Evernote Grid Paper



No more wasting paper - this environmentally-friendly 32 page dotted grid notebook can be used endlessly by wiping clean with a damp cloth Blast your handwritten notes to popular cloud services like Google drive, Dropbox, Evernote, box, OneNote, Slack, iCloud, email and more using the free Rocketbook application for iOS and Android.

  1. Evernote is a note-taking app that allows its users to create notes, as well as edit and share them. It features a lot of cutting-edge tools, including advanced searching, document scanning.
  2. Sketchize is built for UI/UX Designers to help them design lovely apps for mobile, tablet and desktop devices. Just choose any of the sketch sheets that fits your project, print it out and start to sketch your dream!

Neo Smartpen

Evernote

Neo Smartpen is a smartpen that digitizes handwritten data created on the notebooks (Digital Paper)
which have NCode imprinted in the pages. Neo Smartpen saves the data on the connected mobile devices.
Now experience Neo Smartpen that connects the analog and digital!

Neo Notes

Neo Notes is an exclusive app for Neo Smartpens that transfers your notes on paper to digital world. What you write on Digital Paper with Neo Smartpen appears identically on Neo Notes. You can easily archive and share your notes with other people. Capture your ideas, send them to the bigger audiences, and make greater use of them through Neo Notes.

Save and Share

Check the email icon on paper or share your notes through social media services. You can export your notes in various formats (even in Text with transcribing function) to your cloud (Google Drive, Dropbox, and more). If you don't want to miss a thing, Autosync with Evernote. Then all your notes will be automatically shared to your Evernote account.

Edit your writing

Evernote grid paper

Erase unnecessary notes and highlight important ones with colors. You can change color, thickness of handwritten part and add annotations digitally. Edit your notes and make your own presentation in Neo Notes app.

Open and Write

Simply start writing with the Neo smartpen on NcodeTM paper. The Neo smartpen will automatically turn on and recognize what page or notebook you are writing on. Neo Notes does not have to be open while writing, as the Neo smartpen will remember up to 1000 pages by itself. When connected to the app, you can utilize the voice record function to store surrounding sounds synchronized with the strokes.

Neo Notes Windows

Neo Smartpen, which was only compatible with mobile devices and tablet PCs, is now available for Windows OS PCs. Download Neo Notes Windows and experience more new features.

Digital Paper

We have a large variety of notebooks that are designed for designers, professionals, office workers, students, and more. Every page of the notebooks features Ncode™ technology patented by NeoLAB Convergence.

Kickstarter & Backers

Neo smartpen N2 is supported by Backers from Kickstarter.
Visit our hall of fame to see our Backers.

Try OneNote!

Neo Notes added 'Microsoft OneNote' to the auto-saving feature.
Now experience the advanced Cloud services supported by NeoLAB!

PaperTube

SHOWCASE YOUR STORY!

PaperTube is an unique video production tool which allows you to easily produce your own lectures and videos.

Shop

Digital Paper, and accessories.
  • Plan your days

  • NeoLAB released the smartest planner yet available through the Indiegogo campaign

  • [RECO] Blackpink in your notebook

  • Organizing Tips to Supercharge Your Time at Work

  • 5 Back-to-school items that will make your school life smarter

The moment I discovered Ryder Carroll’s Bullet Journal, I fell in love.

Elegant and inspiring, the Bujo simply integrates appointments, activities, ideas, and goals. It eases the crush of to-dos that never get done. The index organizes daily, monthly and long-term lists, sketches, collections of ideas – whatever information you want to memorialize – in one handy location.

I loved the system. But paper has never really worked for me. I struggled to find the right notebook and pens that wouldn’t smear or bleed. Bujo Pinterest boards distracted me, I clicked through literally hundreds of images each more elaborate than the last. I wasted reams of grid paper trying to find the perfect layout.

In the end, my Bujo typically sat unopened on my desk while I tapped away at my computer, using Evernote to organize novel and freelance ideas, clip articles from websites, record business-related information, organize images, presentations, recipes, and more.

I didn’t make the connection until someone in a minimalist Bullet Journal Facebook group posted an article from a website that is now under construction. I wish I could share the link and credit my inspiration; this is the best I can do.

Evernote Grid Paper

In any case, here’s how I’ve spun those ideas into a system that I not only enjoy but use every day, a system that has made me more productive and offers endless inspiration.

The Concept

I’m going to explain this backwards. I started with a single note – a combined Daily/Weekly Log. But my Evernote Bullet Journal lives in a “stack”, or a collection of notebooks that has evolved over time. (Learn more about notebooks and stacks here.) I keep my Daily, Monthly, and Future Logs and Habit Tracker in a notebook called *Bujo Daily (the asterisk moves the notebook to the top of the stack).

Evernote Grid Paper Free

Bujo Archive, Bujo Collections, Bujo Ideas, and Bujo Templates complete my Bullet Journal stack. I use the “Top List” view so that I can see and easily access all the notes in my notebook while I’m working.

Here’s how the notes and notebooks break down:

Daily/Weekly Log

I used the Evernote table tool and onyxandindigo.com design to create this hybrid log. The two column table has 15 rows (I combine Saturday/Sunday). On my Mac, Evernote limits table creation to six rows, but it’s simple to add rows – just Control+click inside a cell.

My Daily note has a little more structure than a standard Bujo. That’s not because I’m a structured person, it’s because I’m lazy. Rapid logging in a traditional Bullet Journal requires using symbols, which takes some extra effort on a keyboard. My gratitude list numbers automatically, as do the check boxes in my schedule section. And it seemed easier to create a bulleted list of “Reflections” than to figure out how to create an eye (exploration), or type an exclamation point (inspiration) or asterisk (priority).

Like I said, lazy.

Index & Collections

The standard Bullet Journal Index page helps you find information in your notebook. You simply write down a topic – or Collection – and record the page numbers related to that topic. Even though Evernote doesn’t have numbered pages, it does have one spectacular feature you can use to create your Index and Collections: Copy Note Link.

Evernote Grid Paper Template

The note link includes the note title (how awesome is that?), so it’s just a matter of copying and pasting.

Because Evernote has an endless number of pages, I felt an Index could become unwieldy, so instead, I set up a numbered Table of Contents. It’s included in my primary notes, it connects virtually every note in my Bujo, and it looks like this:

Evernote Grid Paper Download

Monthly/Future Logs

Have I mentioned how much I love the Evernote table tool? My monthly log is an 8 column, 8 row numbered table. I use it to list birthdays, holidays, special events, important deadlines or appointments:

It took me a while to create a Future Log, and I’m still tinkering. I think of it as my “big picture” space to record major project deadlines and prepare for travel and other milestone events. Copy Note Link keeps this space connected to my project Collections:

Evernote needs one more feature, in my humble opinion, to make it the perfect Bujo space: a way to link notebooks and stacks. You can create a note with the same title as its notebook and copy that link to your Index – the note opens inside the notebook or experiment with adding saved search links.

Paper

Templates

When I started with Evernote, I copied and pasted entire the previous notes to start a new week or month. This involved a great deal of deleting and a little swearing. Then I stumbled across Uncovering Templates, the Hidden Gem of Evernote. Now I move the completed note to my archive notebook and copy a blank note to my Bujo Daily notebook:

So that’s how I Bujo, Evernote style. This is still a work in progress. I welcome questions and comments – leave a note here or find me on Facebook. I’d also love to know how you’re using Evernote as a Bullet Journal.