Stamps & Ink Pads

Stamps & Ink Pads

Clear and rubber stamps plus dye, pigment, and archival ink pads. For journal pages, greeting cards, to-do lists, and every paper project that deserves a hand-pressed touch.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Clear stamps, wood stamps, rubber stamps — which type should I start with?
A: For journaling and card-making, clear stamps are my usual suggestion. You can see exactly where you’re stamping through the acrylic block, which saves so much guesswork. Wood-mounted stamps have a classic, heirloom feel and are great for repetitive stamping once positioned. Traditional rubber stamps on a cushion are somewhere in the middle. At kawaiizaki, I tend to stock clear stamps for planner people and small wood stamps for those who love a bit of desk charm.
Q: Can I use these stamps and inks in my planner without bleeding through the thin paper?
A: Yes, with a careful choice. The key is to use a chalk or pigment ink pad rather than a dye-based one, because pigment inks sit on top of the paper instead of soaking in. Go light on the pressure, and let the stamped image dry for a few seconds. I use VersaMagic on Tomoe River paper all the time, and with a light hand, there’s zero bleed. If you want to be extra safe, slip a blotting sheet behind the page.
Q: How do I get a clean, crisp impression every time?
A: It’s all in the tap, not the push. Place your stamp face-up, ink it by gently tapping the pad onto the stamp—this avoids over-inking the edges. Then put your paper on a firm, flat surface, lower the stamp straight down without rocking, and press evenly with your fingertips, not your whole palm. If you rock or slide, you’ll get a shadow edge. It takes about three tries to get the feel, and then it becomes muscle memory.
Q: Do ink pads dry out quickly? How should I store them?
A: With proper storage, a good Japanese ink pad can last several years. Store the pad upside down—this keeps the ink surface moist against the lid. Keep them in a cool drawer, away from direct sunlight and heat. I also re-ink my pads with matching ink refills when the impressions start looking faint instead of throwing the whole pad away. It’s cheaper and much less wasteful.