Listing DetailsYes. And I’m already eyeing their notebook for journaling. Would you like a shorter version (e.g., for Amazon or Etsy), or one focused more on a specific product like their weekly planner or sketchbook?
The overthinker who wants to do more than plan. The analog holdout who still believes in ink and margin notes. Anyone tired of planners that feel like they were designed for a productivity influencer’s Instagram feed, not real life.
It’s not cheap. You’re paying for thoughtful design, not flashy extras. If you need digital integration, stickers, or color-coded chaos, look elsewhere. And the minimalist cover—while elegant—shows every scuff and coffee ring. It’s a tool, not a display piece, but be warned. cedar logic
I’ll be honest—I picked up a Cedar Logic planner expecting gimmicks. The minimalist, wood-grain branding felt a little too on the nose for “aesthetic productivity.” But after a full month of daily use, I’m genuinely impressed—with a few caveats.
Cedar Logic doesn’t try to change your life. It just quietly helps you live it with a little less mental clutter. That might sound modest—but in a world of over-engineered planners, that’s actually refreshing. The overthinker who wants to do more than plan
The binding lies completely flat from page one. No spine-cracking fight. Also, the “monthly reflection” prompts aren’t cheesy—they’re specific enough to spark real thought, but open-ended enough not to feel like homework.
⭐⭐⭐⭐☆ (4/5)
The layout is quietly brilliant. Instead of screaming at you with neon habit trackers and hourly breakdowns, Cedar Logic gives you breathing room. The weekly spreads have just enough structure to guide without feeling like a straitjacket. Their “Priority Pyramid” (small daily wins → weekly goals → long-term vision) is actually useful, not just clever jargon. And the paper? Heavy, smooth, fountain-pen-friendly. A tactile pleasure.