning that there is a small number of lighter and darker values at the extreme ends of the sample.
Top to Bottom (all Finch): Ingersoll 60#T, Original 50#T, Fine (Left is dark, right is light)
Why is that? I could think of many reasons. Hot candidates for the inconsistency (other than the paper) are the scanner (the bulb’s performance, differences after software updates), the way the pressure is applied or the consistency of the lead.
In the end, independent of which 50#T sample you look at, the 60#T paper used in the Ingersoll notebook still seems to be able to produce a darker line.
Let’s check whether there is a statistically significant difference between the different samples.
The Tukey test puts into numbers what could already be seen earlier: the difference between the two 50#T samples’ means is quite small, even though they look different. The difference when comparing the Opaque 1 and the Opaque 2 sample to the Ingersoll sample is bigger (diff > 0.1).
When comparing the different papers with each other p is always so small that it is displayed as 0, so the differences between the different papers are significant. This doesn’t come as a surprise as the are different samples after all and as far as I understand Tukey isn’t really made to check whether the similarity between samples is coincidence or not.
A colleague (thanks Tatjana) showed me this way of visualising the difference:
The big question is: Can you create closer samples from the same paper if you have good enough equipment? …or is that just impossible, because the lead is not consistent and each sheet of paper is slightly different. I guess there is room to improve, but not with my simple means.
White staples
I don’t really know much about statistics. I normally don’t use statistics for my job, but have tried to learn R in the last years. If you have found any mistakes I would be happy if you let me know so that I can improve.
This morning, when I went to the lecture theatre to give a class for my second year undergraduate students, I made an unusual discovery.
Someone forgot two vintage gold-nibbed fountain pens on the computer station. Shock!
Well, one of the fountain pens is not in such a good state, but it is still a gold-nibbed fountain pen. The other pen seems to be in great shape for its age.
I took them to my office, have checked the timetabling system and have emailed all staff who used the room in the last week in the hope that these treasures can be reunited iwth their rightful owner.
I had had lost my fountain pens I would be devastated, so I hope the owner can be found soon.