Whether simple or colorful, the Carta Pura weekly calendar is a minimalist, elegant and high-quality product.
The wonderfully smooth, 80 g/m² Salzer paper has a generous layout for your appointments, notes, diary entries or sketches. On two pages you have the same amount of space for your entries for all seven days of the week and a separate field for notes. The calendar is printed in a restrained shade of gray in German, and you will find a yearly and monthly overview of the current and following year at the beginning and end of the planner. The public holidays for Germany, Austria and Switzerland as well as the moon phases are also useful. Thanks to the ribbon marker, you can find the current calendar page quickly and easily at any time. The good flatness of the design allows you to write and draw comfortably.
As far as the calendar cover is concerned, you can choose between three fine Japanese papers. Tsumugi paper is embossed like a Japanese silk fabric, which gives it a textile look at first glance. Chiyogami paper contains a high proportion of mulberry fibers and is screen-printed with traditional, colorful patterns. Like the third option - katazome paper - it comes from Kyoto. This variant is based on handmade Kozuba sheets with distinctive handmade paper sheets.
Sustainability at Carta Pura
For Carta Pura, beauty and human scale are the orientation and reason for action. It therefore goes without saying that Carta Pura products are particularly sustainable.
The pads, folders and stationery double cards, books, notebooks and calendars from Carta Pura have been produced for many years in small businesses in the Munich area and in Baden-Württemberg. Rivoli and Carta Pura paper is produced in Holland. The envelopes made from these papers come from Düren.
Carta Pura calculates the quantities sensitively: no more is produced than can be stored and probably sold. If, for example, calendars are left over, they are given away to kindergartens or social institutions.
Carta Pura only travels by train on business trips within Europe and uses public transport or walks in the cities.
At Carta Pura, ten people from four nations work together in a spirit of equality and co-creation. Their love of paper determines their actions.