Planner pre-orders are open for ONE MORE WEEK!

eternal magpie My Busy Week children's planner
eternal magpie My Busy Week children’s planner

Yes, it’s that time again – and pre-orders for the My Busy Week planner are now open!

I’ll place the order with the printers at the end of July, which means that the planners should be ready to send out to you by the beginning of August.

Ideally I need a minimum of ten orders to make the costs of the print run viable, so please feel free to share this post with anybody who you think might be interested.

    If you haven’t seen it before, the planner is designed for busy young children who like to know what’s happening when! 

    You could draw a shopping bag for supermarket day, pop in a sticker when it’s time for football or ballet class, or colour in the days when you go to Nursery. The planner is blank, and designed so that you can fill it in however you like!

    eternal magpie My Busy Week children's planner
    eternal magpie My Busy Week children’s planner

    The first page explains some basic ways to add information. Write in the month at the top, and number the days of the week so you can see what’s happening when. The daily columns are colour coded, so your little one might be able to understand which day is yellow before they can recognise a W for Wednesday.

    There are 53 pages, all the same, to help your little one to get used to your family routine. As it’s undated, it doesn’t matter if their enthusiasm wanes – simply put it away for a while, and you haven’t wasted any pages when you decide to give it another try!

    The book is spiral bound so that you can fold it over and lay it flat to look at one Busy Week at a time. The covers are sturdy gloss card, and the internal pages are made from good quality matt paper, FSC-certified, that’s nice to write on and strong enough to rub out any changes of plan.

    Oh, and by the way… if you’re already subscribed to the eternal magpie monthly newsletter, you’ll have a discount code for £5 off your planner pre-order, as a little thank you for helping me to get it to the printers. Thank you!

    Five A Day

    a list of fruit and vegetables, in colourful child's handwriting, with aborably creative spelling!
    unyen!

    Isn’t this fantastic?

    My friend Clare (who’s a photographer) posted it on Facebook the other day, saying that their little one had been really into getting ‘5 a day’ since being given a sticker with it written on a few weeks ago. I absolutely love the bright colours and the handwriting – and the fact that it’s been helping Mum & Dad to up their game as well!

    eternal magpie five a day downloadable sheet, in colour
    Five a day downloadable sheet, in colour

    It was suggested in the comments that I could design one, so I’ve done just that!

    It’s designed to match the My Busy Week planner (pre-orders close at the end of the month!), and it has options with two, three and four rows so that you can print out the pages that work best for your family. There’s also a black & white version for anyone (like me) who doesn’t have a colour printer.

    eternal magpie five a day downloadable sheet, in black & white
    Five a day downloadable sheet, in black & white

    I’ve made it available as a download over on my payhip store, so if you’d like to give it a try, you can find it there.

    I’m always thinking of different pages to add to my own diary. On the list so far are tracking how much water I drink (nowhere near enough!), and maybe some kind of chart to show all of my overlapping chronic illness symptoms. That’s definitely going to be a rather complicated one.

    I will freely admit that I’ve printed out one of these five-a-day charts for myself, and stuck it to the fridge. Certainly when it comes to eating healthily, I need all the help I can get!

    Planner pre-orders are now OPEN!

    eternal magpie My Busy Week children's planner
    eternal magpie My Busy Week children’s planner

    Yes, it’s that time again – and pre-orders for the My Busy Week planner are now open!

    I’ll place the order with the printers at the end of July, which means that the planners should be ready to send out to you by the beginning of August.

    Ideally I need a minimum of ten orders to make the costs of the print run viable, so please feel free to share this post with anybody who you think might be interested.

      If you haven’t seen it before, the planner is designed for busy young children who like to know what’s happening when! 

      You could draw a shopping bag for supermarket day, pop in a sticker when it’s time for football or ballet class, or colour in the days when you go to Nursery. The planner is blank, and designed so that you can fill it in however you like!

      eternal magpie My Busy Week children's planner
      eternal magpie My Busy Week children’s planner

      The first page explains some basic ways to add information. Write in the month at the top, and number the days of the week so you can see what’s happening when. The daily columns are colour coded, so your little one might be able to understand which day is yellow before they can recognise a W for Wednesday.

      There are 53 pages, all the same, to help your little one to get used to your family routine. As it’s undated, it doesn’t matter if their enthusiasm wanes – simply put it away for a while, and you haven’t wasted any pages when you decide to give it another try!

      The book is spiral bound so that you can fold it over and lay it flat to look at one Busy Week at a time. The covers are sturdy gloss card, and the internal pages are made from good quality matt paper, FSC-certified, that’s nice to write on and strong enough to rub out any changes of plan.

      Oh, and by the way… if you’re already subscribed to the eternal magpie monthly newsletter, you’ll have a discount code for £5 off your planner pre-order, as a little thank you for helping me to get it to the printers. Thank you!

      Children’s planners – your feedback please!

      front cover of the "My Busy Week" children's planner with text asking for feedback
      front cover of the “My Busy Week” children’s planner

      I was hoping to have some prototypes for potential new planners for you by now, but for various reasons I haven’t made that happen yet. Before I leap in and start re-formatting things, I thought it might be wise to ask for feedback from those of you who’ve already been using the planner for a year or two, about what you think are its pros and cons. I’ll share my thoughts below, and if you feel like joining me in the comments, that would be really helpful!

      eternal magpie My Busy Week children's planner
      eternal magpie My Busy Week children’s planner

      At the moment, the planner is A4, landscape format, and spiral bound along the short left-hand edge. This means that you can see a week on each A4 page, and you can fold the spiral binding back on itself to leave the book open at the current week.

      If I switch to having the planner printed on demand by Amazon it won’t be spiral bound, as they don’t offer that as an option. It also won’t be landscape, as they don’t offer that as an option either. (Why?!)

      I could keep it A4, but then the binding would be on the long edge (effectively in the middle)… or I could change it to A5, and have the week as a double page spread. That would make the book smaller, but thicker, as it would have twice the existing number of pages. But whichever I chose, you wouldn’t be able to leave the book open at the current week without squashing the spine, so you’d either need some kind of bookmark, or you’d just have to flick through it to find your place.

      Would that be too annoying? I feel as though a paperback binding might not stand up to the rigours of being opened out flat every single day. I also feel as though keeping the book closed, rather than being able to leave it lying around conveniently showing what’s happening this week, might mean that it simply didn’t get used.

      So… how do you use your planner?

      If you like it exactly as it is, I can leave the current system running, and just place batch orders before the autumn term and again in time for Christmas.

      But if there’s anything you’d like to change – whether that’s something about the design, the format, or the convenience of being able to order one at any time of the year, I’d be extremely grateful if you could let me know!

      The planners are staying!

      the my busy week planners are staying!
      the my busy week planners are staying!

      I just want to say a big THANK YOU to the folks who asked whether the children’s planners would be sticking around once this website changes from a shop into a blog. The answer is yes! I loved designing them, and I love that people are finding them useful, so they’re definitely going to stay. 

      I currently order them in small batches, to try and keep the printing costs at a sensible price. I can’t have them printed on demand as they’re ordered, as having them printed one at a time makes the books around £45 each! And that’s just silly. But the difficulty with having to wait until I have enough pre-orders to get a small batch printed is that I have no way of telling people how long that might take. So I tend to do a couple of pre-orders a year, one before the start of the school term, and again before Christmas. BUT! One of the main points of the planner is that it’s undated, so you can buy one at any time of the year and start filling it in whenever you like. And that’s impossible if there isn’t a pre-order taking place when you want to start your planner. 

      So… I’m looking at ways of making them more easily available. 
      (But don’t worry – I will keep the current pre-order system running for the forseeable future.) 

      the moon journal is now available on amazon
      the moon journal is now available on amazon

      To get the ball rolling, this week I did a little experiment. I re-formatted the Moon Journal, and uploaded it to Amazon. Now Amazon don’t offer spiral binding or landscape format, so if I were to do this with the children’s planners, they would have to change a little bit. I’m still thinking about that, as I’m really very fond of the whole landscape format and spiral bound design. We’ll see.

      But, I’ve made the Moon Journal available, and ordered a copy for myself so that I can see what the quality is like. When it arrives I’m going to write in it with as many different pens as I can lay my hands on, to make sure that the paper is thick enough to withstand felt tips and little kids. I’m also going to lay the pages out as flat as possible, and just generally try to trash the binding, to see what kind of punishment it will live up to! If I think it’s going to be suitable, I might just have a couple of experimental planners printed, let some children loose with them, and see what happens. Then I can decide whether to switch them over to print on demand via Amazon, or stick with doing these small batch print runs myself. 

      If you’d like to be kept posted about how it’s all going, you might want to join the mailing list (in the right side bar, or down at the bottom of the page if you’re on mobile), which is where I send out monthly updates about what’s going on. 

      Running away to join the fair


      Image © Carters Steam Fair

      Yes, I know the circus is more traditional. But ever since I moved to Reading almost twenty years ago, I’ve been in love with Carters Steam Fair. On a whim, I wondered what sort of job a person of my skill range* could do as part of a fair, so I went to their website to have a look.

      That’s when I discovered that Joby Carter, son of John and Anna who originally started the fair in 1975,  runs courses in signwriting and coach painting. He also has an additional business called White Waltham Restoration, which specialises in the restoration, conservation and use of vintage machinery.

      Now that, I could do!

      In fact I went to a signwriter and printer for my school work experience at the age of fifteen… although they didn’t let me actually paint or typeset or do anything, and I spent the entire week designing my own letterhead (they printed an entire ream for me, I think I still have some left) and drawing an extremely detailed picture of a hawk moth that was later hung in my parents’ hallway.

      But I digress.

      It seems as though my degree in typography and my (admittedly limited) experience of painting pub chalkboards would stand me in good stead for not making too much of a pig’s ear of a signwriting course. I’m good at hand-lettering (if I do say so myself!), and learning how to work in the style of the Victorian fairground would be fascinating.

      And how absolutely wonderful would it be to work for a company that has its very own Victorian Roller Disco, complete with a live pianist in the middle?!

       

      So, here’s my latest New-And-Improved Life Plan:

      Step One: Book a place on Joby Carter’s signwriting course.
      Step Two: Get a job with Carters Steam Fair or White Waltham Restoration**.

      What could possibly go wrong…?

       

      *Can’t drive, can’t lift heavy things, can’t operate or repair machinery, fairground rides make me sick…
      **Yes, of course I know it’s not as easy as all that. Stop spoiling all my fun, will you?!

      Letters

      Painted envelopes

      Apparently spring is Birthday Season around here, because I suddenly discovered that I needed to send out a whole bunch of birthday gifts at the same time. A few of us have been enjoying writing actual physical letters to one another recently, so I decided to put together some letter sets.

      They’re bigger than they look – what you can see in the picture is five A4 envelopes. Inside each one is a set of ten sheets of A4 Conqueror writing paper in a lovely deep creamy colour, with five matching DL envelopes. I also put in a few little “thank you” cards, a gel pen, a mini propelling pencil, and a couple of Airmail stickers.

      The outer envelopes looked a bit plain, so I decided that a spot of hand lettering was the order of the day. You can’t really tell from this photo but they’re painted with metallic acrylics, and then outlined with a very fine marker.

      I really enjoyed painting these – I spent a very pleasant afternoon watching endless Eddie Izzard DVDs as I wielded my very tiny paintbrush.