My Ransom Note Dayplanner
Over the summer I suffered a technological mishap that resulted in quite a few lost files. One would think I'd have learned to back up things by now--and I have--just not as frequently as I should. My previous back up was a couple years old. So...a lot of things just disappeared. Like our most up-to-date Scrabble stats, say, or the template for my homespun, recycled dayplanner.
And it is the time of year where I need a new planner. (I am lost without my planner to guide me.) I found myself jotting down a growing list on the last page of December 2016 of concerts, meetings, dental appointments, etc. that are, somehow, scheduled for a 2017 that is astonishingly close. But, my old template was gone, a casualty of the mishap. It was just something basic I'd pulled off the web and so that was where I went to find a replacement.
As I was scrolling through different free options I realized that I could seize this opportunity to get creative and make my own. And a cooler one at that. So, I did.
I don't know where the ransom note idea came from, but I really like it. It is playful and bright, quirky and still easy to read. I enjoyed hunting out the letters and laying them out in an attractive arrangement. Johnny made herself quite a pest trying to help me with all these scraps of paper, but I persevered. The birds I clipped from a renewal reminder for Audubon magazine, but everything else came from an outdated issue of Time. All cast off things, destined for the recycle bin at the library where I work.
I sketched out the boxes and pasted down the letters, making one master copy. I then printed out copies on (the gazillion) pages that students have left behind in the printer at the library. This not only makes the dayplanner more eco-savvy, but frequently provides interesting things to look at from aviation traffic signals to English papers. Often enough though the backside is just gobbledygook.
I have a smallish (9 inches x 7 inches) three ring binder which I use for containing my planner pages. It is something I picked up secondhand and it has served me at least three years now.
I like it. I like it a lot. Maybe there was at least one upside to the digital malfunction.
And it is the time of year where I need a new planner. (I am lost without my planner to guide me.) I found myself jotting down a growing list on the last page of December 2016 of concerts, meetings, dental appointments, etc. that are, somehow, scheduled for a 2017 that is astonishingly close. But, my old template was gone, a casualty of the mishap. It was just something basic I'd pulled off the web and so that was where I went to find a replacement.
As I was scrolling through different free options I realized that I could seize this opportunity to get creative and make my own. And a cooler one at that. So, I did.
I don't know where the ransom note idea came from, but I really like it. It is playful and bright, quirky and still easy to read. I enjoyed hunting out the letters and laying them out in an attractive arrangement. Johnny made herself quite a pest trying to help me with all these scraps of paper, but I persevered. The birds I clipped from a renewal reminder for Audubon magazine, but everything else came from an outdated issue of Time. All cast off things, destined for the recycle bin at the library where I work.
I sketched out the boxes and pasted down the letters, making one master copy. I then printed out copies on (the gazillion) pages that students have left behind in the printer at the library. This not only makes the dayplanner more eco-savvy, but frequently provides interesting things to look at from aviation traffic signals to English papers. Often enough though the backside is just gobbledygook.
I have a smallish (9 inches x 7 inches) three ring binder which I use for containing my planner pages. It is something I picked up secondhand and it has served me at least three years now.
I like it. I like it a lot. Maybe there was at least one upside to the digital malfunction.
I love it...and such a good use of wasted paper...
ReplyDelete~Have a lovely day!
Thanks!! I think it SUPER rad. And I get many comments on it during meetings and things when I bust it out. This is an opportunity for me to plant the seed of reduce-reuse-recycle in people's minds.
Delete(Also, I beg your pardon for ignoring you so long. Somehow I failed to notice I hadn't moderated any comments since last year!! I was startin' to wonder where my friends had all gone...only to discover it was me being a dummy.)