Portrait Week + Month
Short pages on the bottom with lined columns for time-blocking and list-making.
Short pages on the bottom with lined columns for time-blocking and list-making.
Wide horizontal rows on the middle short pages - best for list-makers and day categorizers.
Narrow, lined columns on the middle short pages - best for time-blocking and long lists.
Monthly view on the left, 4 columns on the right. Ideal for organizing life by categorized lists.
Pops up with coil + weekly short pages on the top.
Five-block weekly short pages - designed for educators to manage multiple subjects.
Elevate + protect your planner with our stylish and durable planner folio covers.
Little somethings featuring your favorite patterns - perfect for gift giving.
Customize your planner to fit your life with our paper and plastic insert pages.
Give structure to your sketches, plans, and brilliant brainstorms.
Organize your planner with snap-in page markers and tabs.
Pouches for all of your favorite pens and can't-live-without planner tools.
Maggie
bananas for budgets
Study No.
10 of 10
Linked Collection
Shopping List:
With a new baby on the way, Maggie had a serious financial goal in mind with her planner set up. Her Monthly section is used for appointments, school schedule, holidays, and family events — all the big, time-sensitive things. Her Right-Side Calendar Paper Insert is dedicated to bill tracking. Since finances are a huge focus for her this year, every subscription, small transaction, and payment gets logged here. She's using Lined Paper Inserts as a "franken-stickered" work-in-progress budget tracker and as a Home Cleaning Schedule. Her 4-Column Page is laid out vertically to track ongoing projects and her Habit Tracking section is going to be filled with her biggest focus each week. This system is flexible enough to grow with her — especially with a new baby on the way!
Tip from Maggie:
budget tracker
We love the way Maggie used the lined insert to focus on the things she's tracking in her budget. She purchased some stickers to create the grid, but we think an old-fashioned ruler and marker would do the trick as well!