---
product_id: 48437547
title: "Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy"
brand: "leuchtturm1917"
price: "£38.65"
currency: GBP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/48437547-leuchtturm-145mm-x-210mm-a5-medium-dots-notebook-navy
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# 145mm x 210mm A5 perfect portable size 249 numbered pages for organized note-taking Elastic band fastener keeps your ideas secure Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy

**Brand:** leuchtturm1917
**Price:** £38.65
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 📘 Elevate your productivity game with the notebook that means business.

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy by leuchtturm1917
- **How much does it cost?** £38.65 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.uk](https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/48437547-leuchtturm-145mm-x-210mm-a5-medium-dots-notebook-navy)

## Best For

- leuchtturm1917 enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted leuchtturm1917 brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Stay On Point:** Dotted ruling offers the perfect balance for sketches, notes, and bullet journaling.
- • **Durable & Stylish:** Navy faux leather hardcover combines professional looks with lasting protection.
- • **Organized Creativity:** 249 numbered pages let you track ideas and projects with ease.
- • **Secure Your Thoughts:** Elastic band and page marker keep your progress intact and accessible.
- • **Precision Meets Portability:** Compact A5 size fits effortlessly into your daily hustle.

## Overview

The Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook in Navy features 249 numbered pages with dotted ruling, a durable faux leather hardcover, and an elastic band fastener. Designed for professionals and creatives alike, it offers a perfect blend of portability, organization, and style to keep your ideas secure and accessible.

## Description

Great prices on your favourite Office brands plus free delivery and returns on eligible orders.

Review: A perfect journal for fountain pens - This is exactly what I wanted to draft a novel. It has a couple pages for a table of contents in the beginning, it's very light, and with pages suited for use with a fountain pen. They are numbered so you can see exactly how much progress you've made. The pages are also bright white with a nicely spaced grid pattern, and it makes writing with a fountain pen effortless and quite enjoyable for the smoothness of it. I'm not sure I need 2 bookmarks, but what it nice is that they give you labels to put on the cover and/or spine to mark the book, which helps if you have collection of them, which I intend to build. I have tried every single notebook on the market, and none work quite as well for my purposes. It's a combination of being portable and functional because of how slim and light it is, with a no frills design, but with the sense that you have a journal that you would be happy to write your best work in with you best pen. The sheer lack of any branding or silly quotes, even a logo, makes it better in my mind (obviously you need to remove the cardboard flap). There's just a simple, understated Leuchturm1917, on the inside flap, which makes it feel like grandfather's old journal. This should not be something to praise, but so many other companies screw this up.
Review: Better Than Moleskine - For all today’s gadgets, there’s a great deal still to be said for pen and paper. It’s cheap, reliable and you don’t need to worry about the battery life. Setting those practicalities aside, I find great pleasure in a beautiful notebook and a fine fountain pen, though my handwriting still leaves much to be desired. I’m not a alone in this pleasure with a resurgence in paper notebooks and the legendary Moleskine has pushed to the fore. Is it the best? Here we have two lined notebooks, one from Leuchtturm1917 and the other from Moleskine – let’s take a look and find out. Both Moleskine and Leuchtturm draw on their heritage. Moleskine’s dates back into the early 20th Century name-checking Picasso, van Gogh and Hemingway. Although originally French, it died out in the 1980s, only to be resurrected in the late 90s by an Italian publisher. On the other hand, Leuchtturm goes back to 1917 (hence Leuchtturm1917) with roots in Hamburg, Germany and a reputation for stamp collecting albums, which continues today. These stories are laid out by both companies in small cream folded inserts that accompany each book. The message is clear; you aren’t buying only a notebook, you are continuing the traditions of culture, history and travel. Physically both notebooks are very similar but there are subtle and useful differences. I’d call them medium or A5-sized notebooks though strictly the Moleskine isn’t wide enough for A5. Both are 21 cm tall with hardcovers but the Moleskine is only 13 cm compared with the the Leuchtturm‘s 14.5 cm. Each has an elastic enclosure band, page marker and an expandable pocket inside the back cover. They also come in wide range of colours and pair well with 7″ tablets, such as the Nexus 7. Opening the notebooks shows that both have lined pages with the same line spacing, but with the Moleskine, that’s about it. Although both have an Owner page at the front, the Leuchtturm goes further with three Contents pages and each page is numbered for easy reference. In addition, there are eight perforated pages towards the back that can be removed, along with some stickers to assist with archiving once the notebook is full. The Leuchtturm1917 is for those who want to be organised! “Datum / Date” is printed at the top of each page too, which may put people off but suits me fine. Both notebooks have lovely paper which is a joy to write on with pencil and ballpoint. However, the Moleskine has a problem with pen ink bleeding from one side to the other, particularly with black ink, which makes the Leuchtturm a better choice for fountain pen writers. Overall, both the Moleskine and the Leuchtturm are stylish notebooks with a great feel both in the hand and under the pen. For me as a fountain pen owner, the Leuchtterm wins out by default, but the contents pages and page numbering make it my choice for those reasons too. Pencil owners and people looking for something a little neater may prefer the Moleskine. Whichever you choose, you’ll never go back.

## Features

- MEDIUM (A5) dots navy
- 249 numbered pages
- Hard cover
- page marker
- elastic band fastener

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B0095FFUM4 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 1,706 in Stationery & Office Supplies ( See Top 100 in Stationery & Office Supplies ) 61 in Diaries (Stationery & Office Supplies) |
| Binding | Office Product |
| Brand Name | LEUCHTTURM1917 |
| Colour | Navy |
| Cover Material | Faux Leather |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (39,539) |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 04004117393877 |
| Item Dimensions L x W x Thickness | 21L x 14.5W x 1.9Th centimetres |
| Item Weight | 0.26 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | Leuchtturm Albenverlag GmbH & Co. KG |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Number of Pages | 249 |
| Paper Size | A5 |
| Pattern | Polka Dot |
| Ruling Type | Dotted |
| Special Features | Hard Cover |
| Style | dotted |
| Theme | Military |
| UPC | 791836682705 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** LEUCHTTURM1917
- **Colour:** Navy
- **Cover material:** Faux Leather
- **Pages:** 249
- **Product dimensions:** 21L x 14.5W x 1.9Th centimetres
- **Ruling type:** Dotted
- **Sheet size:** A5
- **Special feature:** Hard Cover
- **Style:** dotted
- **Theme:** Military

## Images

![Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/512HJgPlChL.jpg)
![Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71tHYIWPedL.jpg)
![Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/713lMFDyfXL.jpg)
![Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71WMjGqsQHL.jpg)
![Leuchtturm 145mm x 210mm A5 Medium Dots Notebook - Navy - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81zGFjjLIlL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Color, Style** options.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A perfect journal for fountain pens
*by C***_ on 25 February 2024*

This is exactly what I wanted to draft a novel. It has a couple pages for a table of contents in the beginning, it's very light, and with pages suited for use with a fountain pen. They are numbered so you can see exactly how much progress you've made. The pages are also bright white with a nicely spaced grid pattern, and it makes writing with a fountain pen effortless and quite enjoyable for the smoothness of it. I'm not sure I need 2 bookmarks, but what it nice is that they give you labels to put on the cover and/or spine to mark the book, which helps if you have collection of them, which I intend to build. I have tried every single notebook on the market, and none work quite as well for my purposes. It's a combination of being portable and functional because of how slim and light it is, with a no frills design, but with the sense that you have a journal that you would be happy to write your best work in with you best pen. The sheer lack of any branding or silly quotes, even a logo, makes it better in my mind (obviously you need to remove the cardboard flap). There's just a simple, understated Leuchturm1917, on the inside flap, which makes it feel like grandfather's old journal. This should not be something to praise, but so many other companies screw this up.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Better Than Moleskine
*by A***P on 31 December 2014*

For all today’s gadgets, there’s a great deal still to be said for pen and paper. It’s cheap, reliable and you don’t need to worry about the battery life. Setting those practicalities aside, I find great pleasure in a beautiful notebook and a fine fountain pen, though my handwriting still leaves much to be desired. I’m not a alone in this pleasure with a resurgence in paper notebooks and the legendary Moleskine has pushed to the fore. Is it the best? Here we have two lined notebooks, one from Leuchtturm1917 and the other from Moleskine – let’s take a look and find out. Both Moleskine and Leuchtturm draw on their heritage. Moleskine’s dates back into the early 20th Century name-checking Picasso, van Gogh and Hemingway. Although originally French, it died out in the 1980s, only to be resurrected in the late 90s by an Italian publisher. On the other hand, Leuchtturm goes back to 1917 (hence Leuchtturm1917) with roots in Hamburg, Germany and a reputation for stamp collecting albums, which continues today. These stories are laid out by both companies in small cream folded inserts that accompany each book. The message is clear; you aren’t buying only a notebook, you are continuing the traditions of culture, history and travel. Physically both notebooks are very similar but there are subtle and useful differences. I’d call them medium or A5-sized notebooks though strictly the Moleskine isn’t wide enough for A5. Both are 21 cm tall with hardcovers but the Moleskine is only 13 cm compared with the the Leuchtturm‘s 14.5 cm. Each has an elastic enclosure band, page marker and an expandable pocket inside the back cover. They also come in wide range of colours and pair well with 7″ tablets, such as the Nexus 7. Opening the notebooks shows that both have lined pages with the same line spacing, but with the Moleskine, that’s about it. Although both have an Owner page at the front, the Leuchtturm goes further with three Contents pages and each page is numbered for easy reference. In addition, there are eight perforated pages towards the back that can be removed, along with some stickers to assist with archiving once the notebook is full. The Leuchtturm1917 is for those who want to be organised! “Datum / Date” is printed at the top of each page too, which may put people off but suits me fine. Both notebooks have lovely paper which is a joy to write on with pencil and ballpoint. However, the Moleskine has a problem with pen ink bleeding from one side to the other, particularly with black ink, which makes the Leuchtturm a better choice for fountain pen writers. Overall, both the Moleskine and the Leuchtturm are stylish notebooks with a great feel both in the hand and under the pen. For me as a fountain pen owner, the Leuchtterm wins out by default, but the contents pages and page numbering make it my choice for those reasons too. Pencil owners and people looking for something a little neater may prefer the Moleskine. Whichever you choose, you’ll never go back.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Not for those who can't appreciate a wee bit of ghosting!
*by L***N on 26 March 2017*

This is my first Leuchtturm1917 - I got mine in A5 dot-grid (also a first for me) and I have to say I've fallen in love with it. The dot-grid takes a bit of getting used to, so if you've only ever used single ruled or blank paper before, give it a chance before you dismiss it! The paper isn't be-all-and-end-all quality despite many claims; you will absolutely still get ghosting unless you're using pencils or incredibly fine-nibbed pens, but even my XS Faber-Castell PITT artist pen at 0.1mm shows through. That pen is, however, intended to be permanent which could contribute to the ghosting. That being said, I've also used felt tip markers in it (going over some spots three or four times) and I've yet to see bleed-through. If you can live with ghosting, this is a fantastic notebook. There are two ribbon markers, one plain and one bi-coloured. The elastic matches the cover and is springy enough to make sure your Leuchtturm stays closed without threatening to snap at every movement. There is also a pocket on the inside of the back cover, which I am currently keeping the handily supplied Leuchtturm stickers (three square title stickers, two of which are lined and the other of which is blank, and a few spine stickers). The pages are numbered, barring the three index pages and single blank page at the beginning. The dot-grid is 5mm, which I find is pleasantly spaced for my handwriting but also means that I can fit a lot of that handwriting on one page - one of the things I dislike about cheaper ruled notebooks is that it always feels like the ruling is too far apart and I'm wasting space. All in all, if you don't mind ghosting, give this notebook a chance. It's fantastic for bullet journalers with its built-in index and page numbering, or if you're like me and want a notebook to jot down ideas as and when they appear while still being able to easily reference them, this could be worth a shot.

## Frequently Bought Together

- LEUCHTTURM1917 - Notebook Hardcover Medium A5-251 Numbered Pages for Writing and Journaling (Navy, Dotted)
- LEUCHTTURM1917 Self Adhesive Pen Loop Elastic Pen Holder (Navy)

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---

*Product available on Desertcart United Kingdom*
*Store origin: GB*
*Last updated: 2026-05-15*