If you bought a dot grid notebook and you’re wondering what to do with it next, you’re not alone.
Dot grid notebooks are incredibly flexible - but that openness can make them feel intimidating. This post explores practical, low-pressure ways to use a dot grid notebook for scrapbooking, trackers, and creative pages you don’t have to maintain.
Using a dot grid notebook for scrapbooking
A dot grid notebook works beautifully for scrapbooking because it doesn’t force a layout.
You can use the dots to:
- roughly align photos or text
- layer paper, tickets, and memorabilia
- add captions without worrying about straight lines
Scrapbooking in a dot grid notebook doesn’t need to be chronological or complete. You can document:
- a single day or moment
- a holiday or season
- small memories you don’t want to lose
Some pages might be full of colour and texture. Others might just include a photo and a date. Both count as memory keeping.
How to create a reading tracker in a dot grid notebook
Dot grid notebooks are ideal for drawing your own reading tracker because the structure is subtle.
Popular reading tracker ideas include:
- a simple list of book titles with dates
- a row of boxes you fill in as you finish each book
- a bookshelf-style layout drawn using the dots as guides
A reading tracker doesn’t have to be completed perfectly or consistently. It can be something you return to when you remember - not another task to keep up with.
Creating a mood tracker or bar chart for the year
Many people like using dot grid notebooks to create mood trackers because they help visualise patterns over time.
A simple option is a mood bar chart:
- one bar per month
- different colours or symbols for different moods
- or varying bar heights to reflect how a month felt overall
This kind of mood tracker isn’t about analysing or fixing anything. It’s simply a way to look back and notice how the year moved.
What do you want to track over time?
If you enjoy tracking, it helps to choose things that feel supportive rather than demanding.
You might want to track:
- books read
- creative time
- movement or time outdoors
- rest or slow days
The goal isn’t perfection or streaks - it’s awareness.
Pages you make once and never look at again
Not every page in a dot grid notebook needs to be revisited.
Some pages are for:
- brain dumps
- processing a feeling or season
- writing something you don’t want to carry anymore
You might write a letter, fill a page with shapes or patterns, or list everything you’re done worrying about. You don’t need to reread it for it to have done its job.
One notebook, many purposes
A dot grid notebook doesn’t need one defined use.
It can hold scrapbooking pages beside lists, trackers beside doodles, and one-off pages beside things you return to regularly. The flexibility is the point.
There are no rules, no correct systems, and no requirement to be consistent.
Dot grid notebooks
If you started with one notebook and realise you’d like another - whether for scrapbooking, tracking, or something completely different - you can find our dot grid notebooks here:
https://www.daydotjournals.com/collections/dot-grid-paper-notebooks
But the best place to start is the one you already have.
Open it. Use one page. Let the rest unfold naturally.