This Rite in the Rain top-spiral weatherproof notebook uses the brand’s patented all-weather paper — a coated pulp stock that sheds water and holds ink even when the page is wet. The cover is made for jobsite and field abuse, and the binding opens flat without cracking.
It’s made for field notes in rain, snow, humidity, and sweat — the pages don’t warp, tear, or bleed through when they get wet. The top-spiral binding flips open one-handed so you can write while standing in weather. Construction crews, surveyors, hunters, law enforcement, and military units all carry Rite in the Rain because it’s the only paper that reliably works in weather — and it’s made in the same Tacoma plant the company has been running since 1916.
Rite in the Rain has been making all-weather paper in Tacoma, Washington since 1916 — the same waterproof paper used by military units, search-and-rescue teams, surveyors, and anyone else who has to take notes in weather that destroys normal paper.

