Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Coupon Code
I have found a beautiful new paper that I just love! I'm upgrading my listings and celebrating with a coupon code for you to try it out! Use code UPGRADE25 for 25% off any purchase of $20 or more. Expires September 3rd so don't wait!
Tuesday, August 30, 2016
Plan With Me "Fall in Love"
Ahhh, fall is in the air...
well, it is a little bit first thing in the morning before the sun takes over and heats it up to 85*
I think it's the kids going back to school that's making me think fall, and the changing colors of the pages in my Erin Condren LifePlanner.
Did you think I was going to say leaves?
That doesn't happen much in Kansas, not the way it did when I lived in Vermont.
Does any of this have to do with a PWM?
It does when you take a look at the changing colors I was faced with this week...
Gold into purple smeared all over the place. It's moments like this that I wish I had gone with the neutral layout.
I had no choice but to hop on Etsy and buy some new colorful graphics and turn them into a colorful fall kit that would coordinate with all that watercolored ummm... stuff.
And here it is...
I called it "Fall in Love" because that's how I felt when I actually found some graphics that had all the colors I needed to make it through EC's next few months of watercolored challenges.
This kit is a four page Sampler Kit. That's what I call the kits that don't contain the full box ombres or washi sheets. I usually use the Full Weekly Kits because of my love for the ombres and washi, but this week I was re-formatting the Sampler Kits as well as trying out some amazing new sticker paper, so I wanted to test it all out and see how far this kit could go.
Without my normal ombre checklist boxes to stack with my headers, I turned the book sideways and placed the headers and checklist flags for my to do's.
At this point I was already in love with my new vinyl like paper.
The headers lifted up easily even though it is not labeled as repositionable. I was able to pull them up and straighten them out as many times as I needed and the little babies didn't fade or wrinkle or loose their shape.
Love.
I tried something new in this set and made a two box spread with that fabulous car.
At this point I also wanted to kick myself for forgetting to calibrate my new Silhouette cutting machine! The cuts are off by just enough to show the white on the top of several of the stickers, but I decided to finish the spread and blog it anyway.
Guess what I'll be doing today... ugh.
Despite the calibration fiasco, I really like the way they came together. With the lack of washi, and the adorableness of the two box car, I decided to layer that poor miscut weekend banner over the Today headers. I guess I can do without washi after all!
Maybe.
Last week I tried placing a half box at the bottom of each day to give me an extra little space for incidentals.
At first, I didn't really like the look of it, but it became so useful as the week went on that I did it again this week. However, I didn't really like the look of that last line hanging out there at the bottom, and no washi sheet!
Tape to the rescue.
And here's my favorite PWM trick I learned from Youtube... the old credit card washi cut. In case you haven't been around long, just keep an old store card in your washi stash. Line it up and tear the tape upward against it for clean straight edges.
One of those, can't believe I never thought of that, moments.
And there it is.
Just a few stickers left. I'm sure I will use most of them as the week goes on.
As it turns out, I really liked using the sampler kit.
I liked not having any waste.
And the new paper?
LOVE
I just placed a huge order to upgrade my shop, and I will attempt to do a paper comparison post tomorrow.
You know by now that when I say tomorrow, it could likely be a week!
If you made it this far, thank you for visiting, and please leave a comment below so I know I'm not alone.
Comparing Sticker Papers
Ever wonder what the difference is between all the different sticker finish options?
If you've ever shopped on Etsy for planner stickers there's usually three main options.
Regular Matte
Glossy
Premium Matte or Matte Vinyl
Those are the three types I see most and the three I will be testing today.
First of all, each shop has their own sources for their paper, and believe me they are not revealing those sources, so the actual paper may vary quite a bit from shop to shop.
I have even received an order from one shop that each sheet appeared to be printed on a different type of matte paper.
So this is not exactly a tell all of the secret world of sticker paper, sorry, but more of a general and badly photographed side by side test of three commonly used paper options to help get you started in selecting stickers for your planner.
Personally, I started out with regular matte paper when I started buying stickers for my planner. They are usually the cheapest option, and I was worried that glossy would not take pen well and might stand out too much on my planner page... all that shine, ya know?
To be honest, the first time I actually tried glossy was for this comparison, and I admit I am surprised at how much I like them.
Can you say - Pretty!
Oh my gosh, pretty.
But despite that sleek, shiny appeal, they didn't hold up in other tests... making that oh so annoying decision between pretty and practical more annoying than ever.
So let's get to it.
Three identical sticker sets printed on different papers.
My first impression was how different the colors appeared. Less noticeable in my poor dining room window photos, I'm afraid.
In the photo above I have regular matte sticker paper on top, glossy in the middle, and premium on the bottom.
The colors on the regular were fine, quite beautiful in fact, but if your screen is better than mine, you might notice that they are a bit darker, a bit grayer, and not quite as vibrant.
The colors on the glossy were also beautiful, but a bit paler. The darker golds were rich and gorgeous but the pale pink was not as visible.
The colors on the premium blew me away. I'm always hearing how much better glossy does on showing ink, so I was not expecting it to come out second best. The golds were soft and rich, the pale pink held its own, and the hues overall were vibrant and impressive. It looked like it had been printed on a different printer!
Here's another shot,
regular
glossy
premium
Now, the other big difference that you won't be able to tell no matter how I photograph is how these papers feel.
The regular you can imagine. It feels like paper. It's smooth and sturdier than your average printer paper, I shopped around a bit before I found a nice, clean, matte sticker paper that was affordable, but it is still just paper.
The glossy is slick and sturdy, a bit thinner than I expected, but has good body, if that makes sense.
The one I'm calling premium, is the one I couldn't stop touching! It has a soft buttery texture. Like a fine, smooth vinyl. If that makes any sense.
At this point, the three choices all have some differences, but so far it's more preference than performance. But we don't just buy these stickers to look at them...
ok, we sort of do. But to justify those purchases we actually use them. Usually.
So here's some performance tests...
Three headers. And just like before,
regular
glossy
premium
And now the color coding thing makes sense, right?
I stuck these headers into my classic Happy Planner today. But how often do you stick them down and they are just perfect so you leave them alone and move on?
Not often if your borderline psychotic like me.
No, I stick them down, then peel them up because they weren't quite straight, then peel them up because they still weren't quite straight, then peel them up because I changed my mind about where to put them, then peel them up... I think you get the picture.
And all the while I am cussing myself out on the inside because I know what all that peeling and sticking does to the overall end result. But. I. can't. stop.
Psychotic.
So here I peeled them up.
You can see that the regular pulled at the paper a bit.
The glossy pulled at the paper even more.
The premium didn't pull the paper up, but it did leave a little sticky glue behind.
None of them left the paper clean enough to go bare. I would have to place a sticker back down to cover the evidence from each of them.
Then I stuck them down in the next square. You can see the corners show the damage of lifting even though I was careful.
One more time...
Now the corners on the regular and glossy are really showing the damage, and the edges are pulling up a bit and looking stretched. The premium is looking pretty good. I ran my finger over the corner and the wrinkle smoothed out and stuck flat again. Very good.
Next I tried something that I always try to avoid, but I live a real life with real kids in a real house and real hands that I occasionally wash.
I can't tell you how many times my planner has suffered an accidental water attack, but this is the first time I did it on purpose.
One drop of water on each sticker.
The regular immediately did what it always does. It bleeds and fades.
The glossy didn't appear to bleed, but the actual paper sort of warped and got real fragile.
The premium got wet.
After a few seconds I dabbed them dry with a towel and let them sit to air dry for about an hour.
In the end, the regular looks pretty sad. The corners and top edge won't lay flat anymore from the re-positioning, and the ink ran a mess from the water.
The glossy shows some wrinkling and edge lifting from the re-positioning, and the water left behind a shadow like mark and wrinkly texture.
The premium impressed the heck out of me. It's laying flat. All that moving didn't seem to bother its edges at all, it's looking smooth and clean. If you look really closely you can just make out a shadow of a ring left behind where the water sat, slightly darker pigment.
Seriously impressed.
So at this point, I have a clear front runner... but these stickers aren't just for looks.
Really they're not.
I have to write on them, too.
Now, before you scroll down, remember that my handwriting is my nemesis.
I can't improve it. I've tried.
I give up.
Don't judge me.
For this I cut strips of each paper and placed them on a piece of regular paper.
It's all very scientific and precise.
And as usual we have
regular on top
glossy in the middle
premium at the bottom
I wrote on each one with my favorite pens. Staedtler being permanent (and hard to spell), le pen being a felt tip, G2 gel pen being a gel pen, and I'm not going to explain ball point or pencil. You can google those if you need to.
Each time I wrote the word, I counted to three then dragged my finger across it to check for smearing.
I was cringing when it came to smear testing the glossy. I just knew it was going to smear like crazy and leave ink all over my fingers.
I was wrong.
There was only the slightest line of ink that ran at the bottom of the ball point pen and I'm pretty sure that was just one of those little ink balls that fuzz up and fall off of ball points now and then.
But I had been sure the gel pen would smear. Sure.
So I tried again with a darker gel pen ink color, and this time I did not count to three, just wrote and dragged my finger across...
And haha! I knew it would smear! Ok just a tiny little bit at the bottom of the letters, and guess what? The regular matte paper smeared a tiny bit, too. But the premium?
Crystal clear.
You can't argue with science, people.
Just in case you have outstanding observation skills and you're wondering why I didn't write Pencil on the glossy... I did. It's there, it just doesn't show up.
So, if you're a pencil planner, I don't recommend glossy, and in fact, the pencil is the only one that didn't show extra beautiful on the premium paper either, it's visible, just not as dark.
All things said and done, how am I feeling about my sticker paper options?
Regular matte is a good economical choice.
It takes all inks and pencil well, but it hates water and doesn't agree with my re-positioning sticker perfection.
Glossy is pretty.
Oh so pretty.
But it shrivels at the sight of a wet hand and loses its stick and shape with re-positioning.
Premium matte with its vinyl like qualities is a strong durable choice. It is beautiful and stroke worthy (I don't mean that to sound nasty) with its soft buttery texture that takes ink and locks it in. It laughs in the face of my freshly washed hands and keeps its integrity through my OCD move-around habits, though it does leave a bit of glue behind when lifting that might be messy if you're not putting a sticker back on that spot.
In my opinion, the premium is the clear front runner and I have just placed a huge order to upgrade the stickers in my Etsy shop even though it's going to eat into my non-existent profits. I feel it is a better product over all and that's what I want to have represent me, just in case I start getting orders.
If you have made it this far, please leave a comment on what type of sticker paper you prefer. Have you found any other options out there? I'm curious... and I'd appreciate it!
Wednesday, August 24, 2016
Plan With Me blog style
Yesterday I explained the basic weekly planner stickers for those people who keep asking me in no uncertain terms, what the heck I'm doing these days.
Today I'm going to go through a quick Plan With Me or PWM for those newbies out there...
I have not dug up the courage to film it yet. One of these days I would like to try it youtube style like all those PWM videos I enjoy watching.
I remember the day I told my sister about PWMs...
"It's a video of people putting stickers in their planner."
Silence.
"You just watch them put the stickers in their planner."
"Yes."
Giggle.
"That's all they do..."
"Yes."
Hilarious laughter.
It was very much like the time I explained the enthralling game of Tiny Towers to my mother.
For any of you Tiny-Tower-Newbies, it's a game where people want to go in the elevator.
And you take them.
Hilarious laughter.
So, I've determined that I am very easily entertained, and I am hoping beyond hope, that you are too, because here I am about to do my first PWM and it's not even in a flashy video with voice-over or anything.
Recognize this set?
If you read my stickers explained post yesterday, you would.
"You mean she's not even using new material for this?"
Nope.
Simple entertainment.
I hope.
And this is the Erin Condren vertical LifePlanner.
Now right there we have a common confusion - the whole vertical/horizontal thing.
The planner pictured above is called a vertical style by Queen Bee E.C. herself, because each day is displayed in a vertical column.
I have heard many people call this horizontal because the week spreads out from left to right horizontally, and I see how that could be so easily determined, but that's not how the Miss E.C. named it so work with me people!
When I'm planning in my EC vertical, it also happens to be colorful, and all that lovely watercolor crap at the top of the vertical day columns shows very much around the top of my stickers, so the first thing I do is fold back the edge of my headers sheet and hold the stickers right up against all that lovely watercolor crap to make sure they don't clash.
I might be easy to entertain, but I cannot abide clashing.
The very next thing I do is turn the whole planner around upside-down.
This little trick saved my planning sanity.
Why?
Because I like to plan my days from the top down *but I find it infinitely easier to line the stickers up when going from the bottom up. So by planning upside-down, I get a nice easy to line up stack going from the bottom up, while the actual day is being planned from the top down, and I hardly ever have to peel off and try again when things go off kilter as they always do when I try lining them right side up.
About half way down, I flip it back to check on things.
In this week, I placed the ombre check list boxes at the top. It's back to school week for my kids so I had a lot of little to do's to get done in preparation, and I like getting straight to them.
I placed the Today headers just below and then color blocked the full boxes to go with the ombres. I think it gives it a cleaner more cohesive look when color blocked, though sometimes it requires more thought when placing the obres than I gave it this week.
You'll see in the photo below that I ended up with two feature boxes side by side on the weekend, which I usually try not to do.
I could have switched it with Monday if I'd been thinking ahead, but I also knew Monday would be covered with appointments... so there it is.
Before I start my Littles I put in any appointments and special events that I have scheduled. My handwriting is my mortal enemy, but to make it less messy I write on my half and quarter boxes before placing them. It's easier than writing next to a coil, and if I really screw it up I can just write a new one.
Once my appointments and events are in, I can think about the Littles based on what I'll probably have time for. I usually leave most of them blank until the day unfolds. Littles are the first thing to change if my schedule gets too busy.
At this point, I start putting in my chore and me-time stickers.
See that little ramem noodle bowl in the photo below?
I once sold 1,ooo of those to someone for an event in Chicago. I am wildly curious as to what she did with them!
All I usually do with them is highlight a lunch date, or this spread, mark my meal-planning task.
I used a row of half boxes at the bottom of the littles this week. I'll use that as extra space if something comes up and a place to stick in the back to school pics that I will print with my Polaroid Zip.
I dressed up the side bar with my favorite fox box, and used a checklist flag for my business goals, a weekly box for my daily cleaning zones, and habit trackers for my daily goals.
And that's it.
Well, that's it before I muck it up with all my bad handwriting, anyway.
I fill in the rest as I go through the week.
And here's the sticker sheets I used.
I will keep them handy in my planning space because I know I will be using many more of those little icons as things come up.
Of course, it's all really about waiting for that...
weekend.
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Planner Stickers 101, stickers explained!
When I tell people that I have opened an Etsy shop, I get in general an interested smile, "Oh, how neat!"
When I tell them I am selling planner stickers, the smile freezes and fades as I see their brains working on a polite way to say, "What the hell is that?"
Well, relax folks, there's no need to stress the manners portion of your brain, because this post will tell you exactly what planner stickers are no matter how you phrase that question.
I'll even show you some examples and some different ways of using them.
See how nice I can be?
Planner stickers are, just that. Stickers that you put in your planner.
Why? You may ask...
Because it's fun.
It's a creative outlet.
Remember scrapbooking?
Well, it's like that, but more practical.
And I am nothing if not practical.
As long as the practical comes in pretty, coordinated colors, and neat straight lines.
And guess what? Planner stickers do.
I could end this post right there - planner stickers are stickers that you put in your planner - and some people logged off just now thinking well that's exactly what I thought, but maybe someone is still there wanting more. Maybe?
It can be confusing because the planner sticker world wasn't created with a team of people designating names for specific things like the people who decided what to call a ball point pen. Everyone knows what a ball point pen is because they did a really great job. But planner stickers were created by a mass of individuals, each in their own home, describing their products on their Etsy shops as what they call them.
Functionals, weekly, monthly, reminders, icons... and any given shop may call them the opposite of another... When creating my shop I first had to research every other shop I could find just to figure out what to call some things, only to discover that one person's monthly was another person's weekly, etc. Ugh! No wonder I get so many blank what the hell is that smiles.
So for the duration of this blog, I'd just like to state that I use terms based on "in general, this is what I've found".
Ok? Good.
In my shop a "full weekly kit" is a set of stickers intended to cover a weekly spread. Makes sense doesn't it?
would cover this week in my planner
My weekly kits have 6 or 7 sheets including:
a sheet of decorative full boxes (top)
a sheet of headers and littles (bottom)
Headers may seem more obvious, a handful of miscellaneous titles for specialty or sidebar use and 7 of each of the basic To Do, Today, and Little Things to place at the top of each daily section, but the littles themselves tend to change often from shop to shop, and quite honestly confused me at first.
In general they are all the little things you may want to remember or track that aren't really something on your to do list, like writing what dinners you have planned or noting that you watched episode 47 on your 230 episode series so you can pick up where you left off next time you have a day to binge.
These also come in handy to look back at your week and see that you haven't posted on Instagram in a few days or taken your daily walk in over a week... but who's judging?
It's just nice to know.
I tend to use them has things I have done or would like to do, like call my parents, rather than the tasks I have to do which go on my To Do lists.
On the left, you have a sheet of half and quarter boxes.
The confusing part is that the half boxes are 1 inch tall while the quarter boxes are a half inch tall.
What?
This is because they are based off the Erin Condren Life Planner boxes which are 1.5 wide by 2 inches tall, therefor 1 inch is half the height and .5 is one quarter.
Now it makes sense.
The sheet on the right is called a sampler sheet. It has a weekend banner, a bunch of fun little stickers for tracking chores and free time, clocks and cars for appointments or errands, checklist flags, regular flags, and a few boxes for the sidebar. The blue box is for a weekly schedule (work, cleaning, exercise) and the two red boxes are called habit trackers for things you want to try to do daily, like take a walk, drink your water, write a blog post... if you're good at things like that.
Then there are those two rows of little square icons. I recently made mine square (they are often round) because I wanted to be able to line them up in the ombre checklist boxes (below) without running into other lines and to layer them on the littles boxes when I might need a pet reminder instead of an exercise reminder, or whatever.
And last we have the washi sheet (top)
and the ombre checklist boxes (bottom)
The washi sheet is one I have a love-hate relationship with. It's basically made up of long sticker strips that act like washi tape to cover up extra space at the bottom or top of your planner page, and several 1.5" box-width mini strips in varying heights to fill in or decorate here and there in your spread. I do like the long washi also known as the bottom washi... (yes, bottom washi is a hilarious term if you have an eleven year old boy around). It can really pull the whole page together and is often my favorite thing to design. But all those little box-width strips can be a real tricky balance of usually overwhelming pattern to my simple taste.
And for every time I have an odd little strip of space that I absolutely need a little piece of washi to fill in for that seamless no-white-space look... I have a half a sheet of unused pieces that really have no purpose.
In this spread you can see the bottom washi of the adorable sleeping fox stacked with the floral strip at the bottom of the page, and I used some of the box-width washi layered behind the weekend banner to help it stand out without covering up the decorative full boxes above it.
The ombre checklist boxes, however, win my prize for favorite workhorse. In this spread, I used them as the top row, but they tend to move around the page week to week. I use them in my everyday, in the sidebar, I cut them in half when I need extra at the bottom or short lists for relaxing days... they are always a fully used sheet of stickers in my weekly planning.
And now I fully understand why most Plan With Me's are done as videos!
If I haven't completely lost you, I will be showing more of this in a separate Plan With Me post tomorrow.
I know you're excited.
Once again, thanks for sticking with me... get it? Sticking?
Ok, no more of that.
And if anyone out there actually read this far, please leave me a comment to let me know I'm not alone. I appreciate it.
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