
What if you could try new spreads, fonts, and layouts without worrying about ruining a beautiful journal page? That is the idea behind practising first — and why failure belongs in the creative process.
In this guide
Why failure helps you grow
Failure means you stepped outside your comfort zone. Every creative career includes rejected drafts and early versions that never shipped — learning is the point, not a flaw.
In journaling, a typo or wobbly header is not the end of the spread. See how to overcome perfectionism for reframing mistakes as part of the fun.
A safe space to experiment
Use scrap paper, the back of an old notebook, or a dedicated pad with the same grid as your journal. Practise layouts, doodles, and lettering until you are happy — then copy the keeper into your main book.
Today we recommend lined notebooks, museum journals, or inexpensive notepads for trials before you commit pages in your favourite journal.
What to practise
- New bullet journal fonts
- Weekly spread layouts — see weekly spread ideas
- Mood and habit trackers
- Pen tests and colour combinations
Fail like nobody is watching — then bring your best version to the journal you carry every day.
























