A Fresh Week, Your Way
Share
There is something about the beginning of a new week.
A moment where everything feels open again. Plans are not yet set in motion, and the page sits ready, waiting to be shaped.
For many planners, this is where the process begins. Not just with writing tasks, but with creating a space that feels right to return to.
Weekly planning is where structure and routine meet real life. It holds appointments, to do lists, and the smaller moments that sit in between. But the way that week is laid out can change how it feels to use.
A vertical layout offers clarity. Each day has its own space, allowing plans to be seen individually while still connected across the week. It supports a more structured approach, where each day can be followed from morning through to evening.
A dashboard layout offers a different rhythm. Instead of focusing only on days, it creates space for priorities, notes, and lists to sit alongside the week. It allows everything to be seen together, without being tied too closely to time.
Neither is better than the other.
They simply support different ways of planning.
For some, one layout is enough. For others, using both allows each part of life to be held separately, while still staying in one place. This can be especially helpful when work and home life require different ways of organising the week, while still needing to sit within the same planner.
The dream.design.bloom weekly extension packs are designed to sit within a discbound planner, offering both vertical and dashboard layouts that can be added, removed, and rearranged as needed.
This flexibility means your planning does not need to start again when your week changes. Pages can move with you, allowing your planner to adjust rather than forcing you to rewrite or recreate your plans.
Each page is intentionally left blank.
Not unfinished, but open.
A clean starting point that allows the planner to decide what the week will look like. Some weeks may stay minimal. Others may be layered with stickers, colour, and detail.
That choice is part of the process.
Because for many planners, adding stickers is not just decoration. It is a way to engage with the page. A way to slow down, to personalise, and to create something that feels enjoyable to return to.
Planning is not only about organising what needs to be done. It is also about creating a space that feels personal enough to return to, week after week.
A fresh week does not need to feel overwhelming.
Sometimes, it simply needs a page, ready to be shaped in your own way.