![]() I want to go down this rabbit-hole soooooooooo bad and spend hours looking at this stuff as I've done before many many times.īecause I'm always, always, always on the look-out for organizational practices that will make my life easier, better, more organized the kind of thing that will help me not just remain on task but also remember those tasks in the first place. Posted by cendawanita at 9:00 AM on NovemĪs a person with ADHD this scares me. Now that is a country that makes incredibly attractive, practical stationery. Right now I just splurged on Japanese stationery for this purpose. Not to mention the fact that I feel like I can refer to my notes a lot faster spatially helps A LOT. And I am still a much more precise and faster writer with a pen than with a phone, so I also get to indulge in my fountain pens. It's working out great, because I have too many disparate things going on, so knowing that the sections are flexible for arrangement has managed to keep me stay put with this rather than joining that sad mountaineous pile of notebooks which is just not quite what I wanted. Right now my system is based on a ring binder and looseleaf sheets, which get refiled later, as needed. posted by divabat (82 comments total)Īhhhh what an inspirational post, and a dangerous one (for my wallet!).įor now I'm not totally a PlannerWorld person, but god bless this movement because it sure livens up my own version of the Bullet Journal. However, for many others, it serves as a useful creative outlet, giving them motivation to get organized as well as building connections with communities of fellow planner fans. Not everyone is a fan of planner decoration, with criticisms that it's distracting from the whole point of planning and can get overwhelming. You can DIY your own decorations, or forgo stickers & washi tape entirely to use something else. While all those planner accoutrements may start to get expensive, there are ways to decorate on a budget. (There should really be more though, so if you're so inclined & have art skills please start a business and make some.) A fairly popular tag is #gothplanner ( here's a great video along those lines) and there are planner layouts inspired by Victoriana, witchcraft, fandom geekery, and steampunk. While a lot of glam planning material tends to share similar aesthetics, there are a few offshoots for people with different tastes. (Related, though not quite the same, are the #studyblr and #studyspo tags on Tumblr, which often features planner and notebook setups from current school & college students.) Small businesses ( mostly based on Etsy) dedicated to planners and planner decoration also have active social media accounts to promote their new releases and highlight ways that their products are used. The planner decoration fandom is highly active on Instagram and YouTube, often via hashtags like #glamplanner or #planneraddict, or by posting Plan With Mes and Planner Hauls. Meanwhile, those who favor the Midori Traveller's Notebook from Japan tend to be more free-form in their artistry, often making their own inserts, pages, and full-fledged Fauxdoris. The Filofax fans also adore planner decoration, often incorporating the flyleafs or dividers - particularly to make dashboards, either to hold spare supplies or sticky-note reminders or to add design. ![]() Other brands have their own communities of planner decoration, with their own aesthetic to suit the planner. Other popular brands include the Kickstarter favourite Passion Planner, The Happy Planner (also known as "Mambi", the acronym for its company), Plum Paper, kikki.K, and Kate Spade. ![]() Specific brands of planners are favoured amongst this crowd: the Erin Condren Lifeplanners are especially popular, with many planner stickers and full layouts made in the same colors and sizes as their weekly layouts.
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