Description
Leuchtturm1917 Sketchnote Journal (A5)
Think, plan and formulate in pictures with the Leuchtturm1917 Sketchnote Journal.
From simple icons and stick figures to typography styles and finished visual notes. For the shopping list, when journaling or for work – it is really easy and anyone can do it.
Sketchnotes help you to …
- Develop new ideas
- Visualise your own thoughts
- Work in a structured manner
- Learn things more easily
… and brings a sense of fun to creating notes.
An inspirational workbook with instructions and tips from professional Sketchnoters. Learn how to create visual notes with this easily understandable and playful step-by-step guide.
Details:
- Size: Medium (A5) – 145 x 210 mm
- Hardcover
- 186 numbered pages
- 120 g/m² paper
- With “Sketchnote Journal” embossing in black on the cover
A picture is worth a thousand words: the Sketchnote Journal
The Sketchnote journal is a source of inspiration and a workbook with guidance and tips from professionals intended to help you learn how to create visual notes step by step – the basics are shown in an easily understandable and fun way. Do you want to get your colleagues excited about an idea? Would you like to create understandable notes or simply bring order to your own thoughts? Explaining something with the usual methods often only works to a limited extent because there is a lack of structure and because everyone understands things differently.
Sketch and note. Visual notes. Practically all ideas and concepts can be visualised using this method. Sometimes just a few strokes are enough to give form to a mental model, making it visible and thus understandable for others. There is a good reason for the saying ‘A picture is worth a thousand words’.
The quick and easy way to visualise ideas
Sketchnotes are not about beauty. The aim is to make it easier for people to remember content, because Sketchnotes also work wonders when learning things. The Sketchnote journal includes a beginner’s workshop geared towards everyday working life as well as personal use. In addition, there are lots of tips and exercises as well as sources of inspiration from other professional Sketchnoters, which also help and demonstrate how different your own Sketchnote style can be. The German painter and graphic artist Paul Klee perfectly summed it up by saying ‘A line is a dot that went for a walk’.
The inspiration – and workbook with instructions and tips from professionals
The Sketchnote journal was developed by Anna Frank, a visual designer from Hamburg, and the Berlin-based innovation strategist Sabine Wein. Both authors have been working daily with Sketchnotes for a number of years. They are using this journal to pass on their extensive knowledge. It is insightful, to the point and enhanced with many different ideas and methods from the vibrant Sketchnote community.