I included the
Lighthouse Vario-G in my "binder testing" regime, but I didn't mention it because I found it had one big issue I found annoying -- those tall rectangular rings. My feeling is these binders are really designed for storing pages and not so much for turning pages. The issue is that in order to turn a page, you have to literally lift it up the ring to the top, then pull it over the top, and lower it back down on the other side of the ring. If that sounds laborious to you, and it certainly was for me, I'd beware. The one Vario G binder I bought to test either got demoted to storing unwanted ("but you never know") pages somewhere I've forgotten now or maybe I just threw it out. That's how tired I was of turning pages that way. Your mileage may vary, of course, but I suggest you try one out before you buy more of them.
LH also makes a smaller binder called the
Vario F which is a padded cover 3-ring binder with a slipcase that I like a lot. But it's for smaller (8.5x11") pages so I gave up on it. Also its rings are round, not squared off on one side. Round rings don't hold as many pages. The comparable Scott/Amos 3-ring binder, also with a slipcase, just seems to be the better one for smaller pages like this.
My list of the perfect ring binder would allow for easy page turning and not snag on the holes in the pages (I find 3-ring binders do this more than others, for some reason -- not sure why). Include a ring-opening lever since yanking rings open by hand gets old really fast. Have padded covers. Have a slipcase available.
What I did find was a bit of a surprise to me --
22-ring (British and European) binders.
Dauwalder's Stamp Shop in the UK sells some of these and they are really very nice. And they sell the 22 hole blank pages that fit them. Shipping adds a lot to the price, of course. And
Marini (Italy) and
Yvert & Tellier (France) albums popular in Europe are available with 22 rings (also with two posts). I find that the pages seem to turn more smoothly with more rings which is one reason I like these a lot. Maybe I'm just imagining that, but so far that's what I'm experiencing.
The key problem is you must use 22 hole pages, but these can be bought from these same companies, including blank pages. Blank 22-hole pages can be printed on, of course, but if you must have preprinted pages, they're also sold by both Marini and Yvert -- and I think by
Stanley Gibbons for its UK albums. None of the other album publishers uses 22-hole pages. But I use another trick --
Apparently 22-hole punching is some kind of industrial standard in the U.S., so I found a 22-hole paper punch on
ebay and use that to punch some of my existing pages to fit those binders. It takes some searching to find one, but they do come up for sale. Most of my albums will probably remain Scott two-post albums, but more and more are 22 hole albums as I put some into Marini binders I found at Subway Stamp Shop when they were closing them out a year or two ago. Worth thinking about if you ever get tired of standard hole-ripping 3-ring USA binders. And the Marini binders come with slipcases.
I also bought piles of blank 22-hole pages from Marini (these are large size -- about Scott Specialty size) and had them shipped to me from Italy so I can print on them. Not as expensive as you might think (maybe 25c/page), but not cheap, either, with shipping. Steiner page layouts work just fine on these pages. And in a Marini binder, they look like a completely professional album.
There are also European 4-ring binders -- and even 2-ring binders -- along with lots of binders with different numbers of rings from all the usuals -- LH, Lindner, and all the others. But you need to use their pages. And these albums are really expensive. The whole "number of holes per page" thing these companies engage in can get a little annoying. It's to keep you buying only their pages. And there's Palo Albums in the U.S. which use 5-hole pages! And Schaubek in Germany uses 6-hole pages. No 7-hole pages yet, though. :) Seven holes, anyone? Anyone? "And for the golfers out there, we have this lovely green-jacketed binder designed for 18-holes . . . ."