Following the popularity of my monthly dividers, I have produced a set of topic dividers based on the theme of 'Antique and Antiquity'. Here's what hey look like:
Since making this picture, incidentally, I've had some help with my translations.
The templates are set up with pictures I've found through Google Images and just cropped down to fit the format. The intention is that you can replace these with your own pictures.
When you add pictures, you'll need to position, size and crop them. This will be hard if you don't know how to make pictures 'float' in a Word document. To do this, once your picture is in the document, right-click on the picture and from the pop-up menu, select 'text wrapping', then 'behind text'. You can then drag the picture around at will. Finally, select your picture, right-click and choose 'send to back' to put the picture 'behind' the calendar and the tab.
You can download the templates below as Word documents. Each page will print on A4 card and contain two different Personal-size dividers, with crop marks to make cutting them out easy.
In response to a reader request, I have produced a version of the Midori-compatible Daily Journal with pre-printed appointment times added. Here is how it looks:
These are designed to work as Midori Traveler's Notebook inserts but will work equally well as stand-alone booklets.
You can download one or more of the sets. Each contains two months of pages, so the whole of 2014 is spread across six booklets.
I'm making this available as a in two formats, so everyone should be able to use it. If you want to tinker with it, choose the editable Word file, which is unprotected.
Each file prints double-sided on A4 paper in booklet mode. In all, you'll print sixteen sheets per set, which you can then bind into a cover and trim. This post will show you how.
Following my post of these in Personal size, I received a request for A5 versions. The wider page allowed my to show more of the original pictures, and I'm quite pleased with the results. If you want to see them all, you'll have to download them, but to whet your appetite, here is one example compared with the smaller version:
If you use an A5 Filofax and would like to give these dividers a try, you can download them and print them for yourself.
The templates are set up with seasonal pictures I've found through Google Images and just cropped down to fit the format. The intention is that you can replace these with your own pictures.
When you add pictures, you'll need to position, size and crop them. This will be hard if you don't know how to make pictures 'float' in a Word document. To do this, once your picture is in the document, right-click on the picture and from the pop-up menu, select 'text wrapping', then 'behind text'. You can then drag the picture around at will. Finally, select your picture, right-click and choose 'send to back' to put the picture 'behind' the calendar and the tab.
You can download the templates below as Word documents, each containing six pages, with one A5 divider on each. Each page will print on A4 card, with crop marks to make cutting them out easy.
Those of you in North America who have struggled to obtain A4 paper are likely to have even more trouble obtaining A4 card, so I've made versions for you that are based on Letter paper.
About a year ago, I posted a template you could use to make your own photographic dividers. This year, I've put the template to a different use. I've added calendars to make a set of monthly dividers, which make it easier for you to navigate though your diary pages. Here's how they look. You can click on any of them to get a closer look.
The templates are set up with seasonal pictures I've found through Google Images and just cropped down to fit the format. The intention is that you can replace these with your own pictures.
When you add pictures, you'll need to position, size and crop them. This will be hard if you don't know how to make pictures 'float' in a Word document. To do this, once your picture is in the document, right-click on the picture and from the pop-up menu, select 'text wrapping', then 'behind text'. You can then drag the picture around at will. Finally, select your picture, right-click and choose 'send to back' to put the picture 'behind' the calendar and the tab.
You can download the templates below as Word documents. Each page will print on A4 card and contain two different Personal-size dividers, with crop marks to make cutting them out easy.
I recently offered a Don't Forget page for Personal and Pocket sizes. Not wanting A5 users to be deprived, here is a version in that size:
Click to enlarge
If your tasks are longer than just one line and you're tired of trying to squeeze them onto the standard To Do sheets, you can download and print the insert. You can choose either the editable Word file or the PDF file. Choose the Word file if you want to adapt the layout to your own requirements.
Each version is set up as an A4 document. To use them as A5 inserts, print the document in booklet mode on A4 paper, then use a guillotine to divide each sheet into two and punch the required holes, which the templates are set up with mirrored gutters to accommodate. Or, if you have A5 paper, then either the printer or the PC will scale it to size for you.
It took a while to shrink my weekly habits tracker down from A5 to Personal size, but I'm quite happy with this version:
Click to enlarge
Each week, the tracker will guide you through a four-step process that will help you develop habits in the areas of:
Diet (either for weight reduction or for health)
Exercise (any amount for any level of fitness)
Money (either making it or saving it)
Study (at any level, formal or informal)
Karma (being nice, paying it forward or any aspect you choose)
I've left one space empty for you to add another if you want, but if you have a different set of things you want to track, you can change the table titles very easily.
The insert takes you through the following process:
Step 1: Decide on a goal for this week. For instance, earning a 4 every day would mean a score for the week of 28. Be realistic; think about what would represent a good performance for this particular week.
You'll need to think about what a top score of 5 every day (=35 for the week) would actually mean for you, and what a lower score would look like. Here, your life goals will guide you (because you do have life goals, right?) Also think about what else is happening in your life in the coming week and what compromises you might therefore have to make.
Step 2: At the end of each day, score yourself for each habit. A score of 1 indicates a poor performance that you are very unhappy with. A 5 indicates the best possible performance.
Be honest here. Look back each day at what you were hoping to achieve - what you think (say) a 5 or a 3 look like - and compare your actual performance.
Step 3: At the end of the week, calculate your total points and compare against your goals.
Just some adding up to do, and see how you performed against the targets you set at the start of the week.
Step 4: Reflect on this week and set yourself some commitments for next week.
Work out what you are proud of this week. Give yourself a pat on the back. Resolve to keep doing it.
Then think about what you plan to improve on next week.
If you're ready to start tracking your habits, you can download and print the insert. You can choose either the editable Word file or the PDF file. Choose the Word file if you want to change the standard habits to your own.
Print these double-sided. If you have a duplex printer, set it to flip on the short edge. If you don't then you'll have to print odd-numbered pages and then refeed to print the even-numbered pages on the reverse. You might have to experiment to find out how to refeed the paper.
On one side of each sheet you'll find crop marks. Use a craft knife and a steel ruler to release the Personal pages and punch them. The templates are set up with mirrored gutters to accommodate the holes.
If using the PDF be sure to set it to print at full size as explained here.
In good time for next year, I am producing 2014 versions for all my Midori Traveler's Notebook inserts. Today it's the Daily Journal layout. Here's how it looks:
Inside front cover - opening page
Inside spread
These are designed to work as Midori Traveler's Notebook inserts but will work equally well as stand-alone booklets.
Ideal if you want to try keeping a journal, these will also suit people who sometimes have busy days and want the freedom to organise their schedule on a free-format basis.
You can download one or more of the sets. Each contains two months of pages, so the whole of 2014 is spread across six booklets.
I'm making this available as a in two formats, so everyone should be able to use it. If you want to tinker with it, choose the editable Word file, which is unprotected.
Each file prints double-sided on A4 paper in booklet mode. In all, you'll print sixteen sheets per set, which you can then bind into a cover and trim. This post will show you how.
In good time for next year, I am producing 2014 versions for all my Midori Traveler's Notebook inserts. Today it's the Week on a Page layout. Here's how it looks:
Inside front cover - opening page
Inside spread
Not keen on the blue? You can choose from a range of colours:
Each booklet contains just over half a year. They are designed to work as a Midori Traveler's Notebook insert but will work equally well as stand-alone booklets.
You can download 2014 sets and print them for yourself. The files print double-sided on A4 paper in booklet mode. You can then bind the sheets into a cover and trim. This post will show you how.
I'm making this available as a in two formats, so everyone should be able to use it. If you want to tinker with it, choose the editable Word file, which is unprotected.
To get started, download your selection from the choices below:
I have always read books. I cannot remember a day in my life
when I didn’t read at least a page. Other interests have come and gone, but
reading has been my one constant leisure pursuit. My reading was disorganised,
though. I would have several reading piles, and sometimes get caught out,
picking up books from the library I had already read, knowing there was perhaps
one book in a ten-book series I hadn’t read but having no idea which one it
might be.
Many times, I considered starting a proper record to list
the books I read, but always I discounted the idea. What about the hundreds of
books I’d already finished? How would they end up getting catalogued?
In late July 2005 I was in a hotel in Mumbai, India on
business. July 2005 saw a world record broken in Mumbai:
When 944mm of rain fell on the city in one day I suddenly found I had time on my hands. No planes were flying, no business was
going to be done and I had to be patient. Leaving the hotel was not advised.
Fortunately I had a pile of books with me and decided that the time had come to
start logging what I read.
I knocked up a quick Access database on my laptop, and
entered the details of a few books into it as I finished them. Over the years
since, I have entered details of every book I have read, as I finished it. I’ve
built queries and reports that can show me the data in different ways and track
my progress through the several book series I am in the midst of.
A couple of years after I started recording my reading, I
printed off some reports and analysed what I had read. It was an odd mix. There
was fiction – mainstream and genre – as well as biography, self-help, business,
history and an eclectic mix of general non-fiction. I noticed that there was
very little in my reading that could objectively be judged ‘worthy’. The
occasional Jane Austen was the exception rather than the rule. I wondered
whether I should seed more of the classics into my reading. I decided not to.
Indeed, I set myself a rule that would largely keep me away from the classics.
It was simply this:
Only read books you want to read.
I decided that committing to this rule should be coupled
with an ambitious goal. I resolved to read a thousand books within ten years of July 2005. This wouldn’t be easy; at the time I was reading around seventy
books in a year. A young family meant I had a limited amount of time to devote
to reading, but my target meant I would have to make much better use of the
time I did have. And I have never skim-read a book. I have to read every word
on every page, and I am not a particularly fast reader.
But what I could do then (and can do much better now) is
focus on what I’m reading without getting distracted and having to go back and
re-read a paragraph because I have no idea what I just read. I could also find
ten minutes here, an hour there that might have been wasted had I not been
carrying a book with me. I now always carry a book (or my Kindle) with me. It
gets many hits each day.
So, cutting an already lengthy story short, it turns out I
am nearly there. I have finished 962 books in the (almost) eight years since
that monsoon. Another 38 will see me meet my target. That will happen in late
July or early August if I maintain current rates.
How have I done it? Well, the decision to read whatever I
want helped keep me motivated. Keeping the record and analysing the numbers
introduced a competitive element, too. Every year I have beaten the previous
year’s total. Last year I finished over 150 books, which was more than twice
the number I was reading just five or six years earlier. This year I believe it
will be nearer 175. Can I make it to two thousand books by 2020? Let’s see!