draw ‘til you’re soreWelcome to the bog of Jessica Amber. Herein you’ll find my life, whatever Irandom stuff ’m getting up to. It’s usually creative.
Unmaintained since 2019. Please go to www.jessicaamber.com.au This site contains affiliate links.
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Technology has driven many people away from working in more analog formats. I'm on my iPad so much these days. It is a rare thing for me to get the effort up to dig out a paper book to write in. That makes the bullet-journalling part of my brain sad. It prompted the thought: How can I have that same bujo experience using one of my most-used note-taking apps, Microsoft Office OneNote?
Here is the calendar I made. I'll explain firstly how to do the basic layout, then I'll go into detail about the various features and effects I incorporated.
Basic Layout
Make a table with 3 columns and 4 rows. You can change this to your liking, but on iPad this seems to be the most columns that will fit well on a page in portrait orientation.
Type headings for each month in a brush-style font. The calendars themselves must be in a monospace font like Courier New in order to align correctly. The days and the number 0 to 9 must be followed by 2 spaces to fit the double digit numbers. When typing on an iPad, 2 spaces defaults to 1 space and a period, so you'll either need to disable that in your keyboard settings or go back later and turn the periods into spaces. EmojisHighlighting
You can highlight specific dates, a broad range of dates, or headings.
Bold TextText ColourPicturesTo Do ListsHyperlinking
Conclusion
Do you know any other tips for making a OneNote BuJo calendar look cool and be super functional? Leave a comment below :)
Until next time, Xx Jess
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AuthorI'm just some Aussie 20-something year old with a lot of time and a lot of interests. Archives
July 2019
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