![]() ![]() If you want something minimal and functional that will ‘get the job done’ without any extra flair, this would be a good planner.Using a planner is one of the best ways to stay organized and on top of your goals, no matter what they are. There was some show through of the graph paper on the weekly spread to the monthly calendar.The dates at a glance calendars on the monthly and weekly spread are the smallest I’ve ever seen for a planner 0.75” wide.The year isn’t printed on the spine – the planner could be mistaken for any notebook.Plain boring cover with no option to personalise.Due to the book binding, the planner doesn’t have much room to expand if you want to use lots of stickers and washi to decorate.While it’s a book / sewn bound planner the pages actually lay flat.Very sturdy hardcover – one of the sturdiest I’ve seen in a planner.Wider line spacing large than the standard 0.25” that most planners have.without worrying about it clashing with the design of the planner Subtle design so you could add stickers, washi tape etc.The annual calendar, monthly calendar and weekly planner all start on a Monday (consistent).The paper is cream and smooth to write on however everything had bad ghosting ? I also did some highlighter and stamp swatches. I tried various ballpoint, gel, fine tip and marker tip pens – there was some ghosting on the back side of the page. The colors aren’t that nice and they’re quite big (approx 0.75″) I’m not a fan of these planners stickers. Tabs are preferable and make it quicker and easier to find things but this is a good alternative: Instead, the months are shaded on the side of the pages for each month. This page could be good for marking all the places you’ve been or where you want to go during the year. Time zones page is a nice idea… but probably quicker to just look it up on your phone. These travel planning pages are a bit too brief and would really only be useful for general overview / working out where you’re going, not for detailed trip planning. Related: 12 Planner Layout Ideas for Monthly Habit Tracking in Your Bullet Journal Ideal for habit trackers, saving trackers and year in pixels spreads There are both lined and graph paper pages at the back of the planner. Related: 100 things to put in your habit tracker of your planner or bullet journal (plus free printable habit tracker) In addition to general notes, you could use the graph section for a weekly habit tracker. I really love the right side of the weekly spread with the big action list and wide line spacing. The dates at a glance month calendars are the smallest I’ve ever seen in a planner – only 0.75″ wide. Week numbers are also printed on the page. Saturday and Sunday share the same amount of planning space as a weekday which I tend to avoid (not enough room!) There is a bit of space at the top of the week for events, bills and other things happening that week. I really like these pages – so much list making space and checkboxes!Ĭonsistent with the monthly calendar, the weekly planner starts on a Monday. The calendar splits the boxes in 2 diagonally, rather than restarting the numbering on the top row □Įach month has a 2 page action list. I’m not sure why planners include this as it seems a bit pointless to me however I did have a reader email me once saying they used it for gardening. Public holidays have decorative icons next to them. The monthly calendar starts on a Monday (consistent with the weekly spread). This is an Aussie planner so has Australian public holidays and school terms broken down by state. ![]() Subscribe to my YouTube channel for more planner videos! The Coverīit bigger than a normal medium size (which I classify as 7 x 9″ high) this planner is 7″ wide x 10.5″ high To enlarge the screen of the video, click the square icon in the bottom right hand corner of the video (it will say ‘full screen’ when you hover your mouse over the icon). Made in Australia and ships from Australia.2 Page monthly calendar (starts on Monday).2 page weekly spread (starts on Monday). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |