Have you ever, gentle blog-reader, found yourself in one of those giant stores that caters for offices? Have you wandered into the aisle that's lined with paperclips of every hue, size and kind – striped, plastic-covered, metal, circular... Little pots for holding pens. Bulldog clips! Transparent folders. Box folders. Folders with clips. Folders – sorry, I have to wipe drool away – with a metallic sheen, in silver, green, purple, blue.
There are
those little round paper rings for reinforcing the hole in the paper that fits
into folders with ring-clips. Is there a
dynasty somewhere, grown rich on the manufacture and sale of little sticky
paper rings?
Envelopes
of every colour and size, padded and unpadded, self-sealing and ones you have
to lick. Pens! Oh, the pens.
I hardly ever write with a pen anymore, but oh, the appeal of the pens. Roller-ball, felt, glitter, calligraphy...
With special nibs!
I don't
think it's just me, or even just writers.
Not long after I first met my partner, I asked him for a lift to a big
stationary store, so I could bring home some heavy boxes of typing paper in his
car. In the store a sort of rapture came
over him and he drifted from aisle to aisle, examining paper and card of different
weights, storage boxes of every kind for storing every kind of thing, rulers,
compasses, calculators, coloured inks, ledgers, portfolios (WITH AND WITHOUT
INNER POCKETS)... In a dreamy, wondering
voice, he said “I didn't know places like this existed...!” Yet another benefit to him of knowing
me. And soon he was returning reguarly,
alone, to look at the big set-squares, the highlighter pens and the wall
charts.
I've have
other friends, quite unconnected to writing, to whom I've said, “I just need to
nip into the stationary store...” and they've been visibly thrilled. “Oh, I'll come in with you,” they've said, a
little too quickly and eagerly. And once
through the doors, they've slipped away to finger the mouse-mats and the
desk-tidies, perhaps bought themselves a new pencil or a block of post-it notes
in that hard-to-come-by shade of chartreuse, which will make them the envy of
their work-colleagues.
Why do
office supplies have this allure?
Where's the evolutionary basis?
In all essentials we are still, we're told, the hunter-gatherers of the
Ice Age. It makes sense, then, that the
sight of three red deer stags picking their way past me to reach a river should
rivet me to the spot. But why does a
fixture full of envelopes, with or without windows, in buff, cream or white,
have the same effect? What would Ice-Age
man do with envelopes?
15 comments:
Hi
I was a full time musician in an earlier life. Try to get me past a musical instrument store!
If you love reading (or writing), then a love of the raw materials is understandable. Why do we put so much effort in to mimicking paper backgrounds etc on e-readers? Also as children, we often had our first steps toward literacy with a crayon and a piece of paper and even if we only scribbled.
Shared experience ? That's how our brains are wired. Look at the video-link on this webpage for some thought provoking stuff - http://manxman.ch/moodle2/mod/resource/view.php?id=133
manxli
Worship them, perhaps?
Oh and BTW,
talking of early years shared experience, I still can't pass a model railway shop and even at 58 years of age!
:o)
Padded envelopes,turned inside out so the bubble wrap was outermost, and stitched together with sabre-toothed cat gut(sorry Blott) could make an excellent neolithic anorak - or a duvet for those frosty nights in the cave.
Judith Key
Made me LOL, Judith!
I thought it was just me! I had an hour in Plymouth last week and two things I needed from M and S - got diverted by all the temptations in the Paperchase window,and that was that.
LOL. Nearly as compulsive as bookshops ...
Hope Blot is OK and not trapped in the attic?
ah, but don't you just ADORE the smell of a Kindle? er...no
How could you? Living in a town with several shops* that sell stationery, I try not to go through their doors.
And then the paper sits there, and you haven't actually written any words on it, and the folders have not by themselves tidied the office, and there is never a notebook of just the right weight to take on the holiday or size for the bag AND the zillions of words you might write . . .
Stationery is a lure and a distraction!
Ps * = Sorry for long sentence. Could not bring myself to write the words "stationery outlets".
Spot the stationary stationery ...
Carrying on with the music, it's not only about paper
See http://www.manxman.ch/moodle/
Sorry for the play on words!
Manxli
My husband once told me that he had finally identified my vice, and it was paper. But hardware stores are just as bad or worse.
Can I come, Sue? Yes - I adore stationary. Those thick, blank, smooth wads of paper - those pristine noteboooks - those rolls of golden sellotape - those shapely erasers with that clean, dusty, new mushroom bloom... Mmmmmmm....
Steady on Kath!
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