Friday, 28 August 2015

Make Your Own Gothic Planner




After the latest talk from the awesome Evil Supply Co. about a planner  that caters to the dark at heart, I thought I would dredge up this tutorial from my older blog (that I am quite sure never actually saw the light of day. )
I couldn’t find a planner that worked for me and hold everything I needed, so I decided to create my own and add my own spooky touches.

I tried to carry the graveyard and bats theme throughout my planner, but you can keep it plain or use another theme. Maybe an Alice in Wonderland one with pictures of the characters or a grungy zombie one with biohazard signs and paint splatters. You are only limited by your imagination.



 
 Materials:

-  Printing paper for the pages, for mine I ended up using about a quarter of a ream.

- Thick cardboard and thin black cardboard.

- Decorative bits for the covers.

- Some way to hold your planner together. I used three round clips, used for making small scrapbooks. I found them at the local craft shop. I have seen others where they removed the rings from a folder and use that. You could even sew your planner together like a hand bound book.

 
 
 Thing the First: Decide what you want in your planner. I looked at a whole heap of planners and took what I wanted to have in mine. This isn’t the be-all-and-end-all list, feel free to remove some sections and add others. Mine has three main sections:
 
- Calendar and front stuff

Which has my week to two pages Calendar, ‘Things That Need to be Done’ lists, ‘Notes to Remember’ pages, ‘Logins and Password’ pages, a few ‘Books to Read’ pages and ‘The Garden’ pages.

- Blog Stuff

Which has a ‘Monthly Blog Planner’ and ‘Blog Ideas’ pages.

- Sewing Stuff

Which has ‘Projects at a Glance’ pages, ‘Project Plans’ pages, a few ‘Pattern Wishlist’ pages and a whole heap of coquis pages (which are the drawing templates for fashion drawings.)

I have not included the coquis I use, as they are not mine. I cannot remember where I originally got them from. But a quick online search can yield any style you would need. To make mine I grouped four figures onto the half A4 page, and reduced the opacity in Illustrator so they could be drawn over easily.

You can add pages for financial stuff, household management stuff, managing kids, whatever you need to organise and remember.
 
You can find my templates HERE:

You will need a program to unzip this file, and a PDF reader.


Thing the Second: Decide on how big you want your planner. I made mine half an A4, as it was the easiest to print as well as being small enough to fit into my bag, but not too small that there wasn’t enough space for all the info.

I made my pages in Adobe Illustrator because that was where I had drawn my images but pages can easily be made in Word and Paint or Photoshop.

 A word of warning: If you want two sided pages DON’T just print the same page on both sides, or you will have one page that aligns with the holes for the hole punch and one side that the holes cut into the side decorations.

And don’t make the mistake I did by just flipping the whole page, because that makes it all backwards (you’d think that would go without saying, but it wasn’t till I had printed a few pages out that I realised the bullet points were on the wrong side.)

 
 
Thing the Third: Once you have got your pages, it’s time to print them.


If your printer does not automatically print double sided, you may want to test what way your paper feeds into the printer. I just make a small pencil mark on one corner of the page and print the first pages. It stops you getting confused when printing the other side and printing both pages on the same size, like I did.

If you use my ones, I’ve provided both a side A and a side B for the planner pages. They should give you a two sided page once cut in half.

When I was printing out my pages I found that printing one side first in bulk then printing the other sides one by one was best as my printed didn’t like printing the other side properly with too much in the tray. Hopefully your printer behaves better than mine.

Once you have all your pages printed out, use a hole punch and make hole corresponding to the clasp you are using.

Now, on to the Tutorial:

1. For the cover I cut two pieces of very heavy cardboard a little larger than my planner pages.

2. For the front cover I cut strips of black paper and glued them around the four edges of the cover to give a nice clean finish. For the back cover I cut it so the strips were part of the back piece, so it looked like a + sign.
 
 
  
3. Then folded them over and secured the other side over the top to make it all nice and neat.


4. Now the fun part, decorating the covers! This is where you can really get creative, but make sure your decorations are very secure so they don’t fall off in your bag.
 

 
For my cover, I used some Halloween scrapbooking paper cut to size for the front cover and just plain black for the back. I added some swirly bats and some pretty decorative trim to the top, bottom and on the inside.














5. Punching holes in the cover is a bit harder, I ended up piecing it with a small stiletto (for making holes in fabric) first but a sharp pair of scissors should do it. Make the hole wide enough for whatever clasps you are using.




I made some tabs for easy flipping between sections. I cut some thin black cardboard and glued the section names onto them. Then I glued them to the first page of each section, staggering them.



I tied a ribbon to the top clasp of my planner to make a bookmark for keeping track of the week in the calendar.

And there you have it. Your own spooky planner.






2 comments:

  1. Really cool i love the lay is it possible for me to have your printable weekly layouts i enjoy them alot
    if yes my email is 1stephaniedt@gmail.com

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    Replies
    1. My apologies, I did not realise the files weren't accessible to everyone. I've fixed it now.
      Thank you for letting me know and I am really glad you like them.
      Warmest regards and best wishes,
      Miss Lizzie.

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