And med lab techs too! A lot of us carry around a lot of special pens that we love and supply ourselves. The office supplies that are supplied are crap. Papermate and generic stuff.
@@EmelyPhan probably a lot of the same. We use a lot of sharpie/permanent marker extra fine pens for labelling stuff. I’m a fan of Sarasa and Uniball signos for basic everyday pens.
I thought of healthcare as a separate major from science. My stationery needs for health sciences (biology, anatomy, physiology) differed from the physical sciences I also needed (chemistry and physics). I needed more colors for diagrams, and I used many colors of the Zebra Sarasa gel pens for note-taking and studying. You had some sticky notes, but I needed a TON of tape flags and page points for marking in textbooks and notebooks.
Custom keyboards are the "school supplies" for CS or CE majors. Though I'll still never leave for class without Tombow black plastic erasers and a Zirconium Tactile Turn pencil on me. Stationery is so nice.
Environmental Science majors next!!! We’re always doing fieldwork in the wilderness, and would love recommendations for sturdy, dirt-resistant and especially water-proof stationery (especially notebooks or paper!). The science majors bit was really helpful too! Definitely getting a Multi Ball Rollerball for labelling samples. :D
Thanks for your suggestion! In the meantime, you might like our guides to Every Day Carry Stationery and The Best Pens for the Lab: www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Everyday-Carry-Stationery-Items/pt/46 www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Pens-for-the-Lab/pt/212
Get a damn slate board with sand paper(400grit and higher) and pencils. Never bring paper to the field if possible. Learned that the hard way. All it takes is some rain or mud, and your research data is fucked
One for Architecture students -- might be a hybrid of the Engineering, Business and Art sets, but it would be great to see how you can make a distinct set for Architecture.
Architecture and design students would need a dedicated video! Fineliners pens, pencils, erasers, Copic markers, steel ruler, T-square, post-its, drawing paper, trace paper, loose paper storage, journals, masking tape, pins, caffeine pills, drawing board, poster storage, and a dozen other things I've since forgotten since those days at uni. Would love to see what Jetpens can pull together for the aspiring designer.
Yeah, I think all STEM majors really like the mech pencils w built in large, twist up erasers. Having a separate large eraser is good, but having a built in one is better.
I'm an older non-traditional student about to start med school and the new meta is "nobody takes handwritten notes anymore, it's all about Anki spaced repetition" to memorize the sheer amount of information we get in a short time span. THOUGH THAT DOESN'T STOP MEEEE lol I have my stash of markers/gel pens/fountain pen+inks to keep my planner company year round. About to invest in a gold nib FP *v*
I’m a non-trad too! High five! I get teased about writing notes by hand too sometimes (mainly because I write in cursive, heh), but it works for me! I also get migraines, so screentime isn’t always viable. Do what works for you!
@@natmickan It usually means college students who are not the typical age. So, usually in the USA, people ~traditionally~ start college when they’re around 18. I’m 36, and I’ve met students who were even older. This is much more common in community colleges (which is where I’m going) than in universities. Sometimes Non-trad students are parents or even retired people who are going back to college to finish a degree they had to drop when they had kids, or even are looking for an entire career change. I’ve also met non-trad students who were immigrants or army vets. Every non-trad students’ story is different! But basically, we’re old fogies. 😜
@@Q.Q.Kachoo ooh, interesting, in Australia we call them “mature age” students. I assumed from maggiesaus’ comment that they were a mature age student (from the ‘older’ part), but thought that non-trad was possibly a reference to studying offline/from home rather than on campus. It never occurred to me that the tradition was the age rather than the learning method! Thanks for the info :)
i think you should cover humanities! I'm a sociology and aquatic biology student (a double major, ripp) so I'd love to see maybe some general kit ideas or a set good for both? or just for humanities, since thats what i seem to do the most :')
Graphic Design for Print majors do a lot with art and math so that images are sharp and clean. Being able to use really fine pens and pencils is a must for sketching designs for clients. Architect majors are a combination of Art, Science, and Math.
You greatly overlooked how much reports and assignment papers we engineers submit. Our best friends most of the time are staplers, hole punchers and ruler
What about design majors (ie. interior design, arch, industrial design, graphic design etc)? I am curious in seeing what they come up with cause I have a design diploma.
As someone who retired from a business where I prepared bids for our company I don't think you can do better than a Pilot Metropolitan mechanical pencil.
the mnemosyne notebook is sadly not suited for lab use. The most important tool in any lab is the journal. Everything you do needs to be documented in a journal with non removable and numbered pages.
I'd like to see some stationary for foreign language or library & information science majors! Library science is mostly digital nowadays, but the physical is all about archival quality materials that won't fade or fall apart :)
Linguistics would be fun to see: syntax, phonology, and morphology can be very formulaic like a science/math hybrid with elements of anthropology, sociology, psychology, and even computing when you include computer languages/programs.
You should make a video about stationary supplies for teachers as well. We have to carry lots of "weapon of mass education", USB for data backup, different colour pens for marking tests, or even laptops, around.
Meanwhile, as a composer, I have a BUNCH of fountain pens, a couple manuscript notebooks, and a burning desire for fountain pen friendly music paper. I guess you could do a music major one?
Oooooh I am very curious: do any of your pens have a music nib? Is that actually useful for composing or have the nibs changed? Not a composer, but a choir nerd 😁 and stationery lover.
@@lefthandedclogger technically, the Noodler's Triple Tail is my only music nib (with 2 slits, 3 tines). I do use stub/italic nibs for composing, and I have an architect nib that's good for that too. I want to get a Franklin-Christoph music nib at some point.
Any recommendations for manuscript paper? I had a brand I loved (cream colored with green staves - pencil marks absolutely popped off the page) but it is no longer made.
@@rebeccawilkinson1846 Hmm...it depends on what you want. If you are not using fountain pen, there are many options. The Archives brand paper looks pretty good and has cream colored paper. I think D'addario makes it?
@@Symphing12 I have used Archives before and, yes, that is probably my best option now. I really miss the green staves. That was magic element. Maybe someday I'll run across a stash in an estate sale.
As a previous bio major, I can confirm that I care about organization and archival quality inks. A pen that can write directly on falcon pens is ALWAYS a winner in my book Would love to see one for language majors too! I was a French double major :D
I'm a chem major finishing my degree in Chemistry, I love the pens you suggested but the notebook wouldn't be allowed in a lab due to the spiral bound paper. Also the permanant marker should be erasable with acetone for hood write-ups and quick calculations, would be super helpful however for writing on disposable glassware! My last order with JetPens was; Nomadic's PE-09 Flap Type Pencil Case Zebra DelGuard Type-GR 0.5mm Zebra Sarasa Mark On Gel Pen 0.4mm Tombow Mono Study Eraser Sun-Star Grid Shitajiki Writing Board Uni JetStream Ballpoint Pen 0.7mm Gel Grip Series Pilot Color Eno Erasable Mechanical Pencil 0.7mm Red & Blue
5:17 I think the blue and black (markers?) would be more appealing if the labels were less busy, so to speak, and more minimalistic in overall appearance.
Pls make a part 2!!! This is entertaining---Imma go to csun--- as an art student but my supplies have accumulated so I will hold back on buying for now!!!
As a former IT student I didn't need much stationary. Didn't stop my pencil case overflowing goodies though (many from my former design degree)! All I had was an A5 sketch pad, fineliners, pencils, eraser and whiteboard markers.
1:56 I didn't quite make it into Pi Epsilon Nu Honor Society myself (I had some railroading on my fountain-pen final). But we were all very proud of Sarah when she did, as was the whole town of Pencil-"Where grades matter." Since you have word cards and steno-lined pads (good for vocabulary), highlighters for color coding, progress planners for Gantt charts, and other products that are good for language learning, how about foreign-language major for a sequel video?
Colored pens made a huge difference in my physics based engineering classes like statics. Being able to differentiate between what information on a problem is given and what needed calculated myself made it easy to follow the steps on how to solve a problem.
I built my own economic keyboard as a computer science major to make sure my hands were comfy after long programming sessions, but I noticed that my basic cheap pencils weren't good for all my writing either in my calculus classes so I had to get some good ones from jetpens. Also those Japanese sliding binders are so much better than the crappy 3 ring metal ones we have in the US.
As a math major myself, I've never used a graphing calculator, nor have i ever seen anyone in any of my classes using one, they aren't of much use anyway for any subject that isn't calc 1 & 2
@@lefthandedclogger we typically use ballpoint pens and normal printer paper so far... i'm a huge fan of gel and fountain pens, so there's that! everything has to be sleek and professional while also being hassle free
Accounting and tax law, please. Pens that write quickly with good, fast drying ink flow, tabs that can be moved are see through and you can write on them, erasable pens, highlighters that don't bleed or mess up printer ink, notebooks for organization. Staplers, clips, correction tape, sticky notes! Oh and I'm left handed.
Lefty here! I didn’t major in those fields but I do love stationery! Top pen picks for me: pentel energel or zebra sarasa for gel pen, uni jetstream for a ballpoint, frixion highlighters and pens - both erasable, as lefties tend to accidentally over-highlight!
A video for woodworker stationary? Believe it or not woodworker use a lot of stationery: mechanical pencil, ruler 📏, permanent marker , protractor etc .
What about film, animation, and other visual media majors? We need stuff for notes during lectures, drawing storyboards, sketchbooks for concept art…and some of us (coughMecough) like to take notes and draw sketches while they’re watching movies and documentaries.
If you get one graph and one blank Mnemosyne you’re set! A plastic cover with a sturdy cardboard back (I add a bulldog or giant binding clip to turn it into a clipboard), smooth pages with perforation and labels, and they lay flat for scanning. They’re pretty big though so I have a tiny Rhodia or Leuchtturm that lives in my pocket and goes everywhere with me. If you number the pages you can reference back and forth between all three! I also have a Kuru Toga pencil, a Pilot Kakuno and a Pentel brush pen at all times - you might want to have a grey marker like a Tombow for shading too, especially if you like copying movie frames. My animation teacher also used a music notebook for planning short films - you can time your frames to dialogue or sound with it and it’s an amazing trick! Sorry for the novel, I got excited by your question 😅
As an anthropology major, I'd love to see recommendations for someone who studies/works in the social sciences and in the field (like archaeology, environmental sciences, etc). Durable tools that take you from field to classroom or office. Portability, multifunctional, MEASURING TOOLS
Computer science major: taking notes in class (I still do it by hand, but many also use their laptops), lots of assignments to keep track of, and always need to have a way to write down sudden 'oh that's how I fix that bug' ideas since those happen at the weirdest times and places. I myself use twsbi eco fountain pens combined with a kokuyo campus binder set (1 slider, 1 notebook like one) so I have 1 notebook for all my notes and can keep notes of previous courses organised at home. In the binder is some weekly planner paper, for keeping track of assignments, and dotted line paper so I can draw tables. Computer science books are scarce but when I have them it's for an open book exam without any notes (only plain sticky notes) allowed in the book. As a general planner I have the hobonichi techo in A5 because then I can keep track of my daily todos as well as my schedule.
for art i have a recommendation for wooden pencils... the Mont Marte graphite pencils are really dark with the Mitsubishi Uni hard to find here in the philipines its a really good alternative since its even *D A R K E R* it looks like charcoal i also recommend the Faber Castell 9000 and Goldfaber and for sketchbooks for pricey people the Canson XL for low budget people the Strathmore
Next year I'll be starting Medieval English Literature, and I have to say you just about nailed the literature one I think. The fountainpen for daily use, the ballpen for quick notes, the notebooks. And the brass accessories, I didn't know about these yet but now that I've seen it I kinda need them. I thank you for showing them to me, my bank account doesn't ;-)
As a geology/geophysics major (now working in the profession ), my pen case looks the most like the engineers but I used a a lead holder/sharpener for mapping and homework back in the day, colored pencils/highlighter pencils for color coding notes and coloring maps and graph paper notebooks. Most of us have a secret hoard of prismacolors in our desks ❤️😃
I'm a business major (Supply Chain). I use Kokuyo's slide binder for holding all my notes. Preferred writing gear is a Pentel Graph 1000 and a Pilot Kakuno Fine-tip fountain pen.
Perfect timing i was looking at school supplies a week or two before school ended and i was tempted on getting more for crafts vs actual supplies (which i may still need)
You should definitely make a part 2 since when it comes to my degree (translation and interpreting) i can say that people who study languages in college always need to use colors in class. We rely on vibrant colors for highlighting especially grammatical structures, rules and exemption in the language we study
Computer Science/IT? Yes we do many things online and on computers but some of us still love our stationery and use it for quick notes etc. Or maybe cool things that work well with digital tools as well?
As a civil engineering grad, the draft pencils aren't really in use much bc drafting is mostly done in CAD programs now. I think the better recommendations would be a mix of the the math and science major recommendations. For pencils in engr, w all the math and erasing in most classes, I'd recommend the pencils w large, twist up erasers: Kokuyo FitCurve, Tombow Mono Graph, Pentel Twist-Erase, Papermate Clearpointe, Sakura Sumo Grip, or the Faber-Castell Grip Plus. For rulers, I can't buy rulers from JetPens bc they're all in metric. Unfortunately, STEM majors in the US have to use both. I didn't think any ruler would have both, but I randomly found a clear, grid style ruler (my fav style) w both measurement styles at a Taiwanese bookstore last yr. Not sure which is the brand name, but it had "Joy Star" and "字The WORDS 器" printed on it. Not sure if u guys would consider carrying it or finding smth similar, but I'm sure ur US customers would appreciate it.
As a former Comparative Lit. student, I have to say you forgot about the pencils. A lot of my classmates as well as myself were rocking the classic John Steinbeck aesthetic (but before aesthetics were a thing) So it was all about paper with the narrowest rule and wood case pencils, generally in the 2h range to maintain a the point and without erasers. Never erase an idea, you might need it later.
Physical education majors, are important. "Sports" (basketball, football, soccer) is a major theme in universities/colleges and source of funding. E.g.: Scheduling, roster of the team, individual player performance tracking, fitness training records. team logistics for transport to away games. Most of these are recorded by a durable (because of bad weather in the field) analog system quickly to . . . be organized digitally later.
social work majors if taking notes at all use a pen they fished out of a bog that morning on their way in and a notebook they found on campus that is at least from the 70s
The Maruman Mnemosyne notebook with graph paper is even BETTER for math majors than it is for science. All of the things that make it awesome for science applies to math, but, in addition to that, the grid makes drawing graphs and figures a breeze. That you can use it in landscape format makes complex problems easier to stay on top of than portrait layout as well. When taking notes, having a handy line down the middle to do "facing notes" is easy. The blank facing page is tops for gluing in handouts, or printouts of graphs and theorems from PDF texts. Japanese language majors would be an interesting concept. I found that the Kokuyo Sarasara paper was tops for doing turn-in work like homework and quizzes, plus storing them in the Campus Slide notebook. The classic bound Campus notebook was one of the best for taking notes. Pocket-sized flash cards on a ring, like the Kokuyo Campus word cards, are a necessity for memorizing vocabulary words. You can't practice kanji writing without the Kokuyo ReEden notebook, and some of the best pens for practicing/writing kanji are the Pilot Kakuno or Sailor Compass in fine. For those who can afford a higher-end pen, the Platinum 3776 in fine or the Sailor 1911 24K in extra fine are dream machines for writing kanji. The Sailor 24K extra fine is my all-time favorite for any extended Japanese writing.
That was a good call to recommend Maruman gridded notebooks for Math majors. I was a Statistics major myself, and before the video hit the math section, I immediately thought Maruman would do well because it's gridded and perforated (I have one myself, but the Mnemosyne). I also have an Apica CD gridded in A4 size, and that works perfectly too. Being a Stat major really fueled my stationary junkie lifestyle, because you actually do need a lot of different colored pens for 3D Calculus mostly, but just in general the best way to take notes in a theoretical mathematics class is to have different lighter colors to use for guide arrows or asides/comments. So I think Zebra Sarasa or Pilot Juicy pens should have been included in the recommendation. Lastly, practice exercises are really important in mathematics and statistics, so I used up a lot of yellow pad. I would recommend Veco Block Pad now especially to fountain pen users. And the big pencil case because you have a calculator was true for me as well. But any good backpack or laptop bag with a phone slot will do just nicely, and I've seen this more commonly with my peers. As a general recommendation to anyone who takes notes daily, even throughout adulthood, I would say keep a TWSBI with you in the nib size that's most suited to your handwriting size, and load it up with Caran D'Ache Infinite Grey, because it's highlighter-resistant. It's a color that's not super black and harsh, so it's really easy to write fast notes with because it's light on the eyes and low-commitment feeling like pencil. Then keep a pack of a few highlighters in complimentary colors that make best sense for your system. That's my daily carry along with my Maruman Mnemosyne (gridded, A5) when I can't carry everything else. I always have this in my laptop bag or purse.
Computer Science - Laptop or Tablet, one writing block in DIN A 4 checkered, one ballpoint pen. If they are fancy, maybe a pencil and eraser. But I've seen so many just show up with a block and ballpoint pen :D xD Digital Media - Like CS with Laptop or Tablet, but with all the pens. Highlighters, colored inks, everything!
As an artist, I’ve tried several different pencil brands to find out what I like. Staedtler Mars and Faber Castell 9000 are both pretty good, but so far my favorite brand is one you don’t seem to carry: Derwent Graphic pencils. They are so nice to work with, they are smooth, but with just enough feedback that they don’t feel slippery, even in the softest grades. I’m also a huge fan of the Watersoluble Sketching pencils by Derwent, highly recommend water soluble graphite for artists, so beautiful! I haven’t really tried other brands to compare on that, but I bet they are all at least fairly similar to the Derwent brand ones, so Mars or Faber Castell are likely at least similarly good! 👍 Very nice for quick tone studies! Also less messy than smudging traditional graphite for the people who don’t like the mess of graphite. Water soluble graphite binds a little better to the paper if you get it wet. They also work exactly like traditional graphite in case you need to work in traditional methods for classes or something! Nice to have!
Hey I'm a materials science and engineering student, and I would point out that the sakura micron pens are great for lab journals as their ink is resistant to virtually any spills. I would also love to hear which notebook you recommend as a lab journal, and point out that engineering and science students can often make good use of some sort of coloured pens as they are nice for drawing different force vectors in physics. I really liked the horizontal notebook! Erasable pens such as the frixion pens are a lifesaver in science and engineering, and often preferred over mechanical pencils though I do love the look of a rotring or something similar.
I'm ab artist, I have alot of things needed whenever I had inspiration and else. I have a little pencil case but only sketch pencik and bolder pencil with only one eraser and some pencil leads for the mechanical pencils
What about music majors? What would we need to compose music, or annotate the music in the margins? What about storing and organizing the (very lengthy) sheet music?
Hi there! These cases will fit graphing calculators: www.jetpens.com/Cubix-Round-Zip-Box-Pen-Cases/ct/3260 www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Smart-Fit-Actact-Wide-Open-Pen-Cases/ct/3651 www.jetpens.com/Nomadic-s-PE-09-Pencil-Cases/ct/819
I'd be interested in seeing what products best fit or you would recommend to someone majoring in Horticulture. I tend to work around a lot of different substrates, dirt, and water. Plus sometimes I have to design an exterior space. (Landscaping design) I'd love to see which products would be beneficial in these situations.
I'm really picky with my supply, but in the laboratory I use the cheapest crap I can find, that works reliable.- A 3+1 coloured multiplen with pencil, a spare ballpoint pen (for lending other students/professors etc) and a marker for glass. Printer paper, if there is somethink I need to take notes aside my laboratory journal. No hate here, but don't use your favorite pens and fancy notebook in laboratory, they'll get damaged. Just use them in class.
I’m majoring in music, specifically violin performance. What would music majors have with them? (I’m not asking as a video question, more general. I’m starting university soon)
College Decision Day was last week! Seniors, let us know what college you'll be attending and what's on your back-to-school shopping list.
Laughs in computer science
I'm a senior, and I'm going to be attending RIT next year! 🐅
@@charlotte_____ Nice school, I go to a CUNY and one of my best professors went there
I'm not buying anything because I'm majoring in game design
I might be getting a new backpack though because the one I have is falling apart
Computer major
You forgot all healthcare/medical majors. We use are obsessed with stationary. Have you ever heard about how nurses guard their pens 👩🏻⚕️
Isn't that a part of science too?
And med lab techs too! A lot of us carry around a lot of special pens that we love and supply ourselves. The office supplies that are supplied are crap. Papermate and generic stuff.
@@DioneN I thought that both the non-medical and medical lab people carry similar pens. Guess not
@@EmelyPhan probably a lot of the same. We use a lot of sharpie/permanent marker extra fine pens for labelling stuff. I’m a fan of Sarasa and Uniball signos for basic everyday pens.
I thought of healthcare as a separate major from science. My stationery needs for health sciences (biology, anatomy, physiology) differed from the physical sciences I also needed (chemistry and physics). I needed more colors for diagrams, and I used many colors of the Zebra Sarasa gel pens for note-taking and studying. You had some sticky notes, but I needed a TON of tape flags and page points for marking in textbooks and notebooks.
I'm a computer science major, so we don't use a lot of stationery, but that doesn't stop me from having a ton in my backpack lol
I'm a cs major too, I use a lot of stationery in my notes
Custom keyboards are the "school supplies" for CS or CE majors. Though I'll still never leave for class without Tombow black plastic erasers and a Zirconium Tactile Turn pencil on me. Stationery is so nice.
we would have bonded over stationary and became best friends T_T Why weren't you in my classes q.q
was writing something like that but then i saw your comment lol, i take notes digitally but i journal and plan strictly on paper
@@sparkle0859 I am also a CS student and I do make notes using paper though so I'm wondering what sort of stationary do i need though
Environmental Science majors next!!! We’re always doing fieldwork in the wilderness, and would love recommendations for sturdy, dirt-resistant and especially water-proof stationery (especially notebooks or paper!). The science majors bit was really helpful too! Definitely getting a Multi Ball Rollerball for labelling samples. :D
have you tried stone paper? It is a bit heavier and hard to find but is very resistant.
Thanks for your suggestion! In the meantime, you might like our guides to Every Day Carry Stationery and The Best Pens for the Lab:
www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Everyday-Carry-Stationery-Items/pt/46
www.jetpens.com/blog/The-Best-Pens-for-the-Lab/pt/212
Thank you so much! Will check these out :D
Get a damn slate board with sand paper(400grit and higher) and pencils. Never bring paper to the field if possible. Learned that the hard way. All it takes is some rain or mud, and your research data is fucked
Rite in the rain notebook + a pencil of your choice.
One for Architecture students -- might be a hybrid of the Engineering, Business and Art sets, but it would be great to see how you can make a distinct set for Architecture.
Yes please!!!
Triangle + ruler sets + craft knives + glue + pencils!! + markers
blanket+pillow for the studio 💀
Architecture and design students would need a dedicated video! Fineliners pens, pencils, erasers, Copic markers, steel ruler, T-square, post-its, drawing paper, trace paper, loose paper storage, journals, masking tape, pins, caffeine pills, drawing board, poster storage, and a dozen other things I've since forgotten since those days at uni. Would love to see what Jetpens can pull together for the aspiring designer.
tbh i dont see a difference in Architecture, Engineering and Art lol
For math, I really like the Tombow Mono Graph Pencils. I love the long eraser, it really helps for all the mistakes I make!
Yeah, I think all STEM majors really like the mech pencils w built in large, twist up erasers. Having a separate large eraser is good, but having a built in one is better.
I used a Pentel Graphgear 1000 during my undergraduate
I'm an older non-traditional student about to start med school and the new meta is "nobody takes handwritten notes anymore, it's all about Anki spaced repetition" to memorize the sheer amount of information we get in a short time span.
THOUGH THAT DOESN'T STOP MEEEE lol I have my stash of markers/gel pens/fountain pen+inks to keep my planner company year round. About to invest in a gold nib FP *v*
I just went back to school and am graduating next week! You can do this! Good luck!!
I’m a non-trad too! High five! I get teased about writing notes by hand too sometimes (mainly because I write in cursive, heh), but it works for me! I also get migraines, so screentime isn’t always viable. Do what works for you!
What does ‘non-traditional’ mean in this context?
@@natmickan It usually means college students who are not the typical age. So, usually in the USA, people ~traditionally~ start college when they’re around 18. I’m 36, and I’ve met students who were even older. This is much more common in community colleges (which is where I’m going) than in universities. Sometimes Non-trad students are parents or even retired people who are going back to college to finish a degree they had to drop when they had kids, or even are looking for an entire career change. I’ve also met non-trad students who were immigrants or army vets. Every non-trad students’ story is different! But basically, we’re old fogies. 😜
@@Q.Q.Kachoo ooh, interesting, in Australia we call them “mature age” students. I assumed from maggiesaus’ comment that they were a mature age student (from the ‘older’ part), but thought that non-trad was possibly a reference to studying offline/from home rather than on campus. It never occurred to me that the tradition was the age rather than the learning method! Thanks for the info :)
i think you should cover humanities! I'm a sociology and aquatic biology student (a double major, ripp) so I'd love to see maybe some general kit ideas or a set good for both? or just for humanities, since thats what i seem to do the most :')
As a teaching major myself, us teachers love stationery! We use a lot of stuff and one of top stationery must haves are white board markers!!
What about history, music, and education majors? What about grad and post-grad students?
Graphic Design for Print majors do a lot with art and math so that images are sharp and clean. Being able to use really fine pens and pencils is a must for sketching designs for clients.
Architect majors are a combination of Art, Science, and Math.
You greatly overlooked how much reports and assignment papers we engineers submit. Our best friends most of the time are staplers, hole punchers and ruler
What about design majors (ie. interior design, arch, industrial design, graphic design etc)? I am curious in seeing what they come up with cause I have a design diploma.
As someone who retired from a business where I prepared bids for our company I don't think you can do better than a Pilot Metropolitan mechanical pencil.
I'd love to see a video for Translation/Foreign Language majors! 😁
Ooooh, what would you like to see featured in that video?
yess!!! foreign literature major here :) the most important part for me is index cards, post-it notes, and color coordination!!!
I'd love to see an all-in-one travel folio for passport, notebook, money/cards, a few fountain pens, etc.
the only thing you need is google translate lol
@@matthewzenkiemendoza3415 lol
Music majors will always love good lead pencils and mechanical pens. We take a LOT of notes in rehearsals :)
the mnemosyne notebook is sadly not suited for lab use. The most important tool in any lab is the journal. Everything you do needs to be documented in a journal with non removable and numbered pages.
Law school grads and poli sci majors are HUGE stationary nerds. We have very particular pen opinions as well as paper needs.
Judging by all the "what about me?" comments, methinks this should be a series!
I'd like to see some stationary for foreign language or library & information science majors! Library science is mostly digital nowadays, but the physical is all about archival quality materials that won't fade or fall apart :)
Linguistics would be fun to see: syntax, phonology, and morphology can be very formulaic like a science/math hybrid with elements of anthropology, sociology, psychology, and even computing when you include computer languages/programs.
You should make a video about stationary supplies for teachers as well. We have to carry lots of "weapon of mass education", USB for data backup, different colour pens for marking tests, or even laptops, around.
Meanwhile, as a composer, I have a BUNCH of fountain pens, a couple manuscript notebooks, and a burning desire for fountain pen friendly music paper.
I guess you could do a music major one?
Oooooh I am very curious: do any of your pens have a music nib? Is that actually useful for composing or have the nibs changed? Not a composer, but a choir nerd 😁 and stationery lover.
@@lefthandedclogger technically, the Noodler's Triple Tail is my only music nib (with 2 slits, 3 tines). I do use stub/italic nibs for composing, and I have an architect nib that's good for that too.
I want to get a Franklin-Christoph music nib at some point.
Any recommendations for manuscript paper? I had a brand I loved (cream colored with green staves - pencil marks absolutely popped off the page) but it is no longer made.
@@rebeccawilkinson1846 Hmm...it depends on what you want. If you are not using fountain pen, there are many options. The Archives brand paper looks pretty good and has cream colored paper. I think D'addario makes it?
@@Symphing12 I have used Archives before and, yes, that is probably my best option now. I really miss the green staves. That was magic element. Maybe someday I'll run across a stash in an estate sale.
As a previous bio major, I can confirm that I care about organization and archival quality inks. A pen that can write directly on falcon pens is ALWAYS a winner in my book
Would love to see one for language majors too! I was a French double major :D
You need to do education next !! Most teachers loooove stationary 💕
I'm a chem major finishing my degree in Chemistry, I love the pens you suggested but the notebook wouldn't be allowed in a lab due to the spiral bound paper. Also the permanant marker should be erasable with acetone for hood write-ups and quick calculations, would be super helpful however for writing on disposable glassware!
My last order with JetPens was;
Nomadic's PE-09 Flap Type Pencil Case
Zebra DelGuard Type-GR 0.5mm
Zebra Sarasa Mark On Gel Pen 0.4mm
Tombow Mono Study Eraser
Sun-Star Grid Shitajiki Writing Board
Uni JetStream Ballpoint Pen 0.7mm Gel Grip Series
Pilot Color Eno Erasable Mechanical Pencil 0.7mm Red & Blue
I think that for engineers and architects you forgot the rotring mechanical pencil or isograph/rapidograph. Also the 2mm mechanical pencil.
The 2 mm mechanical pencil is a godsend for everyone and an awfully underrated stationery item.
The orenz referred to in this video is a 2mm mechanical pencil! I love it for doing comics because I have a ton of architecture in them.
Business and Literature looks so aesthetic and professional 🌟
Love the inclusion of the outtakes! Super cute!
Pov: Your watching this during your vacations but still manage to forget Jetpens isn't a binge channel
Education or History majors next! Considering I’m a double major it will be perfect either way!
5:17 I think the blue and black (markers?) would be more appealing if the labels were less busy, so to speak, and more minimalistic in overall appearance.
Pls make a part 2!!! This is entertaining---Imma go to csun--- as an art student but my supplies have accumulated so I will hold back on buying for now!!!
1:25 "could you please pass me the kum sharpener?"
As a former IT student I didn't need much stationary. Didn't stop my pencil case overflowing goodies though (many from my former design degree)! All I had was an A5 sketch pad, fineliners, pencils, eraser and whiteboard markers.
1:56 I didn't quite make it into Pi Epsilon Nu Honor Society myself (I had some railroading on my fountain-pen final). But we were all very proud of Sarah when she did, as was the whole town of Pencil-"Where grades matter."
Since you have word cards and steno-lined pads (good for vocabulary), highlighters for color coding, progress planners for Gantt charts, and other products that are good for language learning, how about foreign-language major for a sequel video?
Love the way how you guys created aesthetic
Colored pens made a huge difference in my physics based engineering classes like statics. Being able to differentiate between what information on a problem is given and what needed calculated myself made it easy to follow the steps on how to solve a problem.
Please do Pychology majors please! I'm already done with my finals as a freshman!
Me, who is no longer a student, watching this:
I would LOVE see you doing a part 2 with supplies for Music Students!!!
How about History, Communications, Political Science and/or Journalism as majors? All heavy on the stationary use!
I built my own economic keyboard as a computer science major to make sure my hands were comfy after long programming sessions, but I noticed that my basic cheap pencils weren't good for all my writing either in my calculus classes so I had to get some good ones from jetpens. Also those Japanese sliding binders are so much better than the crappy 3 ring metal ones we have in the US.
I wonder what a music major should have? I wish we had as many cool manuscript paper options as language, math, and science majors do!
Please do Political Science and Pre Law majors!! Stationary is key for both of those!!
As a math major myself, I've never used a graphing calculator, nor have i ever seen anyone in any of my classes using one, they aren't of much use anyway for any subject that isn't calc 1 & 2
i dont blame you guys for not covering my major!! funeral services isn't exactly common or very vocal in the stationary world!
Oooh but I am very curious to hear what your stationery needs are for funeral sciences! Spill-proof inks? What else?
@@lefthandedclogger we typically use ballpoint pens and normal printer paper so far... i'm a huge fan of gel and fountain pens, so there's that! everything has to be sleek and professional while also being hassle free
Accounting and tax law, please. Pens that write quickly with good, fast drying ink flow, tabs that can be moved are see through and you can write on them, erasable pens, highlighters that don't bleed or mess up printer ink, notebooks for organization. Staplers, clips, correction tape, sticky notes!
Oh and I'm left handed.
Lefty here! I didn’t major in those fields but I do love stationery! Top pen picks for me: pentel energel or zebra sarasa for gel pen, uni jetstream for a ballpoint, frixion highlighters and pens - both erasable, as lefties tend to accidentally over-highlight!
@@lefthandedclogger Thank you so much Sarah. 🤗
Erasable pen is so expensive here, I'm using paper correcting pen 🤣
A video for woodworker stationary? Believe it or not woodworker use a lot of stationery: mechanical pencil, ruler 📏, permanent marker , protractor etc .
What about film, animation, and other visual media majors? We need stuff for notes during lectures, drawing storyboards, sketchbooks for concept art…and some of us (coughMecough) like to take notes and draw sketches while they’re watching movies and documentaries.
If you get one graph and one blank Mnemosyne you’re set! A plastic cover with a sturdy cardboard back (I add a bulldog or giant binding clip to turn it into a clipboard), smooth pages with perforation and labels, and they lay flat for scanning. They’re pretty big though so I have a tiny Rhodia or Leuchtturm that lives in my pocket and goes everywhere with me. If you number the pages you can reference back and forth between all three! I also have a Kuru Toga pencil, a Pilot Kakuno and a Pentel brush pen at all times - you might want to have a grey marker like a Tombow for shading too, especially if you like copying movie frames. My animation teacher also used a music notebook for planning short films - you can time your frames to dialogue or sound with it and it’s an amazing trick! Sorry for the novel, I got excited by your question 😅
@@perevision Oh wow, thanks for all the suggestions! No need to be sorry, I love talking stationary and note-taking. 😆
As an anthropology major, I'd love to see recommendations for someone who studies/works in the social sciences and in the field (like archaeology, environmental sciences, etc). Durable tools that take you from field to classroom or office. Portability, multifunctional, MEASURING TOOLS
Yes, yes please. Notebooks and supplies that are weather proof would be soo sweet
Computer science major: taking notes in class (I still do it by hand, but many also use their laptops), lots of assignments to keep track of, and always need to have a way to write down sudden 'oh that's how I fix that bug' ideas since those happen at the weirdest times and places.
I myself use twsbi eco fountain pens combined with a kokuyo campus binder set (1 slider, 1 notebook like one) so I have 1 notebook for all my notes and can keep notes of previous courses organised at home. In the binder is some weekly planner paper, for keeping track of assignments, and dotted line paper so I can draw tables. Computer science books are scarce but when I have them it's for an open book exam without any notes (only plain sticky notes) allowed in the book. As a general planner I have the hobonichi techo in A5 because then I can keep track of my daily todos as well as my schedule.
for art i have a recommendation for wooden pencils... the Mont Marte graphite pencils are really dark with the Mitsubishi Uni hard to find here in the philipines its a really good alternative since its even *D A R K E R* it looks like charcoal i also recommend the Faber Castell 9000 and Goldfaber and for sketchbooks for pricey people the Canson XL for low budget people the Strathmore
I prefer to use Rotring for technical/engineering drawing. When I do it by hand.
Next year I'll be starting Medieval English Literature, and I have to say you just about nailed the literature one I think. The fountainpen for daily use, the ballpen for quick notes, the notebooks. And the brass accessories, I didn't know about these yet but now that I've seen it I kinda need them. I thank you for showing them to me, my bank account doesn't ;-)
As a geology/geophysics major (now working in the profession ), my pen case looks the most like the engineers but I used a a lead holder/sharpener for mapping and homework back in the day, colored pencils/highlighter pencils for color coding notes and coloring maps and graph paper notebooks. Most of us have a secret hoard of prismacolors in our desks ❤️😃
Don’t forget veterinary majors! (I’m only in 7th grade, but it has been my dream since I was 4!)
as a world languages & linguistics major I use the Raymay Card Memo on Ring as flashcards for terms and concepts!
As an engineering major having dotted or graph notebooks changed my life
I am a biochem major and I exclusively use pencils found on the floor of my classroom after the first structural biochemistry midterm exam
Oh my god that stylus use example was some of the speediest I've ever seen!
I think you should make a video on the different bags you guys offer and which one would suit different styles of students
I'm a business major (Supply Chain). I use Kokuyo's slide binder for holding all my notes. Preferred writing gear is a Pentel Graph 1000 and a Pilot Kakuno Fine-tip fountain pen.
I like cute school supplies because I think they help me to do my study but I haven't been to college yet. I'm just a secondary 3💕
definitely need an excellent pencil for annotating texts as a literature major!
Perfect timing i was looking at school supplies a week or two before school ended and i was tempted on getting more for crafts vs actual supplies (which i may still need)
JetPens happened after I finished college, so I am interested what good pens and paper you would recommend for Creative Writing majors =3
I recommend Computer Science majors!
Sure, we use computers a bit, but digital notes simply cannot beat a good old pen and notebook!
You should definitely make a part 2 since when it comes to my degree (translation and interpreting) i can say that people who study languages in college always need to use colors in class. We rely on vibrant colors for highlighting especially grammatical structures, rules and exemption in the language we study
Education/teacher specific supplies!
Computer Science/IT? Yes we do many things online and on computers but some of us still love our stationery and use it for quick notes etc. Or maybe cool things that work well with digital tools as well?
As a civil engineering grad, the draft pencils aren't really in use much bc drafting is mostly done in CAD programs now. I think the better recommendations would be a mix of the the math and science major recommendations.
For pencils in engr, w all the math and erasing in most classes, I'd recommend the pencils w large, twist up erasers: Kokuyo FitCurve, Tombow Mono Graph, Pentel Twist-Erase, Papermate Clearpointe, Sakura Sumo Grip, or the Faber-Castell Grip Plus.
For rulers, I can't buy rulers from JetPens bc they're all in metric. Unfortunately, STEM majors in the US have to use both. I didn't think any ruler would have both, but I randomly found a clear, grid style ruler (my fav style) w both measurement styles at a Taiwanese bookstore last yr. Not sure which is the brand name, but it had "Joy Star" and "字The WORDS 器" printed on it. Not sure if u guys would consider carrying it or finding smth similar, but I'm sure ur US customers would appreciate it.
I love the pentel twist erase, because of the large eraser, and the metal tip!!!
As a Business Administration major… completely accurate I only thing I’m missing is the folder but I usually keep papers in my journal lol
Maybe do a Computer Science Major and Medical Majors?
I love these videos!!!!!!!!
As a former Comparative Lit. student, I have to say you forgot about the pencils. A lot of my classmates as well as myself were rocking the classic John Steinbeck aesthetic (but before aesthetics were a thing) So it was all about paper with the narrowest rule and wood case pencils, generally in the 2h range to maintain a the point and without erasers. Never erase an idea, you might need it later.
Physical education majors, are important. "Sports" (basketball, football, soccer) is a major theme in universities/colleges and source of funding. E.g.: Scheduling, roster of the team, individual player performance tracking, fitness training records. team logistics for transport to away games. Most of these are recorded by a durable (because of bad weather in the field) analog system quickly to . . . be organized digitally later.
social work majors if taking notes at all use a pen they fished out of a bog that morning on their way in and a notebook they found on campus that is at least from the 70s
Majors that work/study outdoors or in not-so-clean enviroments like geology or cooking.
This was awesome thanks!
Ideas for law school would be great.
The Maruman Mnemosyne notebook with graph paper is even BETTER for math majors than it is for science. All of the things that make it awesome for science applies to math, but, in addition to that, the grid makes drawing graphs and figures a breeze. That you can use it in landscape format makes complex problems easier to stay on top of than portrait layout as well. When taking notes, having a handy line down the middle to do "facing notes" is easy. The blank facing page is tops for gluing in handouts, or printouts of graphs and theorems from PDF texts.
Japanese language majors would be an interesting concept. I found that the Kokuyo Sarasara paper was tops for doing turn-in work like homework and quizzes, plus storing them in the Campus Slide notebook. The classic bound Campus notebook was one of the best for taking notes. Pocket-sized flash cards on a ring, like the Kokuyo Campus word cards, are a necessity for memorizing vocabulary words. You can't practice kanji writing without the Kokuyo ReEden notebook, and some of the best pens for practicing/writing kanji are the Pilot Kakuno or Sailor Compass in fine. For those who can afford a higher-end pen, the Platinum 3776 in fine or the Sailor 1911 24K in extra fine are dream machines for writing kanji. The Sailor 24K extra fine is my all-time favorite for any extended Japanese writing.
That was a good call to recommend Maruman gridded notebooks for Math majors. I was a Statistics major myself, and before the video hit the math section, I immediately thought Maruman would do well because it's gridded and perforated (I have one myself, but the Mnemosyne). I also have an Apica CD gridded in A4 size, and that works perfectly too. Being a Stat major really fueled my stationary junkie lifestyle, because you actually do need a lot of different colored pens for 3D Calculus mostly, but just in general the best way to take notes in a theoretical mathematics class is to have different lighter colors to use for guide arrows or asides/comments. So I think Zebra Sarasa or Pilot Juicy pens should have been included in the recommendation. Lastly, practice exercises are really important in mathematics and statistics, so I used up a lot of yellow pad. I would recommend Veco Block Pad now especially to fountain pen users. And the big pencil case because you have a calculator was true for me as well. But any good backpack or laptop bag with a phone slot will do just nicely, and I've seen this more commonly with my peers.
As a general recommendation to anyone who takes notes daily, even throughout adulthood, I would say keep a TWSBI with you in the nib size that's most suited to your handwriting size, and load it up with Caran D'Ache Infinite Grey, because it's highlighter-resistant. It's a color that's not super black and harsh, so it's really easy to write fast notes with because it's light on the eyes and low-commitment feeling like pencil. Then keep a pack of a few highlighters in complimentary colors that make best sense for your system. That's my daily carry along with my Maruman Mnemosyne (gridded, A5) when I can't carry everything else. I always have this in my laptop bag or purse.
Healthcare, teaching, sport etc etc etc!
Please do a video about students with Information Technology (IT) as their major...we don't use much stationary...but we cherish the little we do...
Computer Science - Laptop or Tablet, one writing block in DIN A 4 checkered, one ballpoint pen. If they are fancy, maybe a pencil and eraser. But I've seen so many just show up with a block and ballpoint pen :D xD
Digital Media - Like CS with Laptop or Tablet, but with all the pens. Highlighters, colored inks, everything!
As an artist, I’ve tried several different pencil brands to find out what I like. Staedtler Mars and Faber Castell 9000 are both pretty good, but so far my favorite brand is one you don’t seem to carry: Derwent Graphic pencils. They are so nice to work with, they are smooth, but with just enough feedback that they don’t feel slippery, even in the softest grades. I’m also a huge fan of the Watersoluble Sketching pencils by Derwent, highly recommend water soluble graphite for artists, so beautiful! I haven’t really tried other brands to compare on that, but I bet they are all at least fairly similar to the Derwent brand ones, so Mars or Faber Castell are likely at least similarly good! 👍 Very nice for quick tone studies! Also less messy than smudging traditional graphite for the people who don’t like the mess of graphite. Water soluble graphite binds a little better to the paper if you get it wet. They also work exactly like traditional graphite in case you need to work in traditional methods for classes or something! Nice to have!
Maybe Theatre Majors? We tend to like having fun/funky note taking tools (esp. for marking scripts)
I'm surprised by how helpful this is as a freshman going into college soon
Wow, you covered all the ones I need gifts for art, library, math, science/lab. Thank you.
have you guys ever thought about carrying padfolios? theyre pretty sleek and handy.
Hey I'm a materials science and engineering student, and I would point out that the sakura micron pens are great for lab journals as their ink is resistant to virtually any spills. I would also love to hear which notebook you recommend as a lab journal, and point out that engineering and science students can often make good use of some sort of coloured pens as they are nice for drawing different force vectors in physics. I really liked the horizontal notebook! Erasable pens such as the frixion pens are a lifesaver in science and engineering, and often preferred over mechanical pencils though I do love the look of a rotring or something similar.
I'm ab artist, I have alot of things needed whenever I had inspiration and else. I have a little pencil case but only sketch pencik and bolder pencil with only one eraser and some pencil leads for the mechanical pencils
What about music majors? What would we need to compose music, or annotate the music in the margins? What about storing and organizing the (very lengthy) sheet music?
I’m starting a degree in criminology soon. Would love to see some stationary for law/justice degrees!
5:06 do you have any other pencil cases that will fit inside a graphing calculator? it's exactly what I've been looking for
Hi there! These cases will fit graphing calculators:
www.jetpens.com/Cubix-Round-Zip-Box-Pen-Cases/ct/3260
www.jetpens.com/Lihit-Lab-Smart-Fit-Actact-Wide-Open-Pen-Cases/ct/3651
www.jetpens.com/Nomadic-s-PE-09-Pencil-Cases/ct/819
Please also add the statiomeey for students of humanities and education.
I'd be interested in seeing what products best fit or you would recommend to someone majoring in Horticulture. I tend to work around a lot of different substrates, dirt, and water. Plus sometimes I have to design an exterior space. (Landscaping design) I'd love to see which products would be beneficial in these situations.
I'm really picky with my supply, but in the laboratory I use the cheapest crap I can find, that works reliable.- A 3+1 coloured multiplen with pencil, a spare ballpoint pen (for lending other students/professors etc) and a marker for glass. Printer paper, if there is somethink I need to take notes aside my laboratory journal.
No hate here, but don't use your favorite pens and fancy notebook in laboratory, they'll get damaged. Just use them in class.
yes yes, obviously a part-2 (or more) needed. can you suggest some cool (& of course functional) things for Geography & Geology students?
I’m majoring in music, specifically violin performance. What would music majors have with them?
(I’m not asking as a video question, more general. I’m starting university soon)
This is the best video I never knew I needed. This is a prerequisite