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So, typical of my personality, I decided to make one myself.
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The things I liked about the purchased planner were the hard cover and the coil binding (can't beat a book that will lie flat!), so I bought a 5.5 X 8" sketchbook and made a stencil template to rule the pages. There were a bunch of letter and number stamps kicking around a drawer upstairs begging to be put to good use, so I employed them as my typeface.
It probably took me about 4 hours to print up (to be honest, 2 of those hours were spent watching a spaghetti western movie with my husband, and the other two listening to a Jeffrey Archer book while printing). I learned a LOT in the process (for example, mounted stamps are far easier to handle than unmounted ones...it took until about June to figure that out!). My later pages are far prettier than my earlier ones, but that is to be expected, isn't it?
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It made most sense to put the month on the right page. My weeks are all Mon - Friday on the left, the weekend on the right. The lower right divided area is for 'to do' lists, and telephone messages.
My planner tends to spend most of it's life on the kitchen counter being consulted daily for meal planning and open for use and referral by other family members, so the loosely divided space on the lower right doesn't get formal designation...
It's hard to see in the picture, but I've put big gold stamps on family birthdays (Youngest's is Sept 29, shown at left).
After all the stamping was done, I added some expandable pockets for receipts, etc. The whole works is sitting under a pile of books upstairs while the glue dries. Tomorrow I begin the adventure of writing in all the different things we have already lined up for the coming year...not the least of which involves speed skating.
It's silly, but every year I have the same satisfaction with closing the previous year's planner, and opening the new year's one. As we get older there are fewer milestones - and the ones we have tend to get further and further apart. There's something about the ritual of literally closing the book on one year and opening a fresh new book on the new one that's so appealing. All those blank pages will be filled with the story of our lives... the literal story, the minutiae. We have the stories we tell about our lives, the love, the memories, but these planners end up being the record of how we get from one day to the next.
Enjoy the rest of the year. I hope your next year's book is filled with lovely things.
Lisa
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