So, I previously used a Midori. My initial form of the Midori was traditional planner with structured inserts. But the next form I used was a bullet journal. What I ended up doing was that I'd have one insert where I'd have daily logs (the planner, more or less), another insert where I'd keep my collections (what I was reading, watching, etc), and a final one to track writing progress. Some people prefer to separate them out like this, and I'd initially thought I wanted that too. I don't. Or rather, it doesn't work for me because I tend to ignore certain inserts in favor of others.
That's why I opted for a single Moleskine this year as my main bujo. But many people use Midoris that way, and it works for them. Or, they have one insert for home and one for work and one for school. Like I said, some people like the separation.
(Ironically, I tried to have another bujo for my current novel-in-progress because that's what people said you "should" do but no. I didn't learn my lesson the first time. Keeping things separate is annoying! So I'm hoping someone will answer your writing workflow question because I'm going to try incorporating them next month in my spreads.)
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Date: 2017-01-26 01:56 am (UTC)That's why I opted for a single Moleskine this year as my main bujo. But many people use Midoris that way, and it works for them. Or, they have one insert for home and one for work and one for school. Like I said, some people like the separation.
(Ironically, I tried to have another bujo for my current novel-in-progress because that's what people said you "should" do but no. I didn't learn my lesson the first time. Keeping things separate is annoying! So I'm hoping someone will answer your writing workflow question because I'm going to try incorporating them next month in my spreads.)