How many notepads do you have on the go at any one time? And what do you use them for?
Hello,
I hope you’re well.
I have been trying to get into the routine of carrying two notepads with me around the house for general, WIP related notes and for drawing pictures linked to my WIP and everything else.
My wonderful fiancé bought me a notepad with the Van Gogh picture ‘Starry Night’ on the front and back. As it has a strong link to a famous artist, I decided to use this as my drawing notepad. Although I can’t draw, I’m hoping it will spark more ideas in relation to my writing.

I’d taken a few pictures previously during the second lockdown (in the UK) whilst taking my morning walks. These were of my surroundings and I’ve since written stories linked to them. To take this further, I’ve decided to draw the pictures myself and add to them to enhance my story.
A most recent drawing started out as an attempt to draw a street with houses either side. This was to practice my perspective drawing. But, as I got into it, the picture morphed into the town where a western, which I first drafted in July 2017 and have started to re-write as of November 2020, is set. I drew those buildings I knew were part of the town and it led me to add a small church next to the huge barn where the town’s horses reside from time to time.
I wondered ‘Why a church?’
Then, it occurred to me.
At the beginning of my Western, our hero is greeted by a vicar trying to give him a bible. The vicar is enthusiastic but our hero is not religious so he declines the offer. The crestfallen vicar walks away. I’ve decided, all from just a drawing, that the hero, as he becomes more accustomed to the town, starts to go to church to find some calm. He gets to know the vicar as he does so. Through all of this, I have found a more prominent character and one that I will use to delve into the hero’s background and to shine a light on an unsung patron of the town. All this from one drawing. How I love the creative process!
As well as keeping my drawing notepad to hand as often as possible it comes with a friend…the writing notepad!

I began to use this particular notepad to map out my current WIP, which I had partially written on my phone in the mornings, on my way to, from, and during work, as well as at home. I realised I needed to map out the story in its entirety as I was getting confused as to what was going on.
Once I had mapped out what I had already written, I went full steam ahead and mapped out the whole thing. This allowed me to sort out the plot holes I had become aware of as I was writing the story on my phone.
With all of this, I managed to write 500 words. 500! That was more than I had managed towards any of my WIPs in the last six months combined on my laptop.
This has got me back into the groove of writing, which I had not realised I had fallen out of. I’ve been making plenty of notes, drawing, and thinking about it but not actually doing it outside of my short story course. Now to keep it going.
This leads me to (repeat) a question, how many notepads do you have on the go at any one time? And what do you use them for?
Thanks for reading and have a decent day!
I’ve got several notebooks going at once. I keep a hardback pretty journal for brainstorming when I’m stuck on an idea—it contains a lot of weird third person statements to myself like “what if we have the character do…” I have a tiny little purse-sized notebook for jotting down bits of dialogue I hear out and about or little word combos I might use in a poem. The third journal is for daily dumps of my feelings (more like a dairy of sorts). I’m not consistent with any of these. Sometimes I use all three in a day, or I may go weeks before jotting down anything.
I’ve changed one note book from writing notes to become a journal and started a third note book for my writing. I update my journal most mornings. I’ve only started doing this in the last few months but it does help to start my day well. I use an app as (Evernote) to take notes on the go. A brainstorming notebook sounds like a good idea.