Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem




This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books. {I'm going to tweak these more to cover the words, better before releasing beyond this blog}

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blakout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem





This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem



This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry.
It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Poetry by Luna Drakon, Blackout Poem- "This inconsequential town"

Luna Drakon Blackout Poetry

This is one of the blackout poems I created from an old copy of Twilight.
I have the ebook, and audio book so i wasn't worried about deconstructing this book- especially since i picked up this print copy at Goodwill.

I've been reading Austin Kleon's blog and tumblr; I wanted to create my own blackout poetry. It's fun, and kills some down time. Plus it's a work that gives that quick fix of "I finished something".

* I intend to create more from this book and others than reorganize to create a cohesive set of my poetry books.

* Also sometime in the future I intend to offer prints of these {maybe also a high-quality scanned digital version at a lower price point than the print}.

Saturday, June 25, 2016

Book Review- Outlining Your Novel Workbook

http://amzn.to/28TRBqV

*Note some links on this page are affiliate links{the book links}- if you decide to buy the books through my links here, I can buy some coffee :)

Basic book info:
Outlining Your Novel Workbook
Step by step Exercises for planning your best book
By K.M. Weiland

How I found the book, and why I wanted to read it:
I found this book by her blog, HelpingWritersBecomeAuthors.
I wanted to read it because I want to write novels,and since I like her blog I figured I would like her books. I have loved workbooks since I was kid, so I figured I would like this as well.
I bought the book on Amazon.com for $8.95. Amazon has a cool program that allows you buy the eBook version of the physical books you buy for a low price. I bought the eBook for $1.99 also.

My first impressions of the book before any reading:
The book measures 9 inches by 7.5 inches, the perfect size to tuck into a medium sized purse. Although for most frequent female readers, our purses our big enough to hold any size book. :)
 
The book is easy to carry and hold. It's not overly thick.
The cover image choice is fitting and perfect for the material. The color combo of the cover image is pleasing and calming.

The back cover is informative of the previous book that this workbook branches from, and the author's site is stated.

Questions that popped into my mind just from reading the covers:
Can the workbook be used without the first book?
Answer= yes, but you'll achieve more if you have the first book, and check out the resources that she lists in the book {an aspect of the book that I love, by the way}.

does the workbook make me want to read the original book, and her other books?
Answer= yes, yes, yes it does! At least for me anyhow. I could just gobble up her work!


My thoughts and things I noticed while using the workbook:
  • I like how she included a list of the other books she wrote. One this list is good to add to my stimuli list, and two this would be something I'd want to do in my future books.
  • One of the first prompts was "What if?", a simple question we sometimes forget to ask and forget the power this statement holds. I spent 30 minutes just asking myself "what if?" about various aspects of my novel idea.
  • My "two sentence premise" became a book blurb {the back cover copy} on my first try. Of course it will need changes as I go, but I'm amused at my lack of containment.
  • After doing the "log lines" from other character's point of views, I started to see some of the weaknesses in my original story idea. The prompts helped mt see the missing holes.

  • Thinking about the "big moments" helped flesh out some of my ideas. I found 7 big moments just form my current partial story idea.
  • [my story process] I'm still struggling with my main antagonist's motive. But if I could find a  lsit of reasons that men fight with each other {not sports fighting - but real fighting= anger}.
  • I like how she mentions resources with exact chapter numbers.
  • I love the "Something to think about" questions
  • I found myself swept up with the brainstorming and my story's weaknesses {missing aspects} became clearer with each prompt. 
  • I worked on the prompts from June 12th to June 22nd. I reached the point of character sketches- so far. Life has gotten in the way a bit, but I will continue to use the workbook through my writing process of this novel idea, and many others.
  • One con: for the question "What is the single most important factor in discovering originality?"
    I thought this question meant originality as in "finding your voice" as a writer. But I now believe she meant the story's originality.

    So I suggest reading the following blog posts to help you answer this question:
    The Single best trick for originality in your fiction
    Let your story find it's own originality
    the secret ingredient of original stories
    the Myth of Originality

I highly suggest dedicating a large notebook or a binder to each story you plan to write. Then write your answers to this workbook's prompts in that notebook. 

Doing the prompts in this workbook will inspire you to follow your muse independently from the workbook as times. If your in the zone, let it flow out of you. Don't fight this!! You can return to the prompts whenever. It's like a self study course.

Using this workbook has helped me organize my ideas better. Inspired me to sit and think about my story idea {got my muse talking to me}.
I highly recommend reading the Outlining Your Novel Workbook.
I'm sure I will gain a lot of insight from her other workbook, Structuring your Novel workbook.

Things you need to check out!:
Get this workbook! Outlining Your Novel Workbook
Poke around K.M Weiland's blog!  HelpingWritersBecomeAuthors
Check out her website!  https://www.kmweiland.com/
Follow her: https://twitter.com/KMWeiland
https://www.facebook.com/kmweiland.author/
http://www.youtube.com/user/KMWeiland
http://pinterest.com/kmweiland/
https://plus.google.com/118172899770750923523/posts


Friday, April 29, 2016

Photo Equipment I Bought March-April 2016

{disclaimer: some of the links below are affiliate if you buy the items through them I can buy some coffee, thanks :}

I've always been interested in photography. I recently decided to dive into even more.
I finally upgraded from simple point and shoots to DSLR.

my older equipment:
Kodak Easyshare 8MP {I dropped, but it still functions}
AT&T Z431 GoPhone {my cellphone}

My first DSLR: Nikon D5200 
{affiliate link- click to buy if you'd like}



Oh, I was enamored with it the moment I unboxed. I had to try out every gadget that came with it.
I tested it by taking random pictures around my room.  The lcd monitor was cool because you could fold it out and tilt it.

It came with a Tamaron lens that was super huge, and really cool. I had trouble putting it on because it didn't have the white dot like the kit lens. I didn't force it but had trouble lining it up- then I got it on. Well I'm not exactly sure what went wrong {did I accidentally squeeze the lcd monitor? Did the lens do something screwy?} I'm not sure but now the lcd monitor has strange lines and pixels that 'bleed'.















So I decided to buy an external lcd monitor I could connect to it.


My Nikon D5200 and all my current accessories for it.















Worried that the bleeding pixels would show up on the external monitor, also my Dad wanted to have a camera of his own. I decided to buy a new dslr camera.



My second DSLR: Nikon D3300



I am so glad that I have this model. It functions basically the same as the Nikon D5200, but the lcd is stationary- which makes me feel a little safer.

Of course with every new large purchase usually requires a bunch of small purchases.
I had to get a bunch of different hdmi cords to expand my functionality.
I wanted to able to plug my Nikon D3300 into my slightly dated monitor, so I needed a HDMI to DVI dongle. Then so that I had more than 3 feet {the HDMI that came with the camera} I bought and extention cord- HDMI standard (Type C) to HDMI mini (Type A).





































Sunday, March 6, 2016

Choosing a Pen name, the why and the how

Remember that choosing a pen name is a business decision as well as a personal one.


what is a pen name?
A pen name, nom de plume (/?n?m d? 'plu?m/, French: [n?~ d? plym]), or literary double is a pseudonym adopted by an author.
A pen name may be used to make the author's name more distinctive, to disguise his or her gender, to distance an author from some or all of his or her previous works, to protect the author from retribution for his or her writings, to combine more than one author into a single author, or for any of a number of reasons related to the marketing or aesthetic presentation of the work. The author's name may be known only to the publisher, or may come to be common knowledge. -Wiki

Remember that choosing a pen name is a business decision. The name you choose will follow you through your entire writing career.
It will become your brand, characterizing your public persona and the types of books that you write.
Your pen name will be used as your domain name, and will take up a large portion of your book cover. You'll have to say your pen name outload often, and be referred to as that name.
Take your time with this decision.

Why do published authors choose to write under a pen name?
-{emotional reasons} the wish to honor a relative or mentor
-protection of your family and self protection {keeping aggressive fans from tracking you down}
-business reasons {your name is the same as another famous person, or is too complex for the average person to pronounce, spell, or remember.
-your name doesn't fit the genre you wish to write {your name sounds too old fashioned for YA, or too cheerful for horror fiction}
-you want to write in multiple genres and don't want to confuse your core readership
-you want a fresh start, or want your work to come out with no premeditated opinions based from your past work

The downsides of using a pen name for each genre you write:
For every name you use you'll need a separate author platform.
Having multiple pen names is like having multiple businesses, and you have to be able to keep up with them.

Should you write under a pseudonym?
 How comfortable are you with having your real name splashed all over the Internet, especially if your writing is being savaged in a blog post or book review?
    Are you likely to attract more readers in your fiction genre if you're writing novels as a male or a female?
    Would your name be easier to remember, pronounce, or spell if it was more generic?
    Is your real name so common that it could be easily confused with the name of someone else (for instance, a highly publicized white collar criminal or another author in your fiction genre?)
    Would you prefer to err on the side of caution, protecting your loved ones from your followers or from any future career fall-out that you may suffer?
    How comfortable are you with the idea that fans and detractors may be able to find you in the phone book and show up at your house or your place of business?
    Does your real name invoke a positive association with the fiction genre that you're writing? (For instance, if your birth name is Cherry Clapp, you may face hurdles in the Romance genre.)
    Are you planning to write multiple fiction genres?

Where to find name inspiration?
    Check out your family tree. There might be a great pen name lurking in there. You might find a great first name in one branch of the tree, and an excellent second name somewhere else. Don’t forget that many first names work as second names, and vice versa.
    Look in a baby name book. It will only have first names, but again, they can often make good surnames too.
    If your name sounds too old or too young, and you need an author name that suggests a person of a particular age group, calculate what year that person should have been born, e.g. 1984, 1974, 1964, 1934. Then google “popular baby names in [insert year]”.
    Search online for the meaning of your own name. Then do a reverse search to find other names that mean the same thing.
    Search online for names that symbolize qualities that really matter to you, whatever those may be. For example, when I googled “names that mean honest”, one site offered me 128 potential names.
    What are some of the characteristics of your writing or your genre? Do they suggest ideas for names? Have a look in a thesaurus for other words that mean the same thing. Maybe you could adjust the spelling somehow, to make it a better name.
    Think about aspects of the natural world: colours, fruit, animals, sounds, weather conditions. Do any of them suggest a name? What about the same word in another language? Try Google’s free online translator.
    Use online name generators. Just google “name generator” and you’ll be surprised what comes up! I’d add the warning that most of these are really just a bit of fun, and probably won’t give you a quality name that you’ll want to write under forever. But keep your mind open, and see what the name generator might suggest to you. Perhaps the silly Spy Name it comes up with will trigger further ideas.
    Check out classic literature such as Shakespeare. Don’t only look at character names, but place names and job descriptions as well. Sometimes even the older versions of English words they used can provide inspiration.
    Try the phone book, if you still have one! In Australia, phone books don’t include first names, only initials. However, surnames often make great first names anyway, as we’ve said before. And you may have first names in the phone books, wherever you live.
    Try a map for inspiration! Yes, street, suburb, state and even country names can make great pen names.

How to choose the right name and make some business decisions?

Identify the right age for your pen name: does it sound old-fashioned or modern?  Young, middle-aged or senior?
  What is the age range of your demographics?
  If you are writing an instructional book, then it isn’t a good idea to choose a young name or a name that is younger than that of your target reader.
  If your target market is 45, you should choose a name near or older than that- they'd be born in 1971. You'd need a name that was from that time period or before.
  You can find name from a certain time period by typing into Google “Top Names of (year)".

Does Your Name Fit Your Niche?
  On the flip side you for many fiction genres you don't want a safe sounding old-fashioned name.
  Take a look at what others in your niche are doing.
  Do you see any similarities popping up?  Are others using initials?   Are they all male of female?

What Letter to start with?
  Where is your preferred pseudonym likely to be shelved?
  At the top above everyone's head? At the bottom of a bookstore's stacks?   It's best to be in the busy middle.
  Near the name of a bestselling author in your fiction genre? (lots of competition)

Is your pen name available?
  How common is the name you’ve chosen? Google it, and also check out social media such as Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. Try to choose a name that doesn’t have any other authors using it, if you can. It will make it much easier for people to find you.
  Is the Twitter handle available? (it’s always much better if you can just have the simple name as your handle, without any hyphens etc.)
  Is the basic .com domain still available? If it isn’t, consider another name. If it is available, buy it NOW, even before you make a definite decision. It’s a small investment to make sure you keep that domain available to you.

The spelling, memory and sound:
  Is your preferred pseudonym easy to spell and remember? You want your fans to be able to remember and find you online!
  How does your new pen name sound?
  How does it feel in your mouth?
  Will you enjoy saying it aloud for the next umpteen years? (Will you enjoy hearing Oprah introduce you by that name?!)
  Do the first and second names flow into each other easily? Does the total name hang together as a cohesive unit?
  Does it sound right for your type of book or genre?
  Strong or soft? Business-like or artistic?
  Masculine or feminine or gender-neutral?
  Can people spell it? This matters much more today, when people want to search for you online, and buy many of their books online too.
  How will it look on a book cover? Make up some dummy covers in whatever software you have. Consider both full size and thumbnail size. Do the letters blend well together or do they look awkward?
  If you are writing certain types of genre fiction, such as crime and thrillers, a short name might be better, because it will fit across the width of the book cover in a larger font!
 Take a look at similar books in a bookstore, and you’ll see what I mean. The bestsellers all have the author’s name in huge letters, much bigger than the title.

Is it close to Another Famous Person’s Name?
  You'll have to fight for Google search space with this person. It's better if your name is not the same as anyone else.
  It can be a real marketing killer to have the same name as someone else.


Actionable Steps:
1. Google names- looking for "baby names" helps.
2. Consider the above questions when choosing the right name(s) for you.
3. Save all the names you find along the way to start a name bank for your characters.


Helpful Links for Choosing a pen name:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pen_name
http://www.writing-world.com/business/pen-names.shtml
http://mentalfloss.com/article/51195/how-8-famous-writers-chose-their-pen-names
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/dec/07/writers-pen-names
https://maggiemcneill.wordpress.com/resources/blog-archives/brooke-magnanti/how-to-blog-anonymously-and-how-not-to/
http://www.smallbluedog.com/how-to-choose-a-pen-name.html
http://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-23313657
http://www.smallbluedog.com/pen-names-different-names-for-different-genres.html
http://www.writing-world.com/business/pen.shtml
http://kriswrites.com/2013/10/02/the-business-rusch-pen-names/

http://www.fakenamegenerator.com/
http://www.fairiesworld.com/fairy-names.shtml
http://www.herinterest.com/100-cool-last-names-for-girls/
https://www.houseofnames.com/top-surnames.html
http://www.youcantcallitit.com/2011/11/16/20-surnames-for-girls/
http://www.thetoptens.com/best-last-names/
http://www.goddess-guide.com/goddess-names.html
http://ilovewerewolves.com/150-vampire-names-both-ancient-and-modern/
http://www.gods-and-monsters.com/vampire-names.html
http://fantasynamegenerators.com/
http://www.20000-names.com/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_common_surnames_in_North_America
http://hubpages.com/family/cool-last-names
http://www.grigsby.org/surname%20lists/index%20to%20unique%20surnames.htm

Sunday, February 21, 2016

My Personal Table of Contents

My Personal Table of Contents


One of my big projects I'm working on is building my commonplace notecard system.
While researching what a commonplace was I came across an article about defining your personal table of contents  {edit- link fixed   copy of the old article / his new revised article}.

So I sat down with a notebook and pen and listed all the things that I blog about, that I pin on Pinterest, and that I'm interested in.
Many things were repeats as I blog about the same topics that I pin.
I whittled the list down to some main categories, but I know I will add more as I build my commonplace.
Then I printed templates for index card dividers; I cut them out from colored paper and white cardstock that I color coded with markers.

Here is my current list of dividers I use for my commonplace {each group has it's own color}:

Crit        -for cards I'm thinking of changing
Junk        -for cards I'm thinking of removing
Tough        -for cards I can't choose a category for
Program        -plans for specific cards
Unnassimilated    -holding zone for new cards that need to be placed

Passwords

My Life        -cards to help me organize events, and the little things in my life to make photobooks etc
My Life- each year    -I found a website that makes 4x6 yearly calendars to print https://www.calendarsquick.com/printables/download.html?action=indexCardMonthly
People I know

Books        -I'm going to take notes from things i watch for ideas, and I want to track what I have watched etc
Movies
TV

My Projects
My Creations    -crafts that I've done
My Fiction Books
My Nonfiction Books   
Photobook Projects

Blog- writing "My Inner Workings"    -blog post ideas, etc

Create Your Own Life

Biz
Venues
Etsy
Craft Fairs
Ebay
Handmade News
Getting Started
Branding
Shop Design
Website Design
In the Office
Finances
Shipping
Marketing
Etsy Tools
Behind the Scenes
Creative Biz Binder Library
Biz- Photography
Blogging
Printables
Vlogging
In the Studio
Passive Products
Passions
Suppliers & Supplies

Writing
How to write a book
Planning a Story
Writing- Nonfiction
Memoirs
Story Parts- Characters
Story Parts- Plot
Story Parts- Setting
Story Parts- Style
Story Parts- Themes
Story Parts- Tone + Mood
Editing
Designing a Book
Author Branding
Printing + Publishing
Promote- Book Marketing
Prompts
Places
Writing Inspiration- Characters
Writing Inspiration- Moods
Writing Inspiration- Setting
Writing Inspiration- Objects
Writing Inspiration- Quotes
Writing Inspiration- Plots

Decor
Studio-Craftroom
Preppers
Homemaking
Household Notebook
Homesteading
Gardening

The Commonplace Book or Knowledge Box Note card system

The Commonplace Book or Knowledge Box Note card system


When I was younger I would save magazine articles, write down quotes in my agendas, save random bits of paper I've wrote ideas and thoughts on.
Now I save text files, images, and mhts of blog posts and such, which I then burn to dvds for future reference {since web pages do get removed from the internet sometimes}.

I recently came across the idea of a commonplace book.

1} What is a commonplace book?
"Commonplace books (or commonplaces) were a way to compile knowledge, usually by writing information into books. Such books were essentially scrapbooks filled with items of every kind: medical recipes, quotes, letters, poems, tables of weights and measures, proverbs, prayers, legal formulas. Commonplaces were used by readers, writers, students, and scholars as an aid for remembering useful concepts or facts they had learned. Each commonplace book was unique to its creator's particular interests. They became significant in Early Modern Europe."
-defined by Wikipedia.com

Most forms of this are moleskin notebooks that many great authors {even the character of Sherlock Holmes} scribbled their ideas, thoughts, quotes, and bits of information.
Many museums have old commonplace books on display http://www.pem.org/library/blog/?p=687

I really like the format used by Ryan Holiday, taught to him by Robert Greene, of index cards in a box to easier move the "thoughts" around to mash them together.
As noted on dougtoft.net this form on inspiration keeping works great for idea entrepreneurs or Infopreneurs https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infopreneur

Robert Greene's method:
"I read a book, very carefully, writing on the margins with all kinds of notes.
A few weeks later I return to the book, and transfer my scribbles on to note cards each card representing an important theme in the book.
For instance, in Mastery, the theme of mirror neurons.
After going through several dozen books, I might have three hundred cards, and from those cards I see patterns and themes that coalesce into hardcore
chapters. I can then thumb through the cards and move them around at will. For many reasons I find this an incredible way to shape a book."
Robert Greene

"The colors represent categories, you are correct. So, for instance, with the War book, blue cards would be about politics, yellow strictly war,
green the arts and entertainment, pink cards on strategy, etc. I could use this in several ways. I could glance at the cards for one chapter
and see no blue or green cards and realize a problem. I could also take out all the cards of one color to see which story I liked best, etc. It also made the shoebox look pretty cool."
Robert Greene


2} Why should I want to create one?
A commonplace can be applied to the needs of bloggers, writers, students, and homeschoolers.

Imagine having every bit of knowledge you thought was important when you were 8, 10, 16 years old.
Now imagine how much knowledge you'd have on file at the age of 82.

Having some form of a commonplace would be useful for bloggers and infoprenuers, you can keep tips, blog post ideas, and more on hand.
Many writers keep a writer's notebook full of ideas, this is a form of commonplace.
Even Tumblr and Pinterest can be considered a form of commonplace, albeit a temporary one.


3} What are the different formats?
Many people are already using some form of commonplace. The key is to create a commonplace system that you can not only collect data, but be able to easily retrieve it for use.

"This is something people always forget: the reason to save things is so you can look at them later. You need a filing system, not a junk drawer. (Although, sometimes a junk drawer is more fun to sift through…)"
-Austin Kleon, author of Steal Like an Artist


Here's a list of the different formats:
a. notebooks
b. binders
c. notecards
d. files on harddrive
e. writer's notebook
f. Pinterest + Evernote

I currently use a combination: a notebook to copy notes from books, index notecards for my commonplace system, Pinterest as a bookmarking/sharing system, Firefox bookmarks, I save files on my hard drive which I burn to DVD for backup.
I've had many sites and blogs that I liked over the years that have since been removed from the Internet, so I try to save everything I think is cool.


4} How to create each format?
a. notebooks
Grab some blank notebooks, and start filling them with thoughts ideas. When you read take notes by coping down the things that you like, sure to cite the source by your notes to give credit where it's due.

b. binders
Write out info on paper and put in binders.
Can be a bit more organized than notebooks, since you can shuffle pages around and use dividers.

c. notecards
Decide what your personal table of contents will be- the categories for the cards.
Write each idea of information on its own index card {or equally sized slips of paper}. **link how to organize 11,000 ideas**

To me this is the best system for the bulk of your commonplace.
The main benefit of writing each idea on it's own index card is that you can mix and match ideas for different projects of work.

To help with organizing the notecards:
"In addition, Phaedrus designed five special categories to make the system as personal and flexible as possible: “Unassimilated,” a category for spur-of-the-moment thoughts and ideas; “Program,” a category that contained instructions for processing the other slips, a kind of software package for the computer of his mind; “Crit,” a category that listed all the slips that could be destroyed (the category also provided a mandatory waiting period to guarantee that no slips were destroyed in a moment of extreme anger or frustration); “Tough,” a category for ideas that were unique or just didn’t belong in any other grouping; and “Junk,” a category for duplicates of previous slips or ideas that needed more refinement."
Robert Pirsig {http://www.enotes.com/topics/lila/in-depth}

d. files on hard drive
This is a good method for saving the original source.
You could save your commonplace digitally using txt files in folders also, I do use this a bit as well.
I use this method for my rough drafts and such.

e. writer's notebook
"My books usually start as a stack of index cards. For Steal, we actually printed some of the unused cards as “Deleted Scenes” in the back of the book."
-Austin Kleon, author of Steal Like an Artist

Note to authors and infoprenuers- the index notecards can be good promotional content as well.

f. Pinterest + Evernote
I've used Pinterest, it's great for bookmarking the original source, but not for keeping just the bits of info.
It's also great for sharing your sources with others so they can be inspired as well.

Evernote I have not used, so Google it at your leisure.

5} What to put in your commonplace book or Knowledge box of index cards?
ideas that pop in your head
that cool dream you had
that cute thing your kid said
your favorite lyrics {best to pick out certain verses for each card rather than the whole song
Quotes & Passages
things that you read from blog posts, book, magazines that really catch you attention, or that you really want to remember
book ideas, story inspiration
things you learned
info you want to teach your kids

** The facts you should include with every card {bit of info}
a} the date your writing the card- this will give you a view of what you were interested in and when
b} the source of the info- to look it up later to see it in context, and to cite credit when/if you shre this info
c} THE INFO  {quote, idea, etc}
d} notes- your thoughts, how you might use this info, etc


In conclusion, a commonplace is a location to store all the cool bits of information you come across in your daily life that you want to save to use later.
It's a way to help your mind clear out some room, for new information.

So pick a format, or two, and start your commonplace today!
And homeschooling parents, you should introduce your child to the idea of a commonplace as well. It's a way for them to "play" with the knowledge so they will retain it better, and in a fun way.

If you have a commonplace, or after you start yours blog about it and share it in the comments!


Links to read about commonplace books
https://www.pinterest.com/LunaEnyaDrakon/commonplace-book/
http://dougtoft.net/2014/02/05/the-commonplace-book-an-essential-tool-for-idea-entrepreneurs/
http://pubbed.wordpress.com/2013/12/30/the-commonplace-book-inspiration-on-index-cards/
http://dougtoft.net/2014/02/12/how-to-create-a-commonplace-book/
http://dougtoft.net/2014/05/28/what-is-your-personal-table-of-contents/
http://www.enotes.com/topics/lila/in-depth