Material: Leather (Hand-coloured, Vegetable Tanned, Full Grain)
Color: DANDELION
Weight: 100
|| Tuck in sleeve for your favourite notebook for hassle free handling. Keep refilling your notebook while maintaining the durability of outer leather cover ||
|| Two separate slots for business/credit cards || Two small slots on top inside for earphone or pen-drive ||
|| Loop in centre top to hold pen or your important keys ||
|| Black elastic closure band, provides added security to your notebook. This can act as a bookmark also ||
|| Small pen loop on cover face of the notebook for quick pen handling ||
|| Another pen loop on side for thin pens ||
|| In order to make the cover more elegant and light weight, the leather used in this product has been thinned and its surface is full-grain leather ||
|| Vintage book styled leather side joint adds a rustic charm to the notebook cover ||
|| Yin Yang Symbol Embossed on front and back of the notebook cover, adds an inspiration to the everyday monotonous chores ||
|| Border design is fascinating Fibonacci series ||
|| Made with top grain vegetable tanned leather. Hand painted by rural artisans, the look and shade can vary, producing a unique possession, no two are exactly the same - a special keepsake for your thoughts & ideas ||
REDUSE REUSE RECYCLE
We Do Not Inherit the Earth from Our Ancestors; We Borrow It from Our Children
We all live on the same planet and share this planet with the people we love. This same planet will be inherited by our children, grandchildren and so on when we die. Therefore we must take care of it so that our future generations can enjoy everything that this beautiful planet offers us.
Three great ways we can eliminate waste and protect your environment — Reduce waste, Reuse materials instead of throwing them away, Do not throw away anything that can be recycled.
Reduce is to limit the amount of waste you create to help the environment.
This includes buying products with minimum packaging, borrowing things which we do not use often, starting compost bin, saving energy and water etc.
Once you reduce waste creation by organising and limiting your consumption, you will save the natural resource. The natural resources are limited and should be used carefully so that our future generation can also enjoy everything that we are enjoying.
Reuse means to use something again instead of throwing it away.
Try to find various efficient ways to reuse things like clothes, containers, plastic bags etc.
We can minimise our usage of natural resources but cannot stop. So whatever we use, we should always think of reusing it to save natural resources.
The concept behind recycling is that you should try to change the waste into potentially useful materials.
Recycling is the third level of saving resources.
First reduce your uses, then reuse things to minimise fresh use. If you have to use and you cannot reuse then try to recycle it so that fresh resources can be saved.
This waste hierarchy is the foundation of eco–friendly, frugal or zero–waste living. It is the only way to save the environment from getting deteriorated.
Sacred Geometry- Fibonacci
In the Fibonacci Series, each number is the sum of the previous two, starting from 0 and 1. Therefore, the series looks like this: 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, and so on.
The ratio of consecutive Fibonacci numbers approaches the ‘golden ratio’ or phi = 1.618. (In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities; that is, (a+b)/a = a/b; if a is larger than b).
Visually this creates a swirling pattern as the sequence goes on..
Pattern on the conch, arrangement of leaves on a stem, branching in trees, sunflower, shape of galaxies, even human body structures and DNA along with the arrangement of piano keys all depict Fibonacci sequence.
The name ‘Fibonacci’ is due to a 13th-century Italian mathematician Leonardo of Pisa, who later came to be known as Fibonacci. However, Indian scriptures find the earliest mention of ‘Fibonacci numbers’ in the 2nd century BCE work of Acharya Pingala.
Seeing the fascination of Fibonacci Series 23rd November is celebrated as Fibonacci day’ because when the date is written in the mm/dd format (11/23), the digits in the date form a Fibonacci sequence: 1,1,2,3.
Observing clearly at the design, one can see two series of Fibonacci joined in centre to form Gopadma.. Symbol to show Cow’s feet. Symbol of purity, motherhood and ahimsa.
Spiritually, the golden ratio has for centuries represented perfect harmony, or the most attractive proportion in almost all the things. It is a form of natural movement of energy and depicts that the designs in nature accomplish specific goals with the minimum of resources and energy.