Alternately most people seem to like Rhodia notepads. (Ninja'd by Cap while I was writing a novel)
I got another pen and more ink. Kaweco Skyline Sport white, medium nib, and a few cartridges in colors I wanted to try. Haven't had a chance to use it yet, been sick so I don't feel up to cleaning it. Also got a bottle of Noodler's Apache Sunset. Only been able to try it with a terrible scratchy dip pen nib I have so lots of feathering and very little shading, but I already like this color and I don't usually like orange. I'm sure it'll look better in a pen that isn't godawful. XD; Still have the Bleu Pervenche in the Metro because I don't write much, derp.
Heh, kind of off-topic since it's not writing or fountain pens, but I remember now why all those years ago I used to use a Speedball C5 calligraphy nib to ink my drawings prior to coloring rather than an 'art' nib, the C5 was narrow enough to look like a normal line and didn't literally rip apart the paper... Weird I guess to use a 1mm italic nib for inking outlines, but I always rotated the paper around to the most comfortable angle for the line for inking to help overcome my poor eye-hand coordination so the variation didn't come into play much except on longer lines where you wouldn't have noticed it much anyway. I had art pens I used sometimes, but they stopped making the one I liked and the dip pen feathered less on the paper I had at the time even if the line was thicker. I should see if I can find one online, lost mine when I moved in 2001 and haven't seen one in a store since. Maybe get some other nibs too, like the B series that's actually intended for inking linework lawl. The one benefit of dip pens is that ink ADD is easy to accommodate rofl.