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Planner Review: Agendio Customizable Planners

Planner Review: Agendio Customizable Planners

I’ve spent several weeks beta-testing the new customization interface for Agendio, a company that has innovated the planner by making the entire process customizable from the size of the finished planner, the page layouts, fonts, colors, paper weight and even the type of finished binding. They have recently added some paper weights specifically to cater to the fountain pen crowd. They offer 24# (90gsm), 28# (105gsm) and 32#(120gsm) text weights. I ordered my planner with 32# paper for the best odds of being fountain pen friendly.

Agendio allows you to input (and save for future planners) personal events, activities and holidays that can be pre-printed onto your calendar. The events can be birthdays, anniversaries, garbage day or anything else that happens with some regularity that you would rather not have to write down every week. They will save your information for future planners so once you’ve added events and activities, you won’t need to do it every year. You can also select specific holiday calendars depending on your religious preferences, naationality, etc. AND… you can even edit out holidays you don’t want included. That’s a pretty awesome extra.

I ordered the planner in the Journal (5.5″x8″) size with a standard wire cover (approx. $47 plus shipping). There are two larger sizes in the bound planners:  7″x9″ Medium and 8.5″x11″ Large. There are dozens and dozens of cover options and the option to customize the cover with your name or other cover text. The cover is then covered with a thick clear plastic cover to increase sturdiness.

I don’t often purchase spiral notebooks so I forgot how nice it is to be able to fold the book over completely so it takes less space on my desk or lap. The spiral is sturdy and I think it stand up to having heavy object sat on top of it without collapsing.

When you start with the Planner Pro designer, you can select starting your page building with either a blank page, community designed pages or one of Agendio’s pre-printed templates. I wanted to create my own layouts and see what options were available so I started designing from the “blank page” option.

My sample planner includes monthly, weekly and daily pages for the months of November, December and January. Agendio allows you to choose how many months you want in your planner, starting with just three months. I wanted to do a test run with the layouts and design so three months seemed like a good time frame.

I wanted to try some new layout options for all my pages. The monthly layout is probably the most standard of any of the layouts. For the weekly layout, I went for a vertical layout but since my life doesn’t have as many tine-specific activities, I removed all the time markers and was able to remove a lot of the lines so I could be all loose-y goose-y like I like. On the far right, I left space for longer writing, lists or whatever pops in my head.

For the weekend pages, I adjusted the open area on the top of each page to make room for a mini photo from my photo printer. Since weekends tend to have more activities that I want to document, I really like this little hack. I left space below the photo area to add a caption.

The weekly pages have a smaller space for doodling, ink swatches, or random nonsense.

I haven’t had a lot of time with the planner yet since it just arrived last week but overall, I really like that I was able to customize it exactly the way I wanted it.

The Paper Quality

As for the paper quality, Agendio sent me extra pages so that I could try to all three stocks and show you my results.

Th 24# (90gsm) paper bled with many of the brush pens and most of the fountain pens, even with fine and extra fine nibs. If you are a fountain pen user or someone who likes to add decorative lettering with brush pens, skip the 24# together.

The 28# (105gsm) paper was better with fountain pens. Some of the fountain pens had a bit of show through. The 28# paper had the least spreading of the lines with fountain pens which I really liked.  I think the 28# might be a bit smoother than the other two.

Only the orange brush pen bled through to the back of the page. So for those among us that like adding lettering or doodles, the 28# might not be for you.

Finally, the 32#(120gsm). While this paper is quite thick, it was definitely the best of the three for fountain pens. The 32# paper is a bit toothier than the 28#.  There was just minor show through with the fountain pens. There was the least showthrough on the 32# with the brush pens, just a few spots at the start and stop of each letter, with the orange brush pen (Akashiya Sai brush from JetPens).

Overall, its great that there are paper options with Agendio. For fountain pen people, the 32# will be the best option though I still wouldn’t recommend using super broad pens in your Agendio planner. If you want a lighter, slimmer planner with more pages,  the thinner 24# and 28# papers might work better for you but you’ll have to be careful with pens that might bleed through. Make sure to add some blank pages in the back to do pen tests.

I still need to work through my layouts and figure out how I best want to use the spaces I created. Not everyday in my weird little stay-at-home life requires a full page so I need to play around a bit to best utilize the space — adding in book reading stats, other media consumption and such to fill out my pages and make my life look a little less blank.

I love that Agendio provides almost endless options for customizing and creating your own planner. There are wrap covers, you can get hole-punched pages for a Filofax or similar, you can choose the color of the printed ink, choose line widths, customize the text and so much more. If you are at a place in your life where you want a planner layout that doesn’t exist anywhere, Agendio may be the answer for you.

I hope you’ll check it out and try their page builder. Let me know what you think.


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by Agendio for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.

November Planner Set-Up & Ramble

November Planner Set-Up & Ramble

How is it November already?!?!

First, let’s talk about October. It was a bit chaotic for me and left me feeling unproductive overall despite my journal often looking barren and neglected. I enjoy my time documenting the little moments in my life and October was too hectic for me to find time to do much journaling which left me mad at myself and frustrated overall.

I go into greater detail about my October trials in the video linked below if you’re curious.

But, I finished my Stalogy B6 notebook so I am starting a new one for November and I feel like I could use a “fresh start” so to speak.

New Stalogy on the top and the overstuffed and filled Stalogy B6 on the bottom!
Pen and Ink selections for November

Pens and Ink for November:

Many washi tape rolls and original sticker sheets from The Well-
Appointed Desk Shop.

Other items:

I also used a variety of stickers, papers and washi tape pulled out of long-term storage in my studio so not all items may be available or even identifiable. Raid your stash!

This month’s tip-in calendar (available as a free download for Patrons) features oak leves, acrosn and junpier branches. I fell in love with these vintage images and wanted something fall feeling without being specifically Thanksgiving related so I think this works.

My goal for November is to conscientiously make time to journal. I don’t want my journaling to feel slapdash so I’m going to try to set aside 30 minutes each to working in my journal each day. Instead of doom scrolling on my phone, I will use the time more productively. By reserving this time in my day for journaling, I hope to  feel a bit more centered — less scrambled. Am I mixing my metaphors? You get what I mean though, right?

From an aesthetic standpoint, I am focusing on a cozy fantasy/dark academia vibe again for November with lots of leaves, books, mushrooms and fall colors.

And now, the video walkthrough and ramble!

Link Love: How Wet is That Ink?

Link Love: How Wet is That Ink?

Happy Halloween! Hope you have a fun, candy-filled, pumpkin spiced day!

Link of the Week:

Our link of the week is a survey about the wetness or dryness of fountain pen inks. Pen Addict Slack User Nicole studies fluid dynamics and she teamed up with a rheologist to study the characteristics of different fountain pen inks.

This survey will help them compare actual fluidity with how people perceive different inks.

Rank the inks on a scale of 1 (extremely dry) to 10 (extremely wet) based on your own experience. If you’ve only used one of the inks, that’s fine, just rank that one. If you have used more of the inks or all of them, fill those out too. Any data will help their research. The more users who fill out the survey, the better. Forward the survey to friends and your fellow pen nerds.

Pens:

Ink:

Pencils:

Notebooks & Paper:

Art & Creativity:

Other Interesting Things:


Boo! I hope I didn’t scare you but while you’re down here reading our fine print, can I remind you that we have a Patreon which will give you access to all sorts of extra content (exclusive podcast, newsletter, goodies in your physical mailbox and more) and you can brag about being a contributor to this web site? If you already a Patron, you rock! Without you, we could not continue to do what we do. Thank you!

Fountain Pen Review: Benu Bush Viper Fountain Pen

Fountain Pen Review: Benu Bush Viper Fountain Pen

I love my silly, punk rock Benu Skull & Roses Fountain Pen that I was thrilled to grab one of the Benu Viper Fountain Pens in “Bamboo Viper” ($180) , especially in this Spooky Season. It’s a black pen with an embossed, snake wrapped around the barrel with a beautiful shimmery green iridescent color in the scales of the snake. There are also versions called the Mangrove Viper (green-blue pen body with purple iridescent snake) and Bush Viper (purple barrel with green iridescent snake).

The pen is quite lightweight, weighing just 22gms capped and 15gms uncapped. The cap, unfortunately, due to its unique shape, does not post.

The Viper pen design is based on the same size (5.25″ capped and approx. 5″ uncapped) and shape as the Skull & Roses design which also makes me wonder what other gothy designs Benu might create on this form factor in the future? I’d love an actual crow or raven design! Or maybe a spider and webs?

Seeing the iridescent color on the Viper, I now wish the Skull & Roses had a little splash of iridescent color to really get the leaves, skulls and flowers to pop.

The color on the snake is a lovely iridescent green and the texture of the pen barrel is the same faux leather embossing that is on the Skull & Roses barrel.

The Viper includes a small #5 Schmidt nib which some find tiny but on this design, the way it tapers, seems like the right size for the pen. I got the F nib which is surprisingly smooth. So much so that it felt a little “ice skating” to me as I normally use grittier Sailor nibs that tend to feel like graphite on paper rather than like a rollerball. The F nib on the Viper is rollerball smooth.

A lot of Benu’s pen designs are quite blingy and sparkly so the Viper adds a nice dark, moody vibe to their line-up while also being somewhat unique in the overall pen world. Teh only other snake-y pens that I know of are from Montblanc as a much higher price point.

Overall, this pen definitely has a specific appeal but if you have a gothy, everyday-is-Halloween aesthetic, you may want to add this little treasure to your collection. Even with my pink hair and love of Hello Kitty, the Viper makes me feel a little more punk rock.


DISCLAIMER: The items included in this review were provided free of charge by Pen Chalet for the purpose of review. Please see the About page for more details.