Organiser Pad
Organiser Pad
Plastic-Free A5 Organiser Pad - Coffeenotes
An A5 organiser pad with three flexible sections for lists, notes and doodles - made from upcycled takeaway coffee cups by Coffeenotes, a family-run carbon-neutral company in Dorset.
Coffeenotes make everything in-house at their carbon-neutral factory, using waste and recycled materials throughout. The cover is 250gsm paper made from 95% post-consumer waste and 5% coffee waste. The 60 tearaway pages are 106gsm, made from a mix of upcycled coffee cups, post-industrial waste from coffee cup manufacture and virgin fibres. Each page has a dotted reverse to encourage reuse before tearing out.
Completely plastic-free, 100% recyclable and produced with minimal ink and glue.
- A5 size - 60 tearaway pages
- Three sections for lists, notes and doodles
- Dotted reverse on each page
- Cover: 250gsm - 95% post-consumer waste + 5% coffee waste
- Pages: 106gsm - upcycled coffee cups and post-industrial waste
- Completely plastic-free and 100% recyclable
- Carbon neutral - made with The World Land Trust
- Made in Dorset by a family-run company
Product Care
Coffeenotes use premium quality boards and papers but these will mark and scuff with use - we think that's part of the charm of a genuinely well-used pad. To minimise marking, take a little extra care when packing it into a bag. As many products are hand-finished, there will be slight natural variations between pads.
FAQs
What makes Coffeenotes sustainable?
They make everything in-house at a carbon-neutral factory in Dorset, using as little ink and glue as possible, only pulp-coloured papers to avoid dye, and no coating on wires so the whole product stays 100% recyclable.
They also work with The World Land Trust to offset their carbon footprint.
Can I recycle it when it's finished?
Yes - the whole pad is 100% recyclable and plastic-free, so it can go in your paper recycling when it's done.
What's the dotted reverse for?
Each tearaway page has a plain dotted side - designed so you can use both sides of the page before tearing it out, halving the paper used.