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on-going mostly unedited stream of thoughts

the experience of completing a sketchbook for my japan trip

Last year I started sketching, and for the first time in my life I started bringing art materials on my travels. I did the same when I went to Japan, except a couple of days into the trip at a Maruzen I stumbled upon a reasonably priced traveler’s notebook with watercolour paper. So this is the first time I used a dedicated sketchbook for a trip – thought it is quite apt that I am using a sketchbook from a japanese company on a trip in japan.

I like this particular notebook because it is very lightweight and it has this unique tall portrait format which opens up to a squarish spread. Discounting the first and last page it allows for 11 spreads, which is a pretty good number for a trip. The limited number of available spreads also felt like I could make a good attempt to complete it.

photo of sketchbook cover from my japan trip

Then while visiting a museum I discovered eki stamps – “eki” means train so these stamps originated from railway stations but now they are also available at tourist spots and some subway stations. I knew vaguely about the existence of eki stamps before but I was never the sort of person to bother with something like this.

Since the museum had it openly lying around I decided to stamp my sketchbook for fun, and before I knew it I was obsessed with hunting them down at every possible location we had been to.

scanned image of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: Fukuoka

Some of the ink pads available at the stations were quite faded, I reckon serious enthusiasts would bring their own.

photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: Hiroshima

I usually sketch food because I love food and they are relatively easy to draw, but at Miyajima we didn’t eat anything I wanted to draw so I decided to try drawing their famous deer, autumn foliage and and torii gate:

scanned image of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: Miyajima

I wouldn’t say my drawings are any good but I think what means more is that I recorded an impression. My sketchbook quickly became the most precious thing I was carrying around, so precious that I kept checking that it is still inside my backpack.

Even as of today as I flipped it to write this post, and it still evokes such complex feelings in me. Like wow, I actually did this.

Sometimes it is fun to work on a spread as though I am designing a layout. I also enjoy replicating the logos of the places I’ve been to. They are nowhere near the original but I liked that I even tried. Since I draw with a pen directly instead of a pencil I made mistakes frequently, but even if they are just 50% representative of the originals they still become powerful impressions to me. Like when I see my drawings they immediately take me back to the actual vivid memories.

scanned image of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: Osaka
photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip showing eki stamps
photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo

Midway through the trip I started collecting/buying stickers, washi tapes and things that I can later stick in my sketchbook – scrapbook style. I stuck most of them when I got back to Singapore.

photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo

Sometimes the drawings start out terrible and disproportionate but I still trudge on, and they end up becoming something memorable. Other times we have to keep our sketchbooks before they dry, so paint gets smudged etc and I just think it is all part of the sketchbook’s becoming.

scanned image of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo
photoof my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo

Thankfully I also kept most of my receipts:

photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo
photo of my sketchbook spread from my japan trip: tokyo

By the end of the trip my sketchbook became really smudgy and weathered, especially because I am not careful when handling the eki stamps. Yet I really love how it feels – ageing something with use is not something that can be actively replicated or reproduced.

Because I was actually busy writing blog posts while travelling on this trip I didn’t really have time to draw, so probably half of the sketchbook was completed retroactively when I got back. I think it is now one of my most precious possessions, because it symbolises a growth in me that I’ve never experienced before. I didn’t think I had it in me to complete a sketchbook, especially because I didn’t complete it while drunk on the romance of the trip. My past self would just have forgotten about it once I was back to the intoxicating familiarity of my home.

I feel like I’ve found a part of myself that was lost a long time ago or was never there to begin with. I am not very good at having fun, being crafty, or doing things that have no obvious value in this reality.

What is the point of working on and completing a sketchbook? In practical terms – none. But the entire process enriched my soul deeply. Each time I completed a spread it feels like I painted another layer of my soul. It is a full circle: having an experience that becomes a memory, pulling out that memory to make art out of it, then holding that creation in my own hands and seeing that memory take a concrete form – it enhances and solidifies the original experience that would otherwise have been quickly forgotten. But now I get to recollect it like a memory with tentacles. We could probably do something similar with photos, but somehow there is alchemy in the act of drawing, as though etching the memory deeper in a bodily manner. It is no longer merely visual, I have used my body and breath to record this.

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4 thoughts on “the experience of completing a sketchbook for my japan trip”

  1. Alice says:

    I love your sketchbook Winnie and I’m so impressed with it! I always think that slightly wonky drawings are more charming. The mistakes are more memorable and anchored to who you were when you created it. Over time your skills are sure to improve too which will be so cool to look back on.

    I also love the train station stamps! I wish we had those in the UK!

    I’ve recently started making photo scrapbooks of my trips and favourite memories, and I love having them to flip through. They are surprisingly labour intensive though! I have to put them together after the trip and often it takes me far too long to complete. I’m trying to get better about it, or at least keeping notes while I’m on the trip to use later when my memory is faded.

    Thank you for sharing!

    1. Winnie says:

      I’ll love to see your scrapbooks too if you’re up to sharing them! Thank you for taking the time to leave your thoughts here. 🙂

  2. anh says:

    Hi Winnie! I think about this post ALL the time. It is one of my favourite blog posts I read in 2024 and I feel like it has changed my brain. You articulate the internal rewards of drawing so well. Whenever I am out and about, drawing an environment or something, I think about it.

    “It is a full circle: having an experience that becomes a memory, pulling out that memory to make art out of it, then holding that creation in my own hands and seeing that memory take a concrete form – it enhances and solidifies the original experience that would otherwise have been quickly forgotten.”

    What a beautiful way of putting it!! Thank you for sharing. Your sketchbook is beautiful and looks so well-loved.

    1. Winnie says:

      hi anh! thank you for stopping by. 🙂 I loved and love your website – it was such a surprise to see my blog post featured in your media recap. thank you for appreciating the words and the intricate intent behind it, resonance is such a magical thing. it changes my brain too, that something i have created or written has come back to me in this manner, like a boomerang. 🙂

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