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How to Make a Travel Journal

Last Updated: February 24, 2023 Approved

This article was co-authored by Archana Ramamoorthy, MS . Archana Ramamoorthy is the Chief Technology Officer, North America at Workday. In 2019, she went on a three-month sabbatical from her work and solo traveled throughout Southeast Asia. She is a product ninja, security advocate, and on a quest to enable more inclusion in the tech industry. Archana received her BS from SRM University and MS from Duke University and has been working in product management for over 8 years. There are 8 references cited in this article, which can be found at the bottom of the page. wikiHow marks an article as reader-approved once it receives enough positive feedback. In this case, several readers have written to tell us that this article was helpful to them, earning it our reader-approved status. This article has been viewed 139,873 times.

Travel is a time for growth, new experiences, and seeing more of the world. If you're taking a trip, you want to remember everything that you did for years to come. Keeping a travel journal will not only help preserve your memories of the experience, but can help enrich your trip in the moment as well. Check out this super useful list we’ve put together about travel journaling! We’ll start off with some tips on what to put in your travel journal, how to write entries, how to pick a journal type, and more.

Travel Journal Entry Template

how to make travel journal paper

Write about more than just activities to make entries interesting.

Try to capture little experiences like meals and conversations.

  • For example, instead of just talking about a hike you went on, describe the meal you ate at the end of the day and how good it was after exerting yourself physically all day long.

Engage all senses to transport the reader to the time and place.

Describe flavors, smells, and textures in detail.

  • For example, describe the scent of the flowers on the table in the cafe where you have lunch or the feel of the breeze when you're relaxing on the beach.

Find a theme for entries to help make them feel coherent.

It's easier to write journal entries if you focus on a central idea or mood.

  • If you're having trouble identifying a theme for an entry, start by asking yourself a few basic questions, such as: “What made me smile today?”, “What surprised me today?”, or "What did I learn today?" Write down the answers, and you may see a theme start to emerge.

Write about people you meet to bring their characters to life.

The interesting people you meet along the way are worth remembering.

  • For example, you could describe how the old lady who sold you fresh produce at the market looked and acted to bring life into the story about your trip to the market that day. Or, you could talk about fellow travelers you’ve been hanging out with and what you like or admire about them.

Collect mementos to add visual interest to your journal.

Mementos can help you capture memories more clearly.

  • You don't necessarily have to glue or tape the mementos in your journal as you're traveling. Just set them aside in your folder, so you can add them when you return home. However, make sure to leave space among your written entries to add the materials that match up with them.
  • If you’re making a digital journal, you can easily scan or take photos of mementos to add to it.

Take photos to bring your journal entries to life.

You know the old saying, “a picture’s worth a thousand words.”

  • If you’re journaling online, such as on a blog, upload a few relevant photos to go with each post and help bring your entry to life.
  • You don’t have to print out photos on the road for a physical journal. Just save the ones you like and print and add them to your journal when you get home.

Add some sketches if you like to draw.

Sketches add visual interest and can make you appreciate things more.

  • It doesn't matter if you're not a great artist. You can sketch a simple map of the neighborhood that you're staying in or a pretty bunch of flowers that you saw. As long as the drawing helps you remember details of your trip later, it's worth it.
  • You could even use watercolors or another type of paint to do some artwork on a separate piece of art paper, then put it in your journal once it’s dry.
  • If you’re making a digital journal, you can use a drawing app on a tablet or smartphone to do sketches for it.

Make a physical journal if you’re a hands-on type person.

A notebook full of memories from your travels makes for a beautiful keepsake.

  • A journal with acid-free paper is usually a good investment because it will ensure that your writing and sketches will hold up for years.
  • If you want to get really decorative, purchase some additional art supplies like colored markers, gel pens, and pencils.
  • Washi tape or a glue stick are handy for sticking postcards, pictures, and other mementos to pages.
  • If you like to draw and sketch, take a set of drawing pencils with you to sketch sights you see along the way.
  • A small pair of craft scissors can also be handy for cutting out images and things to stick in your journal. However, if you’re flying, make sure you can put them in a checked bag or you won’t be able to bring them with you.

Create a digital journal if you want to easily share it.

Digital journals are great for showing family and friends all your travels.

  • Another advantage of digital journals is that you don’t have to bring much with you. You can use a laptop, a tablet, or even just a smartphone!
  • If you want to find different apps for journaling, search wherever you get your apps from with a term like “travel diary” or “journal app.”
  • Remember that there’s no right or wrong way to create a journal. Whatever gets your creative juices flowing and helps you cherish those memories forever is perfect!

Get a clear, expandable folder to collect journaling materials in.

This helps organize and protect your mementos as you're traveling.

  • A folder is especially important if you don't want to compile your whole journal while you're actually traveling. You can just write in the journal as you go, and add the mementos after you've returned home because the folder will keep them all organized.

Use a map to track your travels if you’re going many places.

Tracing your journey on a map is a fun way to recall your route later.

  • If you want to find apps to track your travels on a map, just type “travel map app” into the search bar of wherever you get your apps.
  • You don’t have to be travelling internationally to track your route on a map. For example, if you’re doing a cross-state road trip, you could print out a map of each state and mark your stops along your route in each state.
  • You can also use a large world map to track multiple trips over the months and years to come.

Decide who you're writing for to help guide your journaling.

Writing just for you and writing for an audience are pretty different things.

  • If you plan to share your journal with others, consider the details that you plan to include. You may not think it's necessary to write down the address of a restaurant that you enjoyed to preserve the memory, but a friend may find the information helpful. On the other hand, there may be personal details of your trip that you don't want to share with family and friends, so it's best to omit them.

Start journaling before your trip to help plan and get excited.

Planning a trip can sometimes be just as fun as the trip itself.

  • You could write about what you imagine certain places to be like, then go back and compare notes after you actually visit them for a fun comparison!
  • You can put practical details in the beginning of your journal too, such as contact info for tour operators or directions to get to certain places.

Make entries as often as possible to fill your journal as you travel.

This helps your journal really capture the mood and tone of your trip.

  • It helps to set aside a specific time to write in your journal. For example, you might do your entries at breakfast or just before bed. If you're taking a plane, train, bus, or car to another location, the ride is a great time to work on journal entries.
  • Remember to date each entry, so you can remember the timeline of your trip. You may want to include the time that you wrote each as well.
  • If you're in a hurry, jot down notes about your day on a scrap of paper that you can copy into the journal when you have more time. You may forget some details if you don't write things down as you go, so a rough draft can come in handy.

Expert Q&A

Archana Ramamoorthy, MS

You Might Also Like

Entertain Yourself During a Long Car Ride

  • ↑ https://www.nathab.com/blog/create-a-travel-journal-that-youll-read-again-and-again/
  • ↑ http://www.wanderlust.co.uk/magazine/articles/advice/how-to-write-the-perfect-travel-journal
  • ↑ http://solotravelerblog.com/9-tips-for-those-who-struggle-to-keep-a-travel-journal/
  • ↑ http://www.globejotting.com/create-a-more-vivid-travel-journal/
  • ↑ http://www.fodors.com/travel-photography/article-creating-a-travel-journal-84/
  • ↑ http://www.gonomad.com/2288-tips-on-keeping-a-travel-journal
  • ↑ https://www.windstarcruises.com/blog/how-to-make-a-travel-journal/
  • ↑ https://penzu.com/travel-journal-guide

About This Article

Archana Ramamoorthy, MS

To make a travel journal, write entries in a journal as you're traveling so you don't forget any important details. Try to engage all of your senses as you're writing by describing how your destination smells, sounds, looks, feels, and tastes, which will make your journal entries more vivid and interesting. Remember to take photos and collect mementos throughout your trip so you can glue them into your travel journal later on. You can also draw or paint different sights you see and include your own artwork in your journal. To learn how to get all the necessary supplies for a travel journal, keep reading! Did this summary help you? Yes No

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How to Travel Journal: Tips for Getting Started

Posted on Published: July 19, 2020  - Last updated: April 26, 2023

How to store a finished journal to keep it safe from age, moisture, and prying eyes

A travel journal is a powerful way to record your travels. In a time when destinations, souvenirs, and even iconic photo-ops barely vary from traveler to traveler, creating a personal notebook of your trip guarantees you’ll have a treasured souvenir that’s all yours. A journal filled with lists, photos, longhand reflections, ticket stubs, itineraries, doodles, and/or art is sure to be a treasured keepsake long after other souvenirs are lost or forgotten.

In this article, we’ll talk about getting started making your first travel journal or travel art journal. Including: supplies you’ll need, types of travel journals, how to decide which type is right for you, set up, post-trip storage, and a FAQ. It’s a long article, so feel free to use the table of contents below to jump around to find the information you need.

My First Travel Journal

I didn’t start my first travel journal until I was 30. I spent most of my 20’s working so hard I never made space for art and journaling, but after selling my business at 33 and returning to school for a Masters’s degree, I found myself often doodling in the margins of my notes. These margin doodles eventually turned into illustrated notes, so when I took my first big solo international trip the summer after my second year of grad school, it felt like a natural extension to begin the first of many solo international travels cataloged in mixed media art journals.

A free guide to how to create, store, pick, and pack a travel journal

I created my first travel journal on my inaugural solo trip – a month-long trip from Italy to Croatia , then Bosnia and Herzegovina and back again. It was the PERFECT trip to experiment with my style and practice of travel journaling, since as a solo traveler I had the time to make my own schedule, and my trip included a little bit of everything- including famous art, iconic architecture, awe-inspiring visas, and a few amazing air B&B experiences to illustrate.

Lb travel art journal video still 4

Download my Free travel Journal eBook

Get this full article- plus all the information you need to create an amazing travel journal, via my free eBook: The Ultimate Guide to Travel Journaling . Download the PDF + eReader bundle below!

Download the Free eBook

Wb journal ebook

Types of Travel Journals

The way I see it, there are five types of travel journals, explained below. Which style – or which combination of types – that you use is up to you.

How to choose? Consider what style works best for you, what skills you’d like to practice and grow through your travel journal, and what kind of memories you most want to put on record through art and illustrations.

The “Listicle” Travel  Journal

Half article, half list, the “listicle” is a top format for new sites, and it’s a format that works great for travel journals. A photo or doodle, paired with a brief description is a good way to organize a travel journal without spending too much precious travel time writing.

This style of journal works well with a bullet journal style format, and can even be started well before your trip. Using your travel journal before your trip to plot out things to do , itineraries, and points of interest you dream of traveling to can be a helpful way to organize your trip and set up journal pages that can then be filled out in more detail on-location. (Need some inspiration to start? Download my printable Bullet Style Travel Journal Template )

The “Sketch Note” Travel  Journal

In medieval times, scribes who were tasked with hand-copying sacred texts often added complex illustrations in the margins. Over time, these illustrations began to communicate context and tone in a language all their own. These text, which came to be known as “ illuminated texts ” were valued because they offered something that text alone could not- the visual experience of the story.

Similarly, this style of travel journaling draws on the inspiration of the naturalist illustrations of 19th-century environmentalists- who painstakingly recorded botanical or animal details, adding Latin genus and species and common names, to create records that to this day are used in biology textbooks.

Truffle hunting travel art journal page

The sketchnote style travel journal brings both of these traditions together in a format that combines short-format text mixed with small and medium-size illustrations. The travel journal page shown here describes my unforgettable day on a truffle hunting Airbnb Experience in Italy. It’s a combination of a landscape-style travel art journal page and a sketch note version.

In the illustration above, I capture a broad-stroke memory of the day via the landscape, add words, and include an educational close-up illustration – in this case, a little study of what I learned to look for in a good black truffle mushroom.

Sketchnote Travel Journals are best for:

Sketch note style journal pages are great for taking notes on things you want to remember. They can help illustrate your memory and review what you learned. This type is perfect for remembering details, key points, and specifics of your trip. It’s perfect for using your travel journal occasionally. If you’re in the food business, you can make notes about meals and ingredients to try back home, if you work in tourism/travel, you can take notes detailing what is/isn’t working about your current trip, etc.

How to create sketchnote style journal pages

  • REFLECT. When you sit down to work on your art travel journal, think about what sticks out to you from your day – what objects or images are most poignant? What did you learn?
  • ILLUSTRATE  2 to 3 of these items. Even if they’re just rough sketches, research shows that the process of translating the memory to a drawing (even a terrible drawing) helps us remember much better than we would if we wrote about it or didn’t record it all.
  • ANNOTATE. Once you’ve done a rough doodle – or a full-on finished illustration, add a few notes to the drawing. Draw lines connecting important parts to relevant text and highlight what you’d want a reader to notice or know about the thing that you drew.

My Experience Sketchnoting in my travel journal in Italy

I didn’t actually get the chance to doodle the page above until I was in Croatia. To be honest, it’s not one of my favorite travel doodles but it captures that experience well- and that is what my travel journals are all about. The journal gave me space to capture what stood out about the experience- the texture of a truffle, our guide and his dog, and the views as we hiked through the Tuscan hills overlooking Florence. Space left for text allowed me to record a few things I learned about truffles. You can read more about my adventure truffle hunting in Italy on my post about it .

The architectural record travel art journal

If you’re a student of architecture, an artist practicing perspective, or just appreciate the hard lines of urban landscapes, including architecture in your art travel journal – or even creating a travel journal that focuses exclusively on architectural scenes, may be a fun way to create a personalized, unique record your trip and practice your architectural drawing skills.

Lb travel journal doodle art 008

The following section may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

Steps to create an architectural focused travel art journal:

  • PLAN. Decide if you will dedicate entire pages or if you will split pages to also include journal entries.
  • PACK. If this is your focus, your travel art kit may need extra tools or, I recommend, just a goniometer . This fancy word actually just refers to a simple, hinged ruler that can replace packing a ruler, protractor, and a drawing compass. It makes it easy to draw straight lines, circles, and measured angles while weighing hardly anything and flexing enough to not break in your pen case.
  • DECIDE whether to sketch live or by photos. Keep your eye out for sketchable scenes as you travel. For travelers with a lot of flexibility, you may wish to stop and find a park bench or café where you can sit and sketch. For others, it may fit better with your itinerary to take photos and later create a sketch from the photographs.
  • BE INCLUSIVE. You’ll be tempted to put only iconic, majestic, or famous buildings in your travel art journal, but one of my favorite things to include in this type of travel art journal is ordinary rooms and buildings that were significant to my trip: the interior of an  Airbnb apartment overlooking an Adriatic coastal bay, or the exterior of my Florence Airbnb apartment, shown below, that blended so nonchalantly into the background of shops, vendors, and residents’ doors.

A travel printer is such a cool way to add easy visual elements to your art journal- creating a travel scrapbook as you go. Sometimes, like shown below, I print a photo of the scene I drew live, just to add more depth to my record of the experience.

Travel printer for art journal

Studying the Masters with a Travel Art journal

I started my very first travel art journal in Florence Italy. Starting my travel art journal in the city that is home to so many of the art world’s greatest masterpieces was an invitation I didn’t quite expect.

I didn’t start that journey expecting to create studies of these famous artworks, but I couldn’t resist the invitation to sit in the great hall at Galleria dell’Accademia with Michelangelo’s David or stand in front of The Birth of Venus at the Uffizi Gallery  without creating. After a jaunt over to the Dalmation coast of the Adriatic, I ended my trip in Rome and I got a repeat: again getting to create replicas of Caravaggio and the iconic Trevi fountain in my travel art journal.

If you’re a student of art- formal or informal- dedicating pages in your travel journal to creating your own versions of classic art isn’t just fun – it’s an important part of how art students have learned and honed skills for ages. It’s okay if you aren’t a dedicated art student, giving yourself the opportunity to learn in this way can both improve your skills and create a souvenir that’s far more personally significant than any of the replica tchotchkes sold in gift shops in the surrounding area.

How to create a travel art journal focusing on studying the Masters:

  • MAKE TIME. Plan your travel itinerary so that you’ll have plenty of time for live sketching. Although you can technically do this through photographs later in the trip, there’s something really powerful about creating the work live. Plan to spend at least an hour creating your own version of the art. Some museums may have seating nearby, and others do not, so be prepared. (When I doodled David, I just had to wait for a bench to open, but the Birth of Venus had no chairs, so was created via a combination of standing-sketching and working from a photo from a bench in the hallway)
  • MODIFY KIT. Modify your travel art journal kit for museum rules: NO scissors, NO paint, and ADD a hard-backed drawing surface since you won’t have a table. Although scissors and watercolors are must-haves in my travel art kit , there’s a chance that security will confiscate any art supplies that could damage valuable art – like scissors or, in the case of many museums, even watercolor and pen-style watercolor brushes.
  • PREPARE to be, well, looked at. If you choose to sketch in a popular museum, you may become something of a tourist attraction yourself. My advice? Keep focused and let people look.
  • PACK LIGHT. Most museums that house priceless artwork will not allow a large purse or even a tiny backpack. On museum days, pack yourself down to a tote bag or even a fanny pack to be sure that the essential art supplies you need will be with you in the museum. (I love Travelon’s travel purses because they are secure/zippered, hands-free, big enough for my whole art kit, but small enough that museum security waves them through without a glance.)

My Experience Studying Classical Art via a Travel Journal

Lb travel journal doodle art 006

Florence was my first big solo trip- and what a great place to start! I intentionally planned my days without an itinerary, so I had the freedom to wander, to bask, or to explore. On my first full day of my trip, the only thing on my to-do list was to make it to the Academia Gallery by day’s end. Galleria del Academia was built specifically to house their most famous piece:  Michelangelo’s David sculpture.

It was at this gallery that I discovered the best part about solo travel as an artist- the freedom to really pause and take in great art. Without having to be sensitive to a partner or group’s interest or boredom, I could sit for hours with David- and I did! After some study and some people watching I went to work on this little doodle shown above.

I had so much fun doing this sketched that when I stumbled onto Logia Del Lanzi plaza later that day, I sat and doodled one of those ancient sculptures as well:

Doodle travel journal entries during italy vacation

Making a Landscape-focused Travel Art journal

Landscape travel art journals are perfect for capturing a broad glimpse of what it’s like to be in the place for you are. Unlike architectural-focused urban drawings, landscapes tend to feature natural elements or a combination of natural and urban, like this cityscape of the bay in front of the Diocletian’s Palace in Split, Croatia.

A landscape in my travel art journal

A landscape travel art journal can be fun to create in cafés and restaurants in tourist spots. Often, prime locations with scenic overlooks feature cafes, making them a perfect spot to sit for a bit and rest while creating a piece for your travel art journal.

To create an artistic travel journal that focuses on landscapes:

  • PICK supplies accordingly. Landscapes sometimes require different supplies than a basic travel art journal kit. For example, if you plan to get very detailed you may need multiple sizes of pen nibs.
  • PLAN. Landscape travel art journaling is perfect to do as a midday break – especially since landscapes sometimes require climbing up to a vista point. A break is much needed and desired by the time I reach the pinnacle of a scenic overlook on foot!

Lb travel journal doodle art 003

“Self-portrait as a traveler” travel art journal

I’m not sure this exists as a genre outside of my own travel art journal, but some of my favorite art from my travel journal has been drawings of myself experiencing something significant from my trip. In the image below, it’s me wading into the Adriatic Sea on a beach about 20 minutes south of Dubrovnik near Cavtat, Croatia .

A self-portrait in your travel art journal offers the opportunity to create art that represents both internal and external landscapes . It says something about the place and it says something about you. At the time of this drawing, I was doing a lot of processing around what it means to be a human with a larger than average body and to live fully in that body in environments that aren’t always welcoming to it.

This little painting in my art journal is so special to me because it captures not just the beauty of the Adriatic seascape, but also something really beautiful that was happening within me as I waded into open water.

To create a travel art journal that focuses on self-portraits:

  • Give yourself permission to represent yourself however it feels right at the time. When we do self-portraits can be tempting to feel that we have to be accurate or that we might be judged if other people look at our self-portrait and don’t determine it to be “close enough”. Allow yourself to create what you need to create, in the way that you need to create it – this is never more true and art and when it comes to your own journal and your own body.
  • Work from photos or by feel . When I created this doodle at a little seaside café after my swim, I was looking at the water but obviously not at my own body. Instead, I drew the landscape as I saw it and sketched in my own body informed by feeling rather than what was in front of me.

Where to Start: Materials and Planning your Travel Journal

Best notebooks to use for travel journals:.

The two most important things when you’re looking at journals to use as a travel journal are (1) paper quality and (2) how flat the book lays when it is opened. Although strong binding can be helpful in other journals, for a travel journal it’s important that each page be able to lay completely flat in order for your art not to be distorted and for the paint to dry right where you put it.

The journal featured most prominently on this site is a blank staple-bound Fabriano EcoQua softcover notebook . The staple-bound binding (like a basic booklet) lets the notebook lay perfectly flat with no significant gap- enabling double-spreads. The hardcover spiral-bound version of this notebook offers more rigidity which may be helpful if you expect to create art on the fly without a table or flat surface. The paper quality in these journals is, to me, well balanced between texture, weight, and finish. Read on to learn more about paper quality for a travel art journal.

Lb travel art journal video still 2

I like the paper in these notebooks because it’s smooth to write on but not too slick to accept simple watercolor washes. It’s thick enough to prevent bleed and minimize show-through between pages.

The paper that works best for you might favor pen and ink, or lend itself to standing up to more complex watercolor art. If you know you’ll be watercoloring a lot, you’ll want to choose thicker paper, but if your emphasis is pencil or pen sketches – even with a bit of watercolor wash, you’ll want to choose thinner, smoother paper. Notebooks in Canson’s Mixed Media Paper line have paper that is perfect for journaling and mixed art use, but I personally find their notebooks too bulky to make good travel journals.

Gathering & Packing Supplies for your travel journal

Whether you’re creating a traditional travel journal, a bullet journal, or a travel art journal, the supplies you bring will significantly shape the final look of your journal.

Free Bullet Journal Style travel art journal template

It can be hard to know how to get started when you are staring down a blank page. If you find that the blank page can be a little bit intimidating, I recommend starting with templates. A template can be as simple or as complicated as you need or wanted to be. Sometimes, rotating a few basic layouts can be a way to create visual interest while stimulating your own creativity within those blocks.

If you think a template might be helpful for you, you can start with my  travel journal template printable , which you can download and print for free. It includes page layouts for a typical size travel journal as well as some prompts of things that might be helpful to journal about during your trip.

If you like the idea of the support of template blocks, but don’t want to be tied into my single layout in the resource above, you can make your own templates to pack them to use in your travel journal.

How to make a travel journal filled with art

How to Pack Art Supplies

My list for making your own travel art journal kit is designed to provide you with all the supplies you might need without triggering any issues and airport security or airline policy. Everything in the travel art journal kit is allowed in your carry-on on an airplane and allowed to be used in the airplane during your trip.

Use a pen case.

The best way to pack art supplies for your trip is inside of a pen case. A pen case often has interior straps that help keep art supplies in place to keep them from getting damaged during your trip.

Keep your art supplies in your carry-on.

Always keep your art supplies with your carry-on luggage. Scissors under 4 inches from the pivot point are allowed through any airport in your carry-on luggage (even if they are sharp scissors) however museums and UNESCO sites set their own rules and may x-ray bags and demand the surrender or paid-storage of scissors, paint, or even permanent markers before entry into their area. Art supplies are generally always allowed on a plane, within reason.

Place art supplies inside of an airtight bag before flying.

Be aware that some markers and pens can do funky stuff due to changes in air pressure (I’ve observed pens ooze ink uncontrollably after being uncapped mid-flight). To remedy this, many travelers carry their journaling supplies in sealed zip lock bags. This method can work to prevent potential issues caused by air pressure changes during takeoff and landing, but you should avoid opening the bag at any point during your flight . 

In years past, simply keeping pens capped helped avoid issues with pressure changes, but with most caps perforated to prevent choking, you’ll need to be a bit more proactive about protecting your pens from pressure changes in flight.

Stari most travel art journal

6 Things you should always include in a travel journal

Everyone’s travel journal will turn out different and will include different elements – after all, our journals are a reflection of who we are, where we went, and how we travel! Despite these huge differences, there are a few elements that every single travel journal should include:

  • Date marking the day of your visit and the day of the art-making, if different.
  • Location  – always identify where you made the piece.
  • Location Depicted – if different from above.
  • Your Signature – or an @username tag you plan to share on social media
  • Something about your experience. If you don’t want to write a block of text about your day, just name something you touched, saw, tasted, smelled, or experienced.
  • Anything else that’s important. I love adding Illustrative Highlights: see above in the sketch note style travel journal, it can be fun to add arrows and circles to highlight important things to remember within a larger piece of art in your travel journal.

1 Tip for Bridging Journals and Social Media

Although your travel journal exists as a way to keep the memory of your travel adventures, one of my favorite ways to bridge the gap between a travel journal and social media (which, for many, is a modern format for journaling life events like travel) is by merging the analog journal and the digital. I do this by taking photographs of my journal spreads on location, in front of the icon or landmark they depict.

Taking a photograph of your travel journal entry in front of famous landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower, the White House, or an Iconic mountain scene in Patagonia is a great way to digitize your travel journal – keeping it safe in case something happens to it and making it more accessible.

Why You Should Create a Travel Journal

To enhance memories.

Over time our memories of travel naturally fade. By creating an art journal as we travel, we can not only create an amazing unique record of our trip, but researchers have found that through making art, we can actually experience our trip in a different way- and remember more of it!

Taking photographs, it turns out , makes us less likely to remember an experience than just being present to the experience. Drawing an experience, however, increases the vibrance of our memories significantly. For this and so many other reasons, a travel art journal is an incredible way to enhance any travel experience.

In my professional life, I’m part researcher- so I’ve tracked the research (or rather, lack thereof) of travel-journal related research for a few years.

Finally, in early 2021, a research team from Hong Kong, the UK, and the Netherlands presented the results of the first study centering on how a journaling practice may or may not enhance the experience of traveler. You can read the full pape here , but essentially researchers found that travel-created happiness is generally short-lived, but journaling well (in the case of the study, through a guided journaling app designed by the researchers) increased the memorability and meaningfulness of participant’s travel experiences, which appeared to result in positive long-term benefits from travel.  

To create a totally unique souvenir

Except for the unique, antique souvenirs you can pick up at a good street market , most travel souvenirs are pretty unremarkable. 5-10 years after your trip, you’re probably going to donate that Starbucks mug emblazoned with “London” to a thrift store and toss out those laminated travel magnets, but a well-preserved travel journal creates a unique, quality souvenir that even your grandkids would likely treasure. Journal well and follow the journal preservation instructions below, and you’ll return home with a priceless and enviable souvenir of your travels.

Lb travel journal doodle art 007

To grow writing or art skills

We are often led to believe that the ability to make art or write well are skills that people are born with. While it’s true that some people are more artistically inclined, everyone has the capacity to develop their skills as an artist. Often, the way that we encourage children based on their natural inclinations determines what they dedicate time to, which determines what they become good at. Whether you are a skilled artist/writer or not, practicing will make you better at your craft .

Travel is an amazing opportunity for practice – it dovetails so well with exhausting days of endless walking as a tourist. Taking a very long break in a café to sip a hot drink and sketch- even very terrible sketches- allows you to experience a location in a completely different way while developing your skills.

To grow through personal reflection

Research is very clear that when we reflect on experiences, our ability to be mindful and make more thoughtful, emotionally mature decisions develops. Journaling isn’t just a great way to grow your art skills and create a cool souvenir, journaling can help you grow into a kinder, braver, more thoughtful human.

To share your experience with others

One of the hardest parts of traveling is not being able to share the experience with the people that we love. Even if we are traveling with a partner, a group of friends, or family, there are people we love back home that are only getting the Facebook version of our experience. Being able to come home and walk our loved ones through a travel journal is a gift both to them and to us. This has been especially true for my elderly grandmother who passed away just after I returned from my Transylvania trip , sending her postcards with foreign stamps and hand-scrawled doodles was an important way that we stayed connected over the many miles. ( Click here to read more about my story and how sending postcards to my grandmother from around the world was a way we stayed connected)

Sharing your paper journal of drawings can be a way to share our travels with family, like grandparents, back home

Steps to Make a Travel Journal or Travel Art Journal

A travel printer shown next to a travel journal.

How to Make a Travel Journal

Time required: 30 minutes

Pick a notebook and create a kit of supplies

Use our travel journal supply list as a guideline to create your own, compact journaling kit.

Take your journal everywhere

While traveling, always keep your journal in your bag. Use it to fight boredom on long layovers , jot down impressions of a place, sketch loved scenes, collect papers, and even to press flowers or leaves.

Create a routine

Your journal will turn out best if you create- and stay faithful to- a routine. When I’m solo travelin g, I often spend an hour or more after dinner relaxing, drawing, writing, painting, making a bullet list of the day’s itinerary, and printing photos on my travel printer for my journal.

Give yourself permission to make mistakes

Think of your journal like a record of your trip- and embrace the imperfect parts as part of the experience. In a travel journal, like in travel, perfectionism can ruin the fun.

After your trip, preserve your journal

Follow our tips to preserve your journal safely so you can return to it to remember your trip for many years to come..

Estimated Cost: 10 USD

  • Blank notebook
  • Pens and/or Art Supplies

Flip Through of a Mixed Media Travel Journal:

A travel journal can be an amazing way to record your adventures while traveling, help you grow as an artist, and improve the memory of your significant travel experiences. By creating a travel journal that focuses on- or combines- scenes of architecture, natural landscapes, studying the Masters of classic art, creating self-portraits, or creating a sketchnote styled doodle record of your trip, you can create a souvenir with priceless value that’s totally unique to you and will be cherished for years to come.

Avatar for lynli roman

Lynli Roman’s unique approach to travel is informed by decades of experience on the road with a traveling family and, later, years spent as a solo international traveler. When she’s not writing about Seattle from her Pike Place Market apartment, Lynli writes on-location while conducting hands-on research in each destination she covers. Lynli’s writing has been featured by MSN, ABC Money, Buzzfeed, and Huffington Post. She is passionate about sharing information that makes travel more accessible for all bodies.

Friday 3rd of September 2021

"It’s ok for your art to reflect your experience of a place rather than create an exact record- you get to make the rules and document what is important to you" - truly, truly priceless advice. So very obvious in retrospect, but the sense of freedom it brings is astonishing. Thank you!

LynLi Roman M.A.

Saturday 4th of September 2021

Thanks for commenting Tammi! I'm glad that way of looking at it was helpful- it's definitely helped me feel freer to make MY travel art, whatever that will be!

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How to start a travel journal: 12 tips for beginners.

Published May 08, 2024

Author Suze Dowling

Ever felt like your travels deserve more than just a photo album or a few posts on social media? What if you could capture every laugh, every unexpected detour, and every moment that makes your heart skip a beat?

We're going to show you how to start a travel journal that does just that and more. So, if you're ready to give your memories a home that's as vivid and vibrant as they are — keep reading!

But First, Why Start a Travel Journal Anyway?

Starting a travel journal offers numerous benefits that go beyond simple memory keeping. Here’s why every traveler should consider keeping one:

  • Preserve Your Memories : Capture the details that photographs can't — your thoughts, emotions, and the sensory experiences of your journey.
  • Enhance Your Observational Skills : Writing about your travels sharpens your attention to detail and helps you notice nuances you might otherwise miss.
  • Reflect on Your Experiences : Journals provide a space for personal reflection , helping you process and understand what you’ve learned from your travels.
  • Share Your Adventures : A travel journal can be a beautiful way to share your adventures with friends and family, offering them a glimpse into your experiences.
  • Create a Lasting Souvenir : More than just a collection of entries, your travel journal becomes a keepsake filled with personal stories and adventures.

By keeping a travel journal, you’re creating a bank of experiences that define your journey through life.

What Are Essential Tips for Starting a Travel Journal?

Starting a travel journal might seem daunting, but with a few expert tips, you'll be capturing your adventures like a pro in no time. Here's how to start:

1. Choose the Right Journal

Finding the right journal is like picking a new travel buddy — it needs to match your adventure style. Whether it's a rugged, ready-for-anything notebook or a sleek, stylish journal like our National Park & Trip Passport Bundle , the right journal should inspire you to write. Think about what feels comfortable in your hand, fits well in your travel bag, and makes you excited to open it up and spill your thoughts.

2. Start Before You Go

Your journaling journey starts before you even hit the road. Begin by jotting down your itinerary, expectations, and anything you’re particularly excited about. This could be the foods you want to try, the sights you're eager to see, or the sounds of the bustling markets you anticipate. Setting these expectations primes your senses and builds a prelude to the great stories you're about to write.

3. Date and Place Your Entries

Keep a reliable record of when and where your experiences occur by dating and placing your entries. This is to capture the moment in time and space, giving your future self a clear snapshot of where you were and what was happening. These details will transport you back to moments you might otherwise forget.

4. Capture the Small Moments

Remember those little interactions or odd sights that made you chuckle or pause for a second thought? Like the old man in the park who looked exactly like your favorite cartoon character or the kid who tried to sell you a rock. Those are gold. Jot them down. They may seem inconsequential at the time, but these are the stories you’ll share again and again. They bring the real flavor to your adventures.

5. Sketch Your Path

You don’t need to be an artist to sketch something memorable from your travels. Draw that quirky statue in the park, the layout of your cozy café corner, or just a map of your day’s wanderings. Visuals like these can break up the text and add a personal touch that photos alone can't capture.

6. Include Ticket Stubs, Photos, and Other Ephemera

Transform your journal from a collection of written words to a full-fledged travel scrapbook. Stick in those plane tickets, museum passes, and postcards. Snap a photo of that incredible meal or sunset and print it out to paste next to your description. These tangible bits of your journey add depth and texture to your memories, making your journal a multi-dimensional memento of your travels.

7. Use Prompts To Spark Memories

Stuck on what to write? Let prompts kick-start your storytelling engine. How about, "What’s the weirdest thing I saw today?" or "Who made me smile?" Simple questions like these can pull out the most engaging tales from your travels. They make sure you capture the essence of those fleeting moments.

8. Keep It Regular but Stress-Free

Don’t turn journaling into a daily grind. Yes, try to write often because habits can make your entries rich and detailed. But if life happens and you miss a day or two, don’t sweat it. Your journal is your space, free from deadlines and pressure. When you do write, let it be a joy, not a job.

9. Get a Taste of the Local Scene

Why just see the world when you can taste it, right? Next time you find yourself in a new place, chase down that food truck everyone's lining up for or try out that weird-looking local delicacy. Scribble down what it tasted like, smelled like, even how it made you feel — did it surprise you, delight you, or make you crave seconds? Your journal becomes a sort of menu of memories from all over the map.

10. Turn Strangers Into Stories

It’s the people, not just the places, that shape our travel stories. So go ahead, chat up the barista with the cool tattoo or the elderly man feeding pigeons in the square. Each person you meet can offer a unique slice of life — just a few lines in your journal about these characters can paint a vivid picture of the local culture and add a voice to your adventure.

11. Reflect on Your Experiences

Every now and then, take a step back and read through your past entries. What did you learn? How have you changed? This isn’t just about remembering what you did but understanding how these experiences have shaped you. Reflection turns simple notes into deep insights , adding layers to your travel stories that are uniquely yours.

12. Embrace the Unexpected

Here’s to the wrong turns, missed buses, and happy accidents. When things don’t go as planned, grab your journal. Documenting these unexpected moments often reveals the heart and humor in our travels. Was there a misadventure that led you to the best view of the city or a mix-up that introduced you to a new friend? These are the stories you’ll laugh about later.

Ready. Set. Write!

Now that you've got the scoop on starting a travel journal, it's time to put pen to paper and begin your own adventure in storytelling. At Letterfolk , we believe that every journey deserves to be remembered. With these tips, you're ready to transform your travel experiences into a vivid narrative that goes beyond the usual snapshots.

Whether it’s capturing the giggle-worthy gaffes or the sunset that stopped you in your tracks, your travel journal is your personal playground. So, grab our National Park & Trip Passport Bundle , and let’s turn those fleeting moments into lifelong memories. 

Ready to start journaling? Because your next great story is just a journey away. Pack your journal, and let's make some memories together!

7 benefits of keeping a journal | Kaiser Permanente

Journaling as a Social Emotional Learning Practice | Empowering Education

Don’t Underestimate the Power of Self-Reflection | Harvard Business Review

Creating visual explanations improves learning | PMC

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The Travel Tester

How to Make a Travel Journal? DIY Tips and Must-Have Supplies

Posted on Last updated: June 5, 2024

During my travels, I’ve always kept a travel journal – but they always have been different in style. If you ask me how to make a travel journal , I’d say that the only limit is your own imagination .

You can organise your journals by destination (country, or city), by itinerary or for by date, for example in weekly or daily logs, the possibilities are endless.

There are some tips and supplies that might help you get started on your first travel journal. Today I share them with you!

TIP: For a complete list of our favourite travel journals, have a look at the bottom of this article!

1. TRAVEL SKETCHBOOK

2. travel scrapbook, 3. travel notebook, 4. travel logbook, 5. friends travel journals, 6. themed travel journals, 7. local travel journals, 8. city travel journals, 9. travel photo album, journal sizes, binding types, paper thickness, extra journal features, what should a travel journal include, travel writing tips, prompts for travel journaling, travel journals with prompts, travel journal examples, how do you start a beginner travel journal, travel journaling supplies, travel journal decoration ideas, travel without leaving home, want to be a travel blogger, which book to read, our favourite travel journals, our favourite travel notebook covers, travel journals for kids, discover unique travel gear & gifts in our shop.

How to Make a Travel Journal? DIY Tips and Must-Have Supplies || The Travel Tester

HOW DO I MAKE A TRAVEL JOURNAL?

OUR TOP 6 TRAVEL JOURNALS The Adventure Book (prompts + scrapbook per country) Moleskine Passion Journal Travel (blank paper) Duncan & Stone Travel Journal (prompts + scrapbook) Promptly Journals X Kelli Murray (prompts + scrapbook) Clever Fox Travel Journal (prompts + stickers) Wayfaren Travel Journal (lined paper)

What is a Travel Journal?

Let’s start at the beginning and go over what makes a travel journal. There are just so many different types! It really depends on how you would like to use your own journal to decide the best one for you!

Perhaps you first think of a simple lined notebook where you write down your travel stories, but there are so many other ways to keep your memories from on the road.

Just to name a few:

You don’t have to be a master artist to have fun with a travel sketchbook . Just take a notebook with blank pages and start drawing (or painting!) what you see. You can use pen, pencil, markers, crayons, watercolours or other paint, whatever you like!

There are some great travel journals specifically made for making watercolour drawings, such as the Tumuarta journal and the Seawhite journal .

Here are some other journals with blank pages perfect for sketching: the Moleskine Passion Journal and this personalized monogrammed leather journal .

Bookishly sells cute A5 (6×8″/15x21cm) travel journals with vintage world map covers featuring an inspirational quote on Etsy. The books have 244 blank pages, you can choose gift wrap, they have free UK delivery AND even upgrade to a “Journal for Life”, where you can send them a photo of a full travel journal and they send you a new one free of charge!

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

You don’t always need to be physically on the road to enjoy the beauty of destinations from all around the world!

From vintage travel posters to beautifully displayed souvenirs and home decor items inspired by your favourite places and from travel journals and crafts to exploring world recipes, music and dance.

With our creative articles you’ll get some fresh ideas on how to bring the world closer to the comforts of your own home.

If you aren’t a fan of drawing or painting, then perhaps making collages in a travel scrapbook is more your thing.

Nothing calms me down faster than ripping inspiring images and words out of magazines and flyers, or collecting little scrapbook items such as ticket stubs, napkins, packaging, etc. Simply arrange them in a nice way, add some text or embellishments like washi tape and you’ve got a great page!

I love using Project Life as a scrapbook , this is a system by Becky Higgins where you slide cards and photos into plastic pockets. It’s not widely available anymore, but I still love it.

Another great book to use for scrapbooking is The Adventure Book , which comes in two sizes.

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

Ok, I kind of already mentioned it in the intro, but some traditional travel notebook ideas / travel diary examples couldn’t miss in this first roundup.

You can choose lined, dotted or blank paper and write down anything you want to remember from your trip.

Of course you can combine it with elements of the above, for example by adding little doodles, papers, perhaps flowers or feathers, or any other flat trinkets you collect.

The Robrasim refillable leather travelers notebook has a mix of different paper types (and also a handy pocket)

Wayfaren on Etsy sells Weekender travel journals , which measure 6×8.5″ (about 15×21.5cm) and feature 28 lined pages (56 front and back) with a pre-printed box for location and date. The covers come in ivory and navy.

My favourite dotted journal is the Leuchtturm1917 .

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

If you love to write, but don’t feel like you have the time or energy to fill entire pages with text whilst on the road, a travel logbook might be something for you.

Just write down short little things that stood out about your day, so you won’t forget them. Think about what you did and who you met, what the weather was like, what you saw, heard, smelled, felt or tasted. Use all your senses!

The Everywhere You Go journal by Compendium let’s you take a quick snapshot of a place.

The Trip Passport by Letterfolk is a small, 48-page pocket-sized journal. Each entry page is accompanied by a blank page and there is space to record the date, location, who you went with, first impressions, sights, wildlife and more! It measures 3.5×5.5″ (about 9x14cm), roughly the size of a travel passport.

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

There is a lot that goes into running a profitable blog and there’s so much that goes on behind the scenes than you might not realize at first.

I’ve been blogging since 2006 and have a ton of tips to share! From brainstorming ideas to creating content all year round and from posting on social media to maintaining your website, tracking what’s working, networking at events and eventually working with brands…

Another cool idea might be to start a friends journal . What is a travel journal for friends? Let me tell you!

I actually did this on my first solo world trip, where friends gifted me a journal to take with me. Instead of writing in it myself (I already kept up a digital journal in the form of a blog) – I let everyone that I met on the road write a message in the book for me!

That made the journal super unique and personalized. And it’s still amazing to read back and remember all these people.

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

I also own a road trip journal , which I think is also such a fun idea! Usually on a road trip, you don’t have much time to keep up an extensive diary, so this pre-printed book is an easy way to keep track of all everything along the way you would like to remember.

Here you can find Axel & Ash Life’s a Road Trip Journal >

The Brand Clever Fox has a few fun themed journals, such as the Camping Journal and the Bucket List Journal >

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

You can really add a personal touch by choosing a journal that has a relation to the kind of trip that you are taking.

For example, you can buy a travel journal locally (like I did with the albums below, that I bought in Nepal and India from the market).

On markets across the world, you can also find amazing leather bound journals that right away give a whole explorer-vibe to your journal. You can also turn them into a personalized journal by having your name or the date engraved in the cover.

Here is a beautiful refillable handmade leather travelers notebook by the brand Robrasim >

Some great customizable travel notebooks are these from bamboo by Ruben & Jule of CamperVanStore on Etsy, this beautiful leather travel diary with a compass monogram by TealsPrairie on Etsy and the leather notebook covers by family-run business Galen Leather (their journal covers are compatible with Moleskine , Leuchtturm1917 , Field Notes and Traveler’s Notebook – and they also sell refills )

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

I found these fun city journals by Moleskine that also make for a great travel journal if you’re visiting these specific places.

I haven’t found many of these, but here is one for London , Paris , Hong Kong and New York >

Moleskine also has a great general travel journal and traveller’s journal in collaboration with National Geographic >

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

Any finally, the good old photo album . When I grew up, the albums that could stack all the images from one film canister (*ugh*grandma*ugh*) were very popular – you would usually bring the album to parties for people to flip through! Nowadays, they come in all different shapes and sizes.

Here you can find all kinds of albums for those little Instax photos .

Did I already mention I’m a huge Project Life fan ?

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

How to choose a travel journal?

After choosing your type of journal, there are a few other things to consider when selecting your perfect paper trip companion, such as:

What size is a travel journal? Well, that depends on what you use it for! Personally, I am most happy with an A5 size when it comes to travel journals. The smaller ones I find hard to write in and don’t fit all my keepsakes, the bigger ones just take up too much space in my backpack .

Perhaps you only want to take quick notes, or want to travel real lightweight, then an A6 travel journal (with pockets) might be best for you. And if you only create your final travel notebook at home and want to go all-out, a bigger size, such as A4 , or even larger, makes you happiest!

If you’re only creating a photo album of your trip, then you could for example also look into 1:1 sized albums, like the typical scrapbooks that are 12″ (30,48 cm) x 12″ or the 1.33:1 albums, for example 6″ (15,24 cm) x 8″ (20,32 cm).

I love this A5 Bullet Journal , also perfect for travel.

Incredible A4 travel journal .

Here are some cute Field Notes books – National Parks-themed!

This leather cover fits a 6″ Field Notes notebook perfectly .

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

The type of binding of a notebook is the material that is used to make the upper (front) and lower (back) covers of the journal, also taking into consideration how the pages are attached to the covers/back of the notebook.

For example, a saddle-stitch bind is when paper is folded with a staple or thread through the fold. PUR binding uses a paperboard or heavy cover stock to attach pages to the spine with glue (like in a paperback book). With spiral binding , there is a loop wire going through holes in the cover and pages (Nick hates these, as he’s left-handed and somehow always finds the wire in his way when writing), and with section sewn binding or coptic stitch binding , you get a flexible spine so you can lay the pages flat to work on.

As for the cover, you can choose between a hardcover or a more flexible, soft cover .

There are so many more types of binding that the ones I’ve just mentioned. Which do you prefer?

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

I mentioned them already briefly: are you most comfortable to work on lined/ruled paper (and how close do you like the rules to be?), blank paper, dotted paper, or perhaps paper with a grid or pre-printed boxes or prompts to fill in?

What type of page type for a travel journal you choose all depends on how you’re going to use the notebook. Are you going to write in it with pen or perhaps print typed text? Would you like to use markers or paint? Make drawings? The possibilities are endless.

This is a great example of a travel journal with prompts .

The Promptly journals are filled with custom prompts and also have plenty of space for mementos & photos.

Super handy pre-printed pages in this Camping Notebook by Clever Fox. And they also do a cool Travel Bucket List journal that’s fun to fill out!

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

Paper thickness is measured in weight, which varies from country to country. In the United States for example, you have “ U.S. basis weight ” (in pounds), where they look at a 500-sheet stack of the paper at its original, uncut “basic” size. But this can be confusing as a consumer, because different paper grades have different basic sizes, so even when the weight in pounds is higher, it doesn’t automatically mean the paper is thicker, because the basis size can be different.

It probably makes more sense to look at GSM (“ grams per square meter “). The weight is now determined by one sheet of paper at a size of 1 meter by 1 meter, measured in grams. All different grades of paper are measured at the same size. So a higher GSM always means heavier paper.

For reference, the standard weight of most A4 copy paper for your printer is 20 lb. / 75 gsm.

If you don’t want your pens, markers or paint to bleed through the pages, the thickness of your paper definitely matters, so make sure to test this!

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

Are there any other features you need when choosing your perfect travel journal? For example, I love notebooks with little pockets to keep my receipts and tickets. Or when they have a bookmark or pocket for a pe n!

Tips for extra features in a travel journal could also be page numbers , dividers or dedicated room to write dates . What extra features can you think of that you might need?

TIP ! Unique is The Travelogue by Luckies . This 64 page notepad journal also has check lists, travel tips and 8 miniature scratch maps, each representing different regions of the world. You can simply scratch off where you’ve been!

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

I believe there should not be a hard rule on what a travel journal should include, as the beauty lies in the fact that you can so easily customize it to your specific taste and type of trip!

Besides the obvious elements such as date , location , some highlights of the day and perhaps additional information about the weather, people you’ve met, things you ate and activities you did, you can add anything to your travel journal or scrapbook that’s important to you.

If you are looking for some inspiring examples of things to add to your travel journal, make sure to check out our blog about creative travel journal ideas >

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

How do I write a travel journal that is worth reading?

Travel writing can quickly become repetitive if you just list things you did in chronological order. So what can you do to make a story more interesting?

In a separate blog, I’ll give you my best tips on how to write a travel journal .

For more writing tips, check out “ The Soul of Place: A Creative Writing Workbook ” by Linda Lappin, “ Lonely Planet Travel Writing ” by Don George and “ On Writing ” by Stephen King.

If you’re looking for a bit of travel journal inspiration, then check out this blog in which I’ve handpicked some fun travel journal prompts for you.

There are also several travel notebooks out there that already have printed prompts in them. You can find the best travel journals with prompts at the bottom of our blog about travel writing prompts.

Spoiler : Some of our favourites are “ The Adventure Book ” by Nicole Nagelgast, “ Life’s a Road Trip ” and “ Swept Away by Wanderlust ” journals by Axel & Ash and the “ Travel Journal “, “ Bucket List Journal ” and “ Camping Journal ” by Clever Fox.

Other travel journals with prompts we encourage you to check out is this one by Compendium , this one by Promptly , this one by Moleskine , this one by OneLineVoyage and this one by Duncan & Stone .

These Are the Best Creative Travel Journal Ideas to Try this Year || The Travel Tester

Perhaps you’re not so fond of writing – but you love to craft, draw or paint. That’s amazing! With the following inspirational accounts on Instagram, you’ll get plenty of travel journaling ideas that don’t involve writing:

  • Here are some creative travel project life scrapbook pages >
  • Writer & sketch artist Candace Rose Rardon makes amazing (travel-related) sketches >
  • Same goes for artist Kathrin Jebsen-Marwedel a.k.a. ( Illustrated Journal ), Andrea Muñoz , Alicia Aradilla and Meera Krishnadas ( The Little Black Journal ) on Instagram >

How to Make a Travel Journal? DIY Tips and Must-Have Supplies || The Travel Tester

So far, we’ve looked at: all the different types of travel journals (sketchbook, scrapbook, notebook, logbook, friends travel journal, themed journals, local journals, city journals and travel photo albums), how to choose a travel journal (by looking at size, binding types, page types, paper thickness and additional features such as pockets and bookmarks) and what to include in your travel journal .

I also shared writing tips , journalling prompts , and creative examples of travel journals without a strong focus on text.

Ideas enough, but how do you get started?

It depends a bit what type of travel journal you’re keeping, but my system for creating a (travel) scrapbook is as follows:

  • I collect photos, notes and items while on the road (I keep them on a separate hard disk for the photos, my notes in a simple lined notebook or in my phone and the items in a plastic folder I can zip closed)
  • At home, I organise my photos on my computer in folders by date and location, and I keep all loose items (brochures, ticket stubs, etc.) in a plastic folder in a box – for when I’m ready to start the scrapbook.
  • Before I get started on the journal, I plan where all photos and notes are going to go in the album. If I’m working with project life , I already slide the loose items into the pockets they’re going to go and also write on little papers (that also slide into the pockets) which photos I want to put where – I keep these in a separate folder on my phone.
  • When the planning is done, I print all the photos I want to use in the album.
  • Then I write all the notes that go with the photos.
  • If that’s all done, I collect all scrapbooking supplies (list follows below) and I cut, glue or write where necessary.
  • And FINALLY – I embellish the pages with extra stickers , stamps or other decorations.

how to make travel journal paper

We’ve written an extensive article on all the travel journaling supplies we recommend, but here are a few that shouldn’t miss in your own travel journal kit:

  • colouring pencils
  • felt tip pens (love these from Stabilo and Paper Mate )
  • pens (love this Fisher space pen , the PILOT Rolling Ball Gel Pens and the Stabilo sensor pens )
  • highlighters
  • sharpie markers and pens
  • hole puncher
  • cutting mat and ruler
  • glue stick or glue roller
  • project life album , pocket pages ( type 1 / type 2 ), lined cards and more items …

If you’re wondering ‘how can I decorate my travel journal?’ then I’ve got a handy list for you with some ideas for travel journal embellishments:

  • travel photos / vintage photos
  • polaroids ( fujifilm instax mini camera, film and printer here )
  • travel journal stickers (for example: travel sticker set , planner stickers , world landmark stickers , passport stamp stickers , US state stickers , travel around the world stickers , US national park stickers , outdoor stickers )
  • stamps (big fan of these wooden travel stamps and silicone travel stamps )
  • magnetic page markers
  • some fun digital printables: travel stationary and country flags
  • origami paper or scrapbook paper
  • coins, sand, pressed flowers , pressed leaves or feathers
  • paper ideas: drawings, rubbings, food / product packaging, food / product labels, menus, ticket stubs, postal stamps, receipts, maps, postcards, boarding passes, business cards , letters or notes from friends, written/printed local language, cuttings from (travel) magazines , brochures
  • …what else can you come up with?

How to Make a Travel Journal? DIY Tips and Must-Have Supplies || The Travel Tester

And there you have it! This is how I make a travel journal from scratch. I hope you found these DIY tips and inspiration helpful. For our favourite travel journals, please look below. And for a full list of travel scrapbooking supplies, check out this post !

The Travel Tester || Creative & Cultural Travel Blog || Work With Us

The Travel Tester loves to review books that teach you something about yourself or the world around us.

From travel guides and stories to books about business and self-development and from cultural stories to cook books from kitchens around the world… if it looks interesting to us, we’ll test it!

No matter where you’re going, with our reviews you’ll know exactly what to read next!

  • The Adventure Book – Original Edition (prompts + scrapbook per country)
  • The Adventure Book – Europe Edition (prompts + scrapbook per country)
  • The Adventure Book – Ultimate Traveler’s Edition (prompts + scrapbook per country)
  • Moleskine Passion Journal Travel (blank paper)
  • Moleskine National Geographic Traveller’s Journal (tabbed sections + prompts)
  • Moleskine Journey City Notebook – London (pocket)
  • Moleskine Journey City Notebook – Paris (pocket)
  • Moleskine Journey City Notebook – New York (pocket)
  • Moleskine Journey City Notebook – Hong Kong (pocket)
  • Duncan & Stone Travel Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Everywhere You Go: Guided Travel Journal (prompts)
  • Promptly Journals X Kelli Murray (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Robrasim Refillable Leather Travelers Notebook (mixed papers + pockets)
  • Clever Fox Bucket List Journal (prompts + stickers)
  • Clever Fox Camping Journal (prompts + stickers)
  • Clever Fox Travel Journal (prompts + stickers)
  • Axel & Ash Life’s a Road Trip Journal (prompts)
  • Axel & Ash Swept Away by Wanderlust (prompts)
  • Field Notes: National Parks Series (pocket, graph paper)
  • Bookishly Travel Journals (blank pages)
  • Wayfaren Travel Journal (lined paper)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Motorhome Travel Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Travel Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Caravan Travel Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Wooden Journal (lined pages)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Hiking Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Road Bike Journal (prompts)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Wooden Adventure Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • Oakdene Designs Personalised Camping Journal (prompts + scrapbook)
  • CamperVanStore Bamboo Travel Journal (lined paper + pen)
  • Personalized Monogrammed Leather Travel Journal (blank pages)
  • OneLineVoyage Faux Leather Travel Journal (prompts)
  • Luckies Scratch Off Travelogue (prompts + scratch maps)
  • Letterfolk Trip Passport (pocket + prompts)
  • Galen Leather – Leuchtturm1917 Notebook Covers
  • Galen Leather – Moleskine Covers
  • Galen Leather – Field Notes Covers
  • Galen Leather – Traveler’s Notebook Covers
  • I Was Here: A Travel Journal for the Curious Minded
  • Go!: A Kids’ Interactive Travel Diary and Journal – RED
  • Go!: A Kids’ Interactive Travel Diary and Journal – BLUE
  • Go!: A Kids’ Interactive Travel Diary and Journal – YELLOW
  • Kids’ Travel Specialty Journal
  • Lonely Planet Kids My Travel Journal
  • Lonely Planet Kids The Travel Activity Book
  • The Ultimate Travel Journal For Kids
  • Road Trip Activities and Travel Journal for Kids
  • Travel Journal for Kids
  • Here I Go!: A Kid’s Travel Journal

MORE ABOUT TRAVEL JOURNALLING

  • How to Make a Travel Journal ? Tips and Supplies
  • How to Write a Travel Journal ? Best Writing Tips
  • 65+ Travel Journal Prompts to inspire you
  • 10+ Travel Bullet Journal Ideas you’ll love
  • Best Bullet Journal Tips
  • These Travel Journal Covers will amaze you
  • Explorers’ Sketchbooks Review
  • A Short History of Travel Writing
  • 15 Signs you are born for Travel Writing
  • Our Okinawa (Japan) Project Life Album
  • Must-Have Travel Scrapbooking Supplies

The Travel Tester || Creatief & Cultureel Reisblog

In The Travel Tester shop, you will find our favourite travel products and original gift ideas.

Whether you’re looking for the best travel gear, gadgets, electronics, packing solutions, clothing, shoes, travel books, health- or beauty products… we’ve made a personal selection for you!

We’ve also included our favourite tech items used to create this blog, as well as material that can help you in your self-development, such as interesting books and courses.

How to Make a Travel Journal? DIY Tips and Must-Have Supplies || The Travel Tester

Saturday 9th of March 2024

Creating a travel journal is a wonderful way to capture memories! Your DIY tips are spot-on, especially the emphasis on personal touches. Including must-have supplies like a sturdy notebook and colorful pens enhances the experience. Thanks for inspiring us to document our journeys with creativity!

Friday 21st of July 2023

Creating a travel journal is such a delightful and personal way to preserve the memories of our adventures. I love how the article emphasizes that there are no rules when it comes to making a travel journal, only the limits of our imagination. It's true; each travel journal can be as unique as the journey itself!

The tips and supplies shared here are truly helpful for anyone looking to start their first travel journal. I particularly resonate with the idea of incorporating various embellishments into the journal. Adding travel photos, stamps, and even pressed flowers can truly bring the memories to life and make the journal visually captivating.

Cheers, Femi.

The Travel Hack

Travel journaling: 10 tips to create a gorgeous travel journal to treasure for a lifetime

By: Author Monica

Categories Blog

Travel journaling: 10 tips to create a gorgeous travel journal to treasure for a lifetime

Do you write a travel journal? 

I know, it’s the 21st century and we all take a billion photos a day and share everything online. That’s like a modern form of journaling travel, right? Well…no. Today I’d like to make a case to bring back the lost art of travel journaling.

This post about travel journaling was created in collaboration with Snappy Snaps and I’d like to share some tips to help you create a beautiful and thoughtful travel journal. I’ve got some tips to get started and also tips to keep travel journaling, even on the days you aren’t in the mood!

For me, writing a travel journal or a travel diary is one of my favourite times of the day while I’m travelling.

In my opinion, not enough people write travel journals! Travel journaling is honestly the most therapeutic and creative way to store and reflect on your travel memories. A journal brings back memories in a way a photo never could, and the act of writing helps solidify memories so you’re less likely to forget them.

I’ll usually write in my travel journal before going out for dinner, at that gorgeous time of day when the sun is setting and everything is peaceful and calm. I love to reflect on the day, write about everything I’ve done and jot down notes about things I want to remember. I’ll have a cold beer or a glass of wine and spend half an hour quietly jotting down my thoughts from the day.

Even on the days where I don’t have a lot to say, I’ll just bullet point some thoughts and stick in a few tickets or notes or whatever I’ve collected that day.

I love writing my travel diary but I love reading it back even more. 

I’ve got travel journals from my first backpacking trip in 2009. I’ll admit that many of the pages make me cringe, but it’s a joy to read and it brings memories flooding back in a way that photos never could. It’s interesting to see what felt important at the time and there’s always so much I’d forgotten about until I see the words on the page written in my own familiar scrawl. I’ve written pages and pages about people I no longer remember and destinations that are just a vague blur in my mind.

Journaling Travel - Tips to help you write a travel journal

Here are some tips to help you create travel journals you’ll treasure for a lifetime

The Travel Hack Journaling Travel

#1. Why should you create a travel journal?

  • To preserve your memories
  • As a fun, creative outlet
  • To ensure you have a moment of calm during a busy trip
  • As a form of self-care to help organise your thoughts and talk about your feelings
  • To give yourself a wonderful thing to read back in years to come
  • To help with writing travel blogs and Instagram captions
  • To help remember key facts that could help people plan their future trips

#2. What should you put in your travel journal?

The lovely thing about journaling travel is that there is no right or wrong answer here. You can write about whatever you want. You don’t need to be a good writer or be artistic or creative. You just need a notepad and a pen and some thoughts in your head.

I like to play around with different formats in my travel journals such as:

  • Brain dump – Just sit and write anything that comes into your head. Don’t overthink it, just write.
  • What I did today – A traditional journal style, chronologically following everything you did that day
  • All photos – Some days I don’t want to write so I just stick a load of photos in
  • Bullet points – No time to write sentences? Just get your thoughts down quickly with bullet points
  • Scrapbook style – Stick tickets or other notes into your journal that will remind you of your day

Journaling Travel

#3. What do you need for your travel journal?

You could keep it simple with nothing more than a notepad and a pen, or you could go all out!

Take a look at craft supply stores like Hobby Craft, Etsy or even bargain shops like Poundland for crafting supplies. You can get things like travel themed washi tape, cute accessories to stick in, stamps, stencils, frames and fancy pens.

Notepad – Personally, I like a notepad where I can tear pages out if I need to. I like knowing that if I make a mistake I can just rip the page out.

A nice pen – Stationary geeks will understand the joy of finding the right pen!

Two coloured pens – I try to stick with a particular colour scheme so I’ll rarely use more than two colours

Photos – More on photos below

Scissors – Remember that you can’t take scissors in your hand luggage!

Pritt Stick – Vital for sticking in tickets and notes

Travel wallet – I also travel with some kind of travel document wallet. I’ll use this to store any of the tickets or notes I want to add into the journal as I often do this once I get home.

how to make travel journal paper

#4. Printing photos for your travel journal

I wait until I’m home to print out my photos and stick them into my journal. When I’m writing I’ll leave pages blank to allow space for photos.

For me, photos in a travel journal are SO important. This is mostly because they encourage me to look back and read old journals as it’s more enticing when the pages are broken up with pictures.

For my latest travel journal I used the online photo printing service with Snappy Snaps. I was so impressed with this service. I ordered them at about 2.30pm on Tuesday and they arrived with my postman by midday on Wednesday. I couldn’t believe they came so quickly!

The quality is brilliant and I love the matte effect in my journal.

Travel Hack Tip: When selecting the photos you’d like to print, always choose the best quality ones you have. Avoid filters or heavily edited photos and, if you can, use photos taken on a camera rather than a phone. You often don’t notice the difference in quality when it’s on the screen of your photo but you really do notice the difference once they’re printed. Filters look great on your phone but they don’t look great in print.

how to make travel journal paper

#5. Digital travel journals vs paper travel journals

I’m sure you’re aware that there are countless travel journal apps available. Personally, I prefer a good old fashioned paper journal. I find the words flow easily when written with a pen and it’s a more rewarding and creative process. I’m also more likely to read it back in years to come when it’s a paper journal.

If you’re the kind of person who prefers to keep things digital then I’d highly recommend using an iPad along with an Apple Pencil and the app Day One Journal. It’s a lovely, intuitive app and you can add photos into each journal entry. It also gives you daily journal prompts if you’re struggling for ideas!

how to make travel journal paper

#6. Travel journal prompts

If you’re struggling for ideas for what to write in your journal then here are some travel journal prompts to get you started:

  • What was the highlight of your day?
  • Who was the most interesting person you spoke to today?
  • Write about an interesting conversation you had.
  • Describe the best meal you had today.
  • What was the worst thing you did today?
  • What surprised you today?
  • Did you learn anything new today?
  • Did anything scare you today?
  • Describe your accommodation.
  • What are you missing from home?
  • What happened today that you never want to forget.

Journaling Travel

How travel journaling led to my career as a travel blogger

I’m just going to interrupt these travel journal tips to share how my travel journal led to my career as a travel blogger!

Read more: How I turned my passion for travel into a career as a travel blogger

Passive income and making money as a blogger in 2022

I’ve always been a journaller. Yes, even back in the days when writing a journal wasn’t ‘cool’ and it wasn’t part of every millennial’s self-care routine. I wrote journals about my best friends and my latest crush, my days at school and my hopes and dreams for the future. Yes, it was just as embarrassing as it sounds! It was my way of processing all the confusing thoughts that jumbled around my brain and journaling helped me feel calm and relaxed after a hectic day.

It felt natural to begin a travel journal when I left to go backpacking for two years in 2009.

I wrote a daily journal and eventually typed these handwritten notes up and posted them on the internet in the form of a blog.

I did this for years without anyone really noticing what I was going…until one day people did notice. And quite quickly, lots of people noticed! And, to cut a very long story short, I’m now lucky enough to do this full time! If I hadn’t written that journal all those years ago then I never would have ended up doing this and I just feel so pleased with myself for taking the time to write those journals!

Journaling Travel

#7. Travel journals + self care

Let’s not forget that writing a journal, even if it isn’t a travel journal, is an invaluable form of self care. Whenever I’m feeling stressed or overwhelmed or like I have too many thoughts in my head, I always find journaling will help. 

Travelling can often be stressful and we often travel when we need to escape things at home. While you’re writing your journal, don’t confine yourself to just writing facts and figures and descriptions from your trip, write about everything. Write about how you’re feeling, what you’re thinking and how the overall trip is affecting you. Observing your feelings and how the world around you is making you feel. No one else needs to read your journal so don’t worry about getting personal because this is only for you.

how to make travel journal paper

#8. Should you use an Instant camera for your travel journal?

Polaroids look gorgeous in scrapbook-style travel journals and it is nice to instantly print your photos and add them to your journal as you write. Aesthetically I think they look amazing but realistically I’ve always found it cumbersome.

Polaroid cameras are bulky and annoying to carry. You’ll probably be taking the majority of your photos on your main camera or phone so it’s a big thing to lug around for just a couple of snaps each day. Not only that but the reels are expensive and you’ll have to make sure you’ve got enough for your whole trip.

how to make travel journal paper

#9. What if I’m not artistic, creative or good at drawing? How can I make my travel journal look amazing?

That’s OK, I’m not either!

If you’re no good at drawing but would like something extra in your journal then use brochures, maps and tickets to create gorgeous pages.

how to make travel journal paper

#10. Travel journal inspiration

I’ve left this tip until the end because it can be a double edged sword. Looking at other people’s travel journals for inspiration can give you so many ideas and inspire you to create your own, but it can be overwhelming and put a lot of pressure on you to create ‘the perfect journal’.

The best places to find inspiration are:

Search for the terms:

#TravelJournal

#ScrapbookingIdeas

#BulletJournal

how to make travel journal paper

Tuesday 19th of October 2021

Oh I'd love to try this out when I go on holiday next!

Definitely give it a go! It's a lot of fun and such a nice way to keep a record of your holiday.

Ambica Gulati

That was a very interesting read. I used to keep a diary as a kid, now everything is online. But would love to write again.

That's how I feel too. I love writing blog posts and sharing photos online but it isn't the same or as creative as sitting and writing a journal. It's so theraputic!

Creative Primer

How to Start and Keep a Travel Journal: A Guide to Travel Diaries

Brooks Manley

When you capture your memories, you’ll never lose them.

Traveling is a transformative and enriching experience – and one of the best ways to capture and preserve those memories is by keeping a travel journal. A travel journal serves as a personal record of your adventures, reflections, and emotions throughout your journey.

A travel journal offers numerous benefits and can become a cherished keepsake for years to come. Here is a comprehensive guide on how to start and keep a travel journal – and how to make the most of your journaling experience.

Why Keep a Travel Journal?

Keeping a travel journal is a gateway to a treasure trove of memories , self-reflection , and creative expression . From preserving the details of your journeys to unlocking personal growth, a travel journal is definitely worthwhile. Let’s uncover the magic of travel journaling together.

Preserving Memories

Preserving memories is crucial when it comes to maintaining a travel journal. It is essential to capture the moments and experiences during your trips. Here are some techniques to effectively preserve your memories:

– Write comprehensive descriptions of the places, individuals, and activities you encounter. It is important to be vivid and use expressive language in your writing.

– Capture photographs of the landscapes, landmarks, and memorable moments you come across.

– Keep tickets, receipts, and other mementos from your travels as keepsakes.

– Maintain a daily log of your activities, thoughts, and emotions throughout the journey.

– Consider recording voice memos to encompass ambient sounds and conversations, which will add depth to your memories.

– Document the people you meet on your journey, including their names and stories .

Incorporating these practices into your travel journal will allow you to effectively preserve your memories for the years to come.

Self-Reflection and Personal Growth

Self-reflection and personal growth are essential aspects of travel journaling. When you take the time to introspect and process your experiences and emotions, you not only gain a deeper understanding of yourself but also foster personal growth .

Here are five effective ways to enhance self-reflection and personal growth through your travel journal:

1. Embracing emotions : Use your journal to describe your feelings and emotions during your travels. This practice can help you process and comprehend your emotional responses.

2. Contemplating experiences : Take the opportunity to write about the impactful moments, challenges, and lessons you encounter. By doing so, you can gain valuable insights, learn, and grow.

3. Recognizing strengths and weaknesses : Assess your reactions to various situations and identify areas where you excel as well as struggle. This self-awareness will optimize your personal growth.

4. Establishing personal goals : Utilize your journal to set realistic development goals for yourself. For instance, if you tend to be shy, challenge yourself to interact with locals. Regularly reflect on these goals and track your progress.

5. Documenting achievements : Take the time to celebrate your accomplishments in your journal. Whether it’s conquering fears, trying new activities, or pushing yourself out of your comfort zone, recognizing these achievements will boost your self-confidence and inspire further growth.

By actively engaging in self-reflection and personal growth through your travel journal, you can maximize your travel experiences and create positive changes that spill over into various aspects of your life.

Creative Outlet

Travel journaling provides you with a valuable creative outlet that allows you to express yourself and document your experiences in unique ways.

There are several methods through which travel journaling serves as a creative outlet:

1. Writing: You can vividly describe your adventures, including the places you visit, the people you meet, and the emotions you experience. By skillfully using descriptive language, you can bring your experiences to life on the pages of your journal.

2. Drawing and Sketching: If you possess artistic abilities, you can visually represent your travels through sketches and drawings. You have the opportunity to capture breathtaking landscapes or intricate architectural wonders.

3. Collages and Scrapbooking: Incorporating various mementos such as pictures, tickets, and postcards can elevate your travel journaling experience. By artfully arranging these items, you can create visually appealing collages that effectively capture your journey.

4. Mapping and Planning: You may enjoy incorporating maps and itineraries into your journals. By using different colors, markers, and symbols, you can highlight your routes, points of interest, and even plan future adventures.

5. Poetry and Prose: Travel journals offer a platform for you to explore your emotions and experiences through poetry, short stories, and song lyrics. This allows you to express your thoughts and reflections in a profound and meaningful way.

Incorporating a creative outlet into travel journaling enhances the overall experience, enabling you to express yourself artistically. It adds a personal and unique touch to your journals, reflecting your unique personality and perspective.

Editor’s Note : You don’t have to be a famed artist to enjoy adding artistic touches to your journal – even a postcard can help you capture a moment or memory, it’s art!

How to Start a Travel Journal?

You might be wondering, “Where do I start?”

You’ll need to start with a journal and a journey. Consider the following guidelines as you choose and prepare to record an adventure you’ll never forget. Are you ready to dive into the world of travel journaling and embark on an adventure of self-expression and reflection?

Choose the Right Journal

When selecting a journal, it’s important to choose one that suits your needs and preferences. Consider the following factors:

Consider these factors to choose the right journal that meets your needs and enhances your travel journaling experience.

Determine Your Journaling Style

When it comes to travel journaling, determine your style. This helps capture your travel experiences authentically and true to your voice. Consider these factors when determining your style:

1. Writing or Visual: Decide if you prefer writing or capturing your thoughts and experiences through drawings, sketches, or collages. Some may prefer a combination.

2. Length and Detail: Consider how much detail you want in your journal entries. Do you enjoy writing long and descriptive passages or shorter, more concise entries? This determines entry length and depth.

3. Structure: Think about if you prefer a structured journal with a specific format like a daily log or reflection on specific trip aspects. Alternatively, you may prefer a free-flowing and spontaneous approach.

4. Multimedia Elements: Decide if you want to include additional elements like travel photos, tickets, or souvenirs. These bring memories to life and add a visual dimension.

Remember, your journaling style can evolve and change over time. The important thing is to find a resonating style that effectively captures your travel experiences. Experiment with different approaches and embrace the freedom to authentically express yourself. Happy journaling!

Gather Essential Supplies

To gather essential supplies for your travel journal, follow these steps:

1. Choose a journal: Select a journal that fits your style and preferences. Consider factors like page count, paper thickness, and lay-flat design for easy writing.

2. Pens and markers: Bring a variety of writing tools , including pens, markers, and highlighters, to add color and creativity to your journal.

3. Sticky notes and adhesive: Pack sticky notes or adhesive to incorporate extra elements like tickets, postcards, or photos into your journal. This will make your journal visually appealing.

4. Travel accessories: Consider including travel-specific items such as a small pouch for souvenirs, a ruler for straight lines or measurements, or a pocket-sized travel guide for reference.

5. Accessories for organization: Keep your journal organized with accessories like paper clips, binder clips, or page flags. These can be useful for marking important pages or sections.

6. Glue or tape: If you plan to add larger or heavier items to your journal, such as brochures or maps, bring glue or tape to securely attach them.

7. Travel-friendly storage: Make sure you have a sturdy and compact bag or case to store all your journaling supplies in one place. This will make it easier to access them while traveling.

Remember, the purpose of gathering essential supplies is to enhance your journaling experience and creativity. Consider which items will be most useful and enjoyable for you personally.

What to Include in Your Travel Journal?

Keeping a travel journal is the perfect way to capture the essence of your adventures. You have a lot of options when it comes to what to include – especially if you’re detailed oriented. Here are some of the major players.

Daily Itinerary and Activities

When traveling and keeping a journal, you may want to document your daily itinerary and activities. Here are some key points to consider:

– Record your daily activities: Write down the places you visit, the attractions you see, and the activities you engage in each day. This helps you remember the details and experiences.

– Date and timestamp your entries: Include the date and time of each activity in your journal. This creates a chronological account of your journey.

– Include details and descriptions: Be descriptive in your writing, capturing the sights, sounds, and smells of each activity. Use vivid language to paint a picture of your experiences.

– Add personal reflections: Alongside your itinerary, include your thoughts and feelings about each activity. Reflect on how the experience impacted you and what you learned from it.

– Document any challenges or surprises: Note any unexpected obstacles or pleasant surprises you encountered during your activities. This adds depth and authenticity to your travel narrative.

– Attach mementos: Include tickets, brochures, or other physical items related to your daily activities. These mementos bring back memories and enhance your journal entries.

Remember, the goal of documenting your daily itinerary and activities is to create a comprehensive record of your trip. By capturing the details and emotions of each day, you’ll be able to relive your travel experiences in the future. Happy journaling!

Impressions and Emotions

Impressions and emotions are crucial aspects when capturing the essence of travel experiences. By actively describing and reflecting on them, you have the ability to construct a vibrant and meaningful travel journal.

  • To start, describe your impressions by taking note of the sights, sounds, smells, and tastes that stand out to you when visiting a new place. Utilize descriptive language to effectively convey the atmosphere and essence of the location. For instance, instead of simply stating “the beach was beautiful,” vividly describe the vibrant colors of the sunset reflecting off the water, the delightful scent of the salty breeze, and the comforting sensation of warm sand between your toes.
  • Describe the enticing taste of local delicacies, the texture of cobblestone streets beneath your feet, or the vibrant array of colors at a bustling market. Engaging multiple senses not only makes your journal entry more immersive but also evokes a more vivid recollection .
  • It is important to reflect on your emotions while traveling. Travel often evokes a range of emotions, such as excitement, awe, nostalgia, and introspection . Write about how certain moments or experiences made you feel. Did you experience a surge of adrenaline while embarking on a chalenging hiking trail? Were you filled with a sense of wonder and reverence when visiting a historic site? By capturing your emotions in words, you are able to evoke and relive those unforgettable moments while comprehending their impact.
  • Express your personal connections in your journal. Share how you connected with the individuals you encountered during your journey. Write about the meaningful conversations you had, the friendships you formed, or the cultural exchanges that touched your heart. These personal connections and interactions leave a lasting impression and add depth to your travel journal.
  • Reflect on your personal growth as a result of your travels. Travel provides unique opportunities for self-discovery and personal development. Contemplate how your experiences challenged you, pushed you out of your comfort zone, or broadened your perspectives. Write about the valuable lessons you learned and how you have grown as an individual. Reflecting on personal growth helps to further enrich your travel journal.

By prioritizing and focusing on impressions and emotions in your travel journal, you can create a comprehensive and meaningful record of your adventures. This record will effectively transport you back to those treasured moments whenever you revisit your journal.

Photos, Tickets, and Souvenirs

Photos, tickets, and souvenirs are important for travel journals to capture and preserve trip memories. Here are reasons why these items are valuable:

– Photos: Capture landscapes, views, and moments of travel. They serve as visual reminders of places and experiences.

– Tickets: Save tickets from attractions, museums, shows, or events attended during the trip. These tickets transport you back to the exact date and time of something new and exciting.

– Souvenirs: Physical mementos that evoke powerful memories of travel. They can be notes, postcards, shop receipts, or even food wrappers. Souvenirs remind you of the culture, traditions, and unique aspects of the destination.

By including photos, tickets, and souvenirs, you create a comprehensive record of your experiences. These items add depth and richness to your written descriptions , allowing you to relive your adventures more tangibly. Photos serve as visual aids to jog your memory and bring back specific details of each location visited. Similarly, tickets and souvenirs help recall specific events or attractions interacted with during the trip.

Tips for Effective Travel Journaling

Looking to up your travel journal game? Say goodbye to mundane travel entries and hello to captivating narratives that will transport you and your readers back to your adventures in a heartbeat. Ready to unleash your inner storyteller and create a travel journal that will truly stand the test of time?

Here are our top tips.

Write Regularly

To maximize your travel journal’s effectiveness, it is crucial to write regularly. By consistently recording your experiences, thoughts, and feelings, you can capture the essence of your travels and create a vibrant and meaningful record.

1. Set a schedule : Establish a routine for journaling, whether in the evening before bed or during breakfast each morning. By incorporating journaling into your daily routine, you ensure that you don’t forget to record important moments and details.

2. Make it a habit : Treat journaling as a regular practice, like brushing your teeth or exercising. By prioritizing journaling and making it a non-negotiable part of your day, you are more likely to write regularly and consistently – at home or away.

3. Write in the moment : Don’t wait too long before jotting down your experiences. Memories fade quickly, and by writing while the details are still fresh in your mind, you can capture the nuances and emotions of each adventure.

4. Keep it simple : You don’t need to write a lengthy essay every time you journal. Sometimes, a few sentences or bullet points can be enough to jog your memory and capture the essence of the moment. Focus on the key highlights and impressions that stand out to you.

5. Use prompts and writing techniques : If you’re feeling stuck, use prompts or writing techniques to stimulate your creativity. Try freewriting, list-making, or describing a specific sensory experience. This can help generate ideas and deepen your journal entries.

By writing regularly, you will cultivate a substantial collection of travel memories for future reflection. So, make it a habit, be consistent, and enjoy the process of documenting your adventures. Happy journaling!

Be Descriptive and Detailed

Keeping a travel journal requires being descriptive and detailed. This allows you to capture the essence of your travel experiences and create vivid memories. Besides sharing sensory descriptions and your emotions and responses , here are some tips to help you be descriptive and detailed in your travel journal:

1. Include colorful anecdotes : Share interesting stories, encounters, or observations that stood out to you during your travels. These anecdotes add depth and personality to your journal entries.

2. Add context : Provide background information about the places you visit. This can include historical facts, cultural traditions, or local customs. It helps create a richer understanding of the destinations you explore.

3. Use quotes and dialogue : Incorporate conversations you had with locals or fellow travelers, as well as any memorable quotes or phrases that resonated with you. This adds authenticity and liveliness to your journal.

Being descriptive and detailed in your travel journal creates a personal time capsule of your adventures . So, grab your journal, embrace your inner storyteller, and let your words transport you back to those incredible moments you experienced while traveling.

It can also enhance memory retention – writing about experiences in detail helps solidify memories and improve recall.

Keeping Your Travel Journal Safe

When it comes to keeping your travel journal safe, there are a couple of important considerations to keep in mind. With the increasing use of technology, finding the right methods for digital backup is crucial. Safeguarding your physical journals from loss or damage is also a key aspect of preserving your travel experiences.

Let’s explore the best practices for keeping your travel journal safe and secure!

Digital Backup

When it comes to keeping your travel journal safe and secure, digital backup is essential. Here are some options to protect your travel journal:

  • Cloud Storage: Use Google Drive, Dropbox, or iCloud to upload digital copies of your travel journal. This way, even if you lose or damage your physical journal, you can always access your entries from any device with an internet connection.
  • External Hard Drive: Backup your travel journal regularly with an external hard drive. These devices have large storage capacities, allowing you to store written entries, photos, and videos.
  • USB Flash Drive: Keep a USB flash drive specifically for your travel journal backups. These portable devices are compact and easy to carry, ensuring you always have a backup copy of your journal.
  • Email Yourself: Send digital copies of your journal entries to your email address. This serves as a quick and convenient backup method accessible from anywhere.

In addition to these options, it is advisable to password-protect your digital backups for added security. Remember to regularly update your backups and store them separately from your physical journal to minimize the risk of losing all your travel memories.

By implementing one or more of these digital backup methods, you can have peace of mind knowing that your travel journal is safeguarded, and your cherished memories are securely preserved. So go ahead and embark on your next adventure, knowing that your travel journal is backed up and ready to capture every moment.

Protecting Physical Journals

Protecting physical journals is crucial to ensure the safety and longevity of travel memories. To safeguard your travel journal, consider the following tips:

– Use a sturdy cover : Opt for a durable journal , like a hardcover or leather-bound notebook , to prevent tearing or damage.

– Waterproof protection : Invest in a waterproof journal cover or use a plastic sleeve to shield your journal from spills or rain, preserving your writing – especially if you’re hiking or camping with it.

– Keep it separate : Avoid storing your journal with sharp objects or liquids. Use a dedicated pouch or compartment in your bag to minimize accidents.

– Store in a safe place : When not in use, store your journal in a secure and dry location , away from sunlight and extreme temperatures to prevent fading or warping.

– Back it up : Make digital copies or scans of your journal pages to mitigate the risk of loss or damage. Store them securely on your computer, external hard drive, or cloud storage.

– Handle with care : Use clean hands and gentle handling to preserve the binding and keep the pages intact.

By following these precautions, you can protect your travel journal and ensure it remains a treasure of memorable experiences for years to come.

Interesting fact : The oldest surviving travel diary dates back to the 2nd century AD. It was written by a Roman soldier named Aulus Plautius , who documented his exploration of Britain !

Sharing Your Travel Journal

When sharing your travel journal, follow these steps to effectively communicate your experiences to others so they can experience your adventure with you all over again.

– Organize your entries : Arrange your journal entries in a logical order, either chronologically or by location. This helps readers follow your journey and understand its progression.

– Include visuals : Alongside your written entries, add photographs, postcards, or sketches that capture the essence of your travels. Visuals enhance readers’ understanding and create a more immersive experience.

– Be descriptive : Use vivid and detailed language to describe the places, people, and experiences you encountered. Paint a picture with your words so that readers can feel like they are there with you.

– Share personal insights : Include your thoughts, reflections, and emotions in your journal entries. This adds a personal touch and allows readers to connect with your experiences on a deeper level.

– Consider your audience : Think about who you want to share your journal with. If it’s a close group of family and friends, you can be more intimate and less formal in your writing. If you plan to publish or share your journal with a wider audience, make sure your tone and content are appropriate.

– Set boundaries : While sharing your travel experiences can be exciting, respect the privacy of others. Be mindful of what you include in your journal and obtain consent before sharing personal stories or photographs involving other individuals.

Sharing your travel journal allows you to relive your adventures and inspire others to explore the world. So grab your pen, gather your memories, and let your words transport you and your readers to the incredible places you’ve visited.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. how can a travel journal be beneficial for business purposes.

By keeping a travel journal, you can jot down ideas and inspiration for business ventures during your trips. It allows you to document potential collaborations, networking opportunities, and innovative concepts that can be implemented in your work.

2. What are some pre-departure ideas to spark travel journal ideas?

Before leaving for your trip, consider researching the history and culture of your destination. This can help spark ideas for what to include in your travel journal, such as unique landmarks, local customs, or traditional cuisine.

3. How can a travel journal help with post-holiday ideas?

After your trip, reviewing your travel journal can jog your memory and inspire ideas for future vacations. You can reflect on your favorite experiences, places you want to revisit, or even new destinations you discovered during your previous trip.

4. What are some different versions of travel journaling?

There are various ways to approach travel journaling, including “just the facts,” storytelling, envelope-style, scrapbook style, and sketchbook. Each version offers a unique way to document and remember your trips, allowing you to choose the style that suits you best.

5. Can a travel journal be stored digitally?

Absolutely! In modern life, digital travel journal options are available. You can use diary software or dedicated travel journal apps to create a solid collection of your travel memories. Just make sure to backup your digital journal to keep it safe.

6. Is it essential to keep a separate notebook for each trip?

It is not necessary to have a separate notebook for each trip. You can use a single travel journal and section it off for various travels. This way, you can maintain one comprehensive journal that includes all your travel adventures.

Brooks Manley

Brooks Manley

how to make travel journal paper

Creative Primer  is a resource on all things journaling, creativity, and productivity. We’ll help you produce better ideas, get more done, and live a more effective life.

My name is Brooks. I do a ton of journaling, like to think I’m a creative (jury’s out), and spend a lot of time thinking about productivity. I hope these resources and product recommendations serve you well. Reach out if you ever want to chat or let me know about a journal I need to check out!

Here’s my favorite journal for 2024: 

the five minute journal

Gratitude Journal Prompts Mindfulness Journal Prompts Journal Prompts for Anxiety Reflective Journal Prompts Healing Journal Prompts Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Journal Prompts Mental Health Journal Prompts ASMR Journal Prompts Manifestation Journal Prompts Self-Care Journal Prompts Morning Journal Prompts Evening Journal Prompts Self-Improvement Journal Prompts Creative Writing Journal Prompts Dream Journal Prompts Relationship Journal Prompts "What If" Journal Prompts New Year Journal Prompts Shadow Work Journal Prompts Journal Prompts for Overcoming Fear Journal Prompts for Dealing with Loss Journal Prompts for Discerning and Decision Making Travel Journal Prompts Fun Journal Prompts

How to Start a Bullet Journal + 25 Bullet Journal Ideas

You may also like, a guide to manifestation journaling + 50 prompts.

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How to Start and Keep a Bullet Journal: A Beginner’s Guide

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How to Make a Travel Journal: The Ultimate Guide

When it comes to adventure and traveling the world, there’s no better way to commemorate the unique experiences than through a travel journal. From some of the most heart-touching memories to other zany eccentric explorations, learning  how to make a travel journal   allows you the freedom to do it in the way you choose to write your story.

Why make a travel journal?

Whether you are a solo traveller or enjoy vacationing at new destinations with friends and family , you get to bask in the new, unfamiliar experiences. From going to a completely new city to participating in activities you never imagined doing – the experience is awe-inspiring and something you want to reminisce over and over again.

This is exactly where a travel journal comes in. A travel journal is a great way to catalogue the highlights of some of the fondest moments of your vacation. It can make many memories worth preserving. This includes the feelings you experienced, collecting photographs, or irreplaceable memories,  

The best part is that journaling is an effective way to foster self-awareness at any age. You may even pass the stories down to the younger generations. After all, who doesn’t like hearing about how exciting their grandparents were and what they experienced? If you are interested in picking up the habit of travel journaling, let’s dive into learning how to make one.

What to include in a travel journal?

Did you know that your brain stores much more information when you write things down? As a result, choosing to begin travel journaling relieves stress . Your brain creates powerful connections with the memories you record, thus allowing you to remember them for longer. That means you’ll have an easier time recollecting the experiences in the future without having to revisit your travel journal.

Keeping all the lucrative benefits aside, people end up asking themselves:  how do I make a travel journal ? To help you get started, start by getting your hands on a travel journal that resonates with your personality. 

The power of imagination

Once you have the journal, begin jotting down what you imagine your trip is going to be like. This may be tough for some, especially if you are writing for the first time. However, if your destination is a place you have always dreamed of visiting, you are bound to get swept away.

Focus on capturing experiences rather than listing activities. 

It’s true that many of us have a preplanned itinerary of things we want to do on our next trip. But, when it comes to travel journaling, try focusing on recording captivating stories or events. These bring your experience to life as opposed to a mundane list of things you’ve done. Pick and choose experiences. Try to review the day’s events and recall one that best speaks to you or where you enjoyed the most. Once you have that experience, try writing about it from your perspective.’

Mark the highs but don’t forget the lows.

Let’s face it! We have all been in awkward or embarrassing situations during our trips. Many times, when we reflect on these dramatically bad experiences, they are nothing more than a reason to sit back and enjoy a good laugh. 

Another key tip to remember when learning how to write a travel journal is to be honest. Include both the ups and downs of the trip. Writing can sometimes act as your therapist. Record the most unpleasant and regretful events as well as the ones that made it worthwhile. When you feel afraid, frustrated, homesick, or powerless, your travel journal can be your safe place and refuge amid upheaval.

Add visuals if possible.

Limiting your travel journals to words alone can sometimes limit the impact of the memories. Instead, try collecting as many visual aids as possible while on your adventure. Tickets, event photographs, or even restaurant bills play a key role in creating a great travel journal . Combining visuals, sketches, and even doodles with your words instantly takes you back to that event, making it more persona and immediate.

Best travel journals available 

After embarking on a new adventure, it can be disappointing to realize you don’t have a place to document all your memories. Instead of stuffing all your unique collectables in your suitcases and backpacks or even jotting down the eventful details on pieces of paper, why not learn how to make a travel journal and invest in buying the perfect travel journal. 

From photographs and stamps to different experiences you have witnessed during your days navigating a new country or trekking through a dangerous trail, a travel journal helps you pen down all your experiences in one journal.

Regarding adventures, we all have our perspective of looking at events and places and what better way than to record the world as we see it. Luckily, today while you sit here and ponder upon how to make a travel journal, there are already dozens of travel journals available in the market for you to choose from. 

From sturdy regular travel books to those with writing prompts giving you the extra boost to start writing and even ones that allow you to paste pictures and scribble away, travel journals have undoubtedly come a long way. Below we have rounded up a collection of some of the best travel journals available for you to choose from.

The Poketo Colorblock Travel Journal

If you are looking for a travel journal with separate spaces to document different trips, then The Colorblock Travel journal Poketo is your best bet. With a total of 72 lined pages and costing less than $10, The Poketo Colorblock Travel journal has a great budget but is conspicuously eye-catching in design. The journal is made so that it can be tossed almost anywhere in your backpack or luggage. 

Moreover, the journal pages are designed to provide open-ended space to write down one’s observations and memories alongside jotting down other notes. Additionally, given its focus on the organization, it contains dedicated pages to pen down things like your shopping list, accommodation details, itinerary, packing list, expense details, and other relevant details. No doubt, this 3.8 x 7.4 travel journal is a perfect way to remind you to look up and out as you explore new places.

What we like:

  • Cost-effective
  • Organized sections to cater to all your needs

What we don’t like:

  • Softcover (which wouldn’t stand a chance against stubborn weather)

The Moonster Leather Journal

If you are inspired by movies involving adventure, solving mysteries, puzzles and even treasure hunts, I’m sure you must have noticed the hero with a travel journal, noting even the smallest details. With more than a thousand reviews and a five-star rating on Amazon, the  Moonster’s leather travel journal  is as well-loved for its combination of elegance and practicality.

The Moonster Travel journal is made of dark brown, creamy, rustic, water buffalo leather and a soft, supple binding. Moreover, the light wear-and-tear that occurs while travelling gives the journal a wonderfully vintage coating.

On the other hand, the interior comes with 120-240 unlined pages with the assurance that the ink won’t bleed due to the hearty paperweight, which is made from recycled, acid-free cotton paper. Additionally, if you prefer a little spatial room in your travel journal, you can choose between the sizes 7 x 5 or 6 x 9. 

The Moonster Leather Travel journal is one of the most durable travel journals one can invest in. It’s a great choice if you require plenty of space to capture the details of your glory days.

  • Fine weather-resistant leather exterior
  • Non-smudge cotton papers
  • Great for longer journeys
  • Value for money
  • Not refillable

Moleskine Passion Journal 

When it comes to learning  how to make a travel journal , Moleskine is a common name for those into hard-core travel journaling. However, if you are just starting and trying to choose a travel journal for your first adventure, then  Moleskine’s Passion Journal  is an excellent choice for beginners. With over 400 acid-free pages, the Passion Journal is available in various colors and costs less than $30.

For starters, it helps travel enthusiasts with their tickets, receipts, stamps and other souvenirs by keeping them secured and organized in the designated back cover instead of stuffing them in their backpack pockets.

As for the interior, the page layouts are designed to break the journal’s entries into separate sections. This gives you a bit of a boost and encouraging you to continue with your travel writing. If you prefer drawing or sketching your findings, the additional lined space caters to the artist within you.

  • A trusted brand is known for its quality
  • Structured page layout
  • Provides room to draw 
  • Allows you to carry souvenirs in its back pocket
  • Available in different colors
  • The papers are a bit thin compared to other sturdy travel journals.
  • The journal itself isn’t refillable.

Rite in the Rain Weatherproof Travel Journal

If your journeys lead you to areas with unpredictable weather or one susceptible to constant rainfall, then the “ Rite in the Rain” Travel journal  is exactly what you need. This journal has remained a popular choice from adventure-seeking backpackers wandering the trail in monsoon season to daring news reporters covering weather like thunderstorms and tornados.

The 64-pager-lined weatherproof paper won’t turn to mush when wet and will repel almost anything, including water, sweat, grease, and mud while keeping your memories intact. 

As far as the exterior goes, the journal’s cover is made from a flexible Polydura waterproof shell that binds the pages together and protects them from binding or un-spiralling. 

  • Weather resistant
  • Large format

Ten travel journal prompts

There are so many reasons why you should learn how to write a travel journal for your next vacation. Alternatively, there are times when coming up with ideas on what to write about can be hard work , especially if you are tired after a long day of trekking, mountain climbing or even sightseeing! 

It can also be equally hard to know where to begin since not all of us are born writers. When stuck in such situations,  using travel journal prompts  like the ones listed below is a good way to start.

  • What is the one thing that truly made you smile today?
  • What was the worst thing that happened today?
  • Did I try something new today?
  • Are there any travel bucket list items I can cross off on this trip? 
  • What makes this place similar or very different from where you are from?
  • How did this trip mirror the inner work I need to focus on?
  • What were the key highs and lows of this trip?
  • What is the one skill I learned during this trip?
  • Did I gain clarity on my life’s purpose during this trip? 
  • While I sit here and enjoy this serene moment, who is the one person I miss the most from back home?

The bottom line

Memories can be fluid. Recalling and reliving even some of your best travel memories can be tough, no matter how powerful or unique your journey has been. Thus learning  how to make a travel journal is an art worth investing in . It acts as your personal travel insurance guarding all those beautiful memories against vanishing without so much as a backward glance.

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How to Make a Travel Journal (+ 5 Writing Prompts)

How to Make a Travel Journal (+ 5 Writing Prompts)

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When you travel, you create incredible memories. Keeping a travel diary helps you remember the details of your trip that made it special. Taking the time to jot down your expectations, itinerary, experiences and emotions adds an element of reflection and creativity to any travel as well.

Making a travel journal doesn’t have to be complicated; most travelers opt for a simple bound notebook in one of three styles: lined pages, blank sheets or bullet journal. Opting for a physical journal is a good choice for travelers who won’t be bringing a laptop or have access to an internet connection. If your goal for your trip is to “unplug,” a physical diary is for you.

For business travelers, bloggers and photographers who plan to have technology at their fingertips throughout their trip, a travel journal app may be a better option.

Travel Journal Apps

Using an app you can access from your phone or laptop is great for documenting quickly while on-the-go and sitting down to detail what happened during the day. Using a digital diary also allows you to share with friends, family and followers at home, as well as transition thoughts to a more polished report or blog more easily.

Try one of these app options:

  • Bonjournal , a website and iOS app for journaling that lets you download your thoughts later
  • Day One , an award-winning interface for multiple journals in one place
  • Penzu , an interface bloggers will find familiar is paired with a commitment to privacy
  • Tripcast , a “living travel journal” with group photo sharing and geotagging capabilities 

Creative Travel Journal Ideas

If a blank notebook or app won’t truly capture your travel experiences, a more free-form, creative travel journal could be an option. Just be prepared to carry a lot more supplies during your trip!

Buy a postcard every day and write down the date, the weather and what you experienced in the pictured location. After your trip, tie them all together for a unique “journal.” Other paper and pen ideas include a series of lists , or writing your notes on a map or calendar .

For a more eclectic, artistic look, write on or around mementos (coffee sleeves, tickets, shells, labels, coasters, etc.) placed in a journal. You could also use unique writing utensils. Try watercolor paints or colorful pens!

5 Writing Prompts for Your Travel Journal

  • What experience, food or destination are you most looking forward to?
  • Did you overhear an interesting conversation among local residents today?
  • How did you get from place to place?
  • Was your travel experience different in any way from what you expected?
  • Which elements of your trip would you recommend to other travelers?

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The Best Travel Gifts

Free printable travel journal template: One Question A Day Diary

The cover of a question a day journal

Are you going on a trip soon and do you want to keep track of all your fun memories? Great news! In today’s post, I’m going to show you how to make a simple DIY travel journal. It’s really easy, low-key, and fun! Plus, if you’re not feeling crafty, you can even download my free printable travel journal template that I made just for you.

Like many travelers, I used to forget the small, fun details of my trips. So, I started keeping track of memories with this one-question-a-day journal.

The idea is simple.

You just answer one fun question every day for a week. And the week after, you’ll answer the same one. It’s not like those big, heavy journals that are hard to carry. And you won’t have to write a lot, just one interesting question each day. This way, you can remember all the neat things that even photos can’t show, without any effort.

So stick with me, and I’ll show you how this easy idea can make your trips even more memorable. Let’s start making your very own travel journal!

In This Post:

Save this free printable travel journal template

Don’t forget to save this template on Pinterest so you’ll know where to find your downloads for your next trip!

Printabel travel diary prompt pages and covers

Why you should keep a travel journal

Alright, I know you are dying to get started with this DIY travel journal, but just before you grab your crafts and head off, allow me to share a few more reasons why journaling is a game-changer for your travels.  Trust me, after reading these reasons, “forgetting” to journal will be a thing of the past!

  • Document memories: Revisiting your adventures through a journal is super fun. Those quirky anecdotes and hidden gems you discovered? They will all be in your journal waiting to be re-lived.
  • Record thoughts and ideas that you might otherwise forget: Ever had a brilliant idea or a profound realization while traveling, only to forget it later? A travel journal ensures those thoughts are captured forever.
  • Reflect and learn: Journaling allows you to ponder over your experiences, offering insights and learnings that can be transformative.
  • Unleash creativity: It’s not just about writing; it’s about expressing your creativity. Doodle, paste ticket stubs, or write a poem – your journal, your rules!
  • Enhance your journey : A journal adds depth to your travels. It encourages mindfulness and helps you appreciate the journey on a deeper level.

Ready to make your travels more memorable and meaningful? Let’s get started and make your own travel journal!

A  set of sample pages for travel journals

A question-a-day: How does it work?

If you’re unfamiliar with the one-question-a-day format, let me give you a quick rundown, so you can make the most out of our free template.

Traditionally, these journals are used for an entire year, containing 365 unique questions – one for each day. The idea is to keep the journal for five years, answering the same question on the same date each year. This way, you end up with a fascinating record of how your thoughts and experiences evolve over time.

What I love about this format is the ease and simplicity. Answering just one question a day is a breeze, making it effortless to maintain a consistent journaling habit – often the biggest challenge for many travelers who want to keep a travel journal.

I adapted this concept for travel. Instead of spanning years, it covers your trip’s duration, with the same set of questions repeated each week. This approach is perfect for travelers who start journaling with enthusiasm but find the task daunting as their journey progresses. With just a short question to answer daily, it’s easy, fun, and incredibly rewarding.

So now that you understand the concept, let’s find out how to make your own travel journal.

I will share two options below; A DIY version and a free printable one . Neither one is better, just pick whichever one suits you best!

two examples of how to make your own jorunal

Option1: DIY travel journal

The first option I’ll share is a true DIY travel journal. You start with an empty paper or notebook and craft your own.

If you are looking for the free printable, scroll down to the free printable travel journal template section.

Materials needed

  • Paper (A4 that you fold in two to make a booklet or any type of notebook)
  • Crafting materials (if you want to make it look nice, but this is not necessary)

How to make your own travel journal

Step 1: find a notebook.

Honestly, it doesn’t matter if you just fold A4 paper in half and use a stapling machine to bind it. If you buy a simple notebook, or if you go all the way and buy a beautifully designed travel notebook.

I’m a big bullet journal fan, so I just make a collection and dedicate a few pages of my daily bullet journal to this Question-a-day journal. That way it’s integrated with all my other work and travel notes.

But feel free to do whatever fits you. All that matters is that you actually start and that you enjoy working on it. If you need a beautiful design to feel inspired, then by all means go for it. But the design should not be a reason to not get started.

The size of the notebook doesn’t matter either. I usually prefer an A5 format, because it’s small and easily fits in my backpack. But really, anything works. Lined, dotted, squared, or blank paper, all is fine.

A red ring binder notebook

Step 2: Make the pages

At the top of each page write one of the questions below, followed by a prompt for the right date. So weeks 1, 2, 3, etc (depending on how long you’ll be traveling)

  • What did you eat today?
  • Who or what made you smile today?
  • What did you do today?
  • Did you learn something new today? What was it?
  • What is the most beautiful thing you saw today?
  • Did you come across any challenges today? What was it? How did you overcome it?
  • What was your favorite moment of the past week?

A notebook with a page and a question and five weeks to answer it

Of course, there are many different variations of questions you could ask. I found these seven the most interesting ones. But check the section about other prompts below for more question ideas.

I usually don’t add the answer sections for each week yet (I only showed it in the example above to give you an idea), because I don’t know how much space I’ll be needing for my answers. But you could add those if you want to make sure everything fits on one page.

An example of a question a day journal

Step 3: Decorate your travel journal

Now, I’ll admit. I am not the most creative person out here.

I can’t draw and I have the handwriting of an 8-year-old. So when I get crafty with my journal without any template, stickers, stamps, or premade anything, it will look like a mess. And that’s why I go for simplicity,

But if you are nothing like me, this is where you can get crazy. Get out your markers, crayons, glitter, and whatnot to make this travel journal feel like you. You could even add more blank pages so you have more options for photos, doodles, and other fun keepsakes from your trip.

Step 4: Start answering the questions every day

Now that your journal is finished, all you need to do is answer one simple question a day. No endless essays, writer’s block, or not feeling inspired. You’ll know exactly what to write and it will only take a few seconds.

What I like even more, is that even if I forgot to journal one day. I can easily trace back and still answer that one question from yesterday.

Two pages in a journal with questions answered

Option 2: Free printable travel journal template

Alright, if you’re looking for a printable travel journal, then I’ve got you covered too. Find out how to make your own travel journal from my free printable PDF below!

  • Paper (white A4 that you fold in two to make a booklet)
  • Printer (that can print in a booklet, though most printers nowadays have this setting)
  • A free printable cover
  • Free printable questions

9 examples of printable travel journals

How to use the free printable travel journal pdf

Step 1: choose and download your cover.

For you to use this journal every day and make the most out of it, you need to be super enthusiastic about it. And one way to get you excited is to help you find a design that matches your personality. And that’s why I came up with five different covers so that you can pick one that matches your spirit best.

Choose your favorite down below, or head over to Canva and make your design, as long as you print it on the right side of the paper in landscape shape, it will work too.

A blue cover of a free printable travel journal

Step 2: Print the cover

Print it on an A4 paper and fold it in two. I deliberately put it on landscape and on the right side of the paper, so you can fold it in two and use it as the cover.

Instructions of printing a travel journla pdf and folding it in half

Step 3: Print the questions

Now that we have your cover, it’s time for the questions, which you can download here .

They are in A4 PDF format, but you can easily print them as a booklet by using the right printer settings, I explained below.

The complete set of free printabel question pages

Print instructions

  • Click print once you’ve downloaded and opened the PDF on your computer
  • Go to printer settings and select booklet
  • Print double-sided

With these settings, your printer will automatically put them in the right order, so that when you fold it in two, you will have a book from question 1-7, and extra notes in the back.

printer settings with arrows to print a booklet

The settings might look slightly different on your computer, but it works the same for every printer.

Feel free to add more blank paper so you’ll have more notes. Or simply print more of the last “notes” page.

DIY travel journal tips

There are a few things that can help you to make the most out of this travel journal.

  • Make this journal your own: the more it feels like your own project, the more enthusiastic you will be to write every day
  • Set a specific time or moment when you will answer the question
  • Start each answer with your current location followed by “:” and the answer. As travelers we visit so many different places that sometimes just seeing the name of a city you were at helps you set the mood and remember the content when you’re reading your travel journal years from now

A DIY travel journal with questions

DIY travel journal variations

As you probably already noticed, there are about 1000 different ways in which you can style your travel journal.

I just shared five printable travel journal templates with you, as well as my super simple but effective handwritten method. But remember. This journal is about you. It should be a design that invites you to write every day and create a beautiful travel memoir for your future self.

So go wild and use which ever design you want.

Besides differences in designs, you can also add different questions that are important to you, or that you want to remember from your trip. I’ll share a few of my other questions below.

I use these when I make my monthly travel journal for longer trips (more about this monthly journal below).

  • Who did you meet today?
  • Did you travel with someone today? Who is it?
  • What was the weather like today?
  • When was the last time you did something kind for someone else?
  • What surprised you today?
  • When was the last time someone did something kind for you?
  • Did you fall for any tourist traps this week?
  • What was your favorite accommodation up until now?
  • Did you do something that scared you this week?

The printable travel journal prompts I shared with you today are for a five-week trip, but of course, you can also use them for a two-week vacation or any other duration.

If you’re traveling longer than 8 weeks, I would advise you to make a journal with a question for each day of the month. That way you’ll have more variation in the types of questions asked and the things you will remember from your trip.

Just check out my list of questions above for more inspiration. And if you want more help, or if you’re not feeling creative, Shoot me a message and I will send the full list of monthly questions as well as a free monthly printable that I use as well!

A sample mail yo get all questions

More DIY travel ideas

Did this project release your inner Martha Stewart?

Then you’re in good luck! We’ve got more super DIY travel projects for you to try.

  • The 45 best DIY travel projects
  • Homemade voucher book for your loved ones staying behind

Three homemade coupon ideas

Save these free templates

Did you save these free printable travel journal templates on Pinterest yet?

how to make travel journal paper

Final notes about this simple DIY journal

Whether you’re a seasoned traveler or a first-time explorer, I hope that this free printable travel journal template will make your adventures more memorable.

So, grab your pen and start capturing those precious travel moments, one question at a time!

how to make travel journal paper

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Vanilla Papers

62 Best Travel Journal Ideas (And Inspiring Prompts)

Travel expands your world and leaves you inspired.

But these days travel is often a whirlwhind with packed itineraries and long “must-see” lists.

And when you return home, you often have photos that you hardly remember taking.

So how do you slow down and make travel more meaningful? And how do you make time to journal on a busy trip?

I’ve kept a travel journal for decades and it’s made my travels slower and more unforgettable .

And here’s my ultimate guide to start a travel journal. This guide includes everything to put in your journal – and the best prompts, travel journal ideas and tips .

It will inspire you to take a travel journal along on your next trip!

Table of Contents

23 benefits of a travel journal:

A woman holding a big map to her face stands in front of the Sacre Coeur cathedral in Montmartre, Paris.

1. Increases your self-discovery

A travel journal leads to fresh insights and self-discovery . And it makes travel far more rewarding when you reflect back on what you’ve learned and how you reacted in different situations.

2. Prolongs your pre-trip excitement

Journaling before you leave home gets you excited and prolongs that sweet anticipation. Write about what you’re most looking forward to on your trip. Write about your expectations.

3. Helps you plan an itinerary

A travel journal is an amazing tool to help plan your ideal itinerary. Use your journal to research before the trip – whether that’s finding maps and itineraries or jotting down restaurants to try.

Read books set in your destination and write down your favorite quotes to break the ice if you’re new to travel journaling.

4. Increases your self-awareness

When you travel, you’re thrown outside your daily routine. Self-awareness is easier because you don’t have your everyday surroundings to send you into auto-pilot.

You’re thrown into new situations and meeting new people. Your senses are heightened.

When you journal about your experiences, you get to know yourself. And that leads to more self-awareness and wisdom.

5. Exposes your weaknesses

A colorful map of the world lays out on a table with colorful photos and images on top.

Travel journaling lets you see yourself at your worst. No trip is perfect and travel tests your patience and leaves you vulnerable.

When you learn what triggers your moods, you learn how to navigate your emotions.

6. Gives you a pastime

Travel journaling is a great pastime when you’re waiting at the airport or taking a long train ride. It fills up time you’d otherwise waste aimlessly scrolling your phone.

Pick up your travel journal and let your thoughts flow. A travel journal is also a great conversation starter and way to meet new people on the road.

7. Helps you remember specific places

A travel journal increases your mindfulness and helps you remember the moment like no photo could.

So grab a seat when you can – whether that’s a park bench, a cafe or your hotel bar after a day of sightseeing.

Sketch your surroundings and vividly describe the scene in front of you. Take in all the details, sights and sounds of the moment you’re in. And capture that in your journal with descriptive language or a quick sketch.

8. Gathers items and mementos

A travel journal is a great place to collect ticket stubs, bits of leaflets and flyers, or anything you pick up as a souvenir of your trip.

Glue and tape in small items into your travel journal. These small everyday items are a powerful way to keep your memories vivid and give you a sense of place.

Carry a glue stick in your bag and keep an eye on anything you could include in your journal.

9. Keeps you organized

Whether it’s the name of that cafe in Florence or the dates of a Brooklyn art exhibit, your travel journal is a place to jot down details when you’re planning your trip.

A travel journal helps you keep track of everything you want to remember.

Your journal can also be an invaluable workbook that helps you arrange your itinerary, keep track of your budget or reshuffle your plans.

10. Helps you remember details

A woman in a bright yellow winter jacket sits on a hillside in the sunshine with the peaks of snowy mountains in the background.

Your travel journal is your personal record of the stimuli that makes your trip memorable – whether that’s the sound of a big city at rush hour or the smell of cotton candy on the beach.

It’s these rich sensory experiences that photos can’t capture.

11. Records your accomplishments

Hurdles that seem impossible are often overcome during travel.

Overwhelming situations later turn into learning experiences.

Your travel journal is a record of all these experiences and a reassurance that – in travel, as in life – everything eventually works out.

12. Keeps you motivated

A travel journal motivates you to change your habits – and your life – after everything you’ve seen on the road.

Whether you return from California and want to get back into yoga, or come home from Taiwan and want to bring more green tea into your life, use your journal to stay inspired.

13. Slows you down

A travel journal forces you to slow down and make the most of your holiday.

When you leave your daily routine behind, it can be difficult to switch to vacation mode. Writing slowly (as opposed to typing) gives you that much-needed time to recharge and observe your thoughts.

14. Boost your mindfulness

A travel journal puts you right in the moment.

When you’re writing, you don’t think about the past or plan for the future. Instead, you’re focused on the present and everything you’re experiencing.

15. Boosts your creativity

A book laying open with a map of Australia and a bright blue ocean surrounding it.

A travel journal is a great tool to fuel and inspire your creativity. Include sketches, collages or descriptive writing in your journal to get your creativity flowing.

16. Creates a souvenir

Re-reading your travel journal makes you experience your trip all over again.

17. Makes a great travel guide

Your travel journal makes a great guide if you visit the same destination again or when friends ask for recommendations.

18. Makes you more eloquent

Writing, like any other skill, gets easier with practice.

A travel journal hones your storytelling skills and your powers of description.

19. Shares your experiences

Your travel journal makes a great chronicle to share with friends or pass down to your children.

20. Relieves stress

Science shows that pouring your stress out onto a page helps you process feelings and let go. A travel journal is a portable therapist on the road.

21. Stores important info

A woman's hand points to a location on a map spread out on a table. There's a coffee cup and another map laying alongside.

Your travel journal holds your itinerary, hotel info, flight info, departure/arrival times, tour company contact information, and more.

This info proves invaluable when your phone runs out of battery – or there’s no Wi-Fi.

Use your travel journal to keep visa requirements, basic language phrases, numbers and currency exchange rates in one convenient place.

22. Keeps your kids entertained

A travel journal keeps your children occupied during long trips. It also helps them reflect on their experiences and creates a souvenir they’ll treasure when they’re older.

23. Helps you network

A travel journal is a great conversation starter with people you meet on the road. It’s also a great place to jot down their contact info or email.

24. Helps you reflect

When you return from your trip, a travel journal keeps expanding your knowledge of the destination you’ve visited.

Reflect back on your trip: what did you learn, what went better than expected and what didn’t.

A travel journal makes your trip more meaningful and lets you experience slow travel even during a short getaway.

Here are 25 travel journal ideas:

My travel journal lays open on a table with a map of Cairo and my drawing of the river Nile.

  • plane, metro, train and bus tickets
  • luggage tags
  • wine and beer labels
  • business cards
  • food labels
  • tea bag wrappers
  • cutouts from local newspapers
  • candy wrappers
  • sauce packets
  • sand and earth rubbings
  • foreign currency and coins
  • perfume samples
  • tags from clothes and souvenirs
  • paper bags and wrappers
  • paper menus
  • dried flowers and leaves
  • tickets for museums, galleries, theatres and attractions
  • tourist maps

7 travel journal tips for beginners

A brown leather notebook and a map lay on a dark wooden table.

1. Stay realistic

When you’re starting out, keep things simple.

If you scroll Pinterest and see picture-perfect journals packed with beautiful sketches, you’ll be too intimidated to start.

2. Make your travel journal personal

Buy a simple journal that you won’t mind “spoiling” with awkward doodles or sloppy handwriting.

Remember that it’s better to have an imperfect journal that’s yours than none at all.

3. Don’t mind your handwriting

If your writing feels awkward, remember that it’s still yours. You’ll find it invaluable to reread your journal years from now – and you won’t mind that it’s not perfect.

4. Keep it truthful

Keep your travel journal honest.

Be truthful with yourself and don’t be guided by what you think a travel journal should look like.

Let it be yours – and let it reflect the good, the bad and the ugly of your experiences.

5. Make it comfortable

A map and flower petals lay on the table with dim and rosy sunlight alongside a notebook filled with travel journal ideas.

Go for a spiral-bound notebook if you plan to glue and collect souvenirs into your journal. A spiral-bound notebook gives you more leeway to make collages because it expands more than a tightly-bound journal.

6, Make it art friendly

Pick a journal with thick paper if you plan to write in ink (which can easily bleed through thin paper) or if you want to sketch or do watercolors.

7. Make it portable

Pick a notebook that’s large enough to write and sketch in, but small and light enough to carry easily in your bag.

6 travel journal prompts

A pile of dozens of different maps lays all on top of each other in layers on a table.

Use journal prompts to get your writing flowing.

Here are 6 travel journal prompts to get inspired:

  • What were your expectations for this trip? Is it living up to your hopes?
  • What’s your itinerary, and what have you done spontaneously?
  • Describe a person you’ve met – their character and personality, their mannerisms, their appearance and clothing.
  • Write about a new food or restaurant you’ve tried.
  • Describe the best and worst part of your day.
  • Describe a place you’ve visited. What’s the history, the atmosphere and the smells and sounds of the place?

The benefits of writing by hand

A notebook filled with cursive writing lays open with a cup of coffee on top, surrounded by leaves, a dark green ribbon, a bowl with rocks and paper scraps.

Did you know that the mere act of writing by hand (vs. typing on a keyboard) has countless different benefits – from fighting stress to boosting your memory?

It’s all the more reason to start a travel journal and really unwind on your next vacation.

Read my guide to the Incredible Benefits of Writing by Hand (vs. Typing)   to get inspired on your analog journey.

How to start a journal

A journal lays open with writing and sketches of birds, next to a white coffee cup.

If you haven’t written in awhile – or just need some fresh inspiration to start journaling, read my Powerful Journaling Tips For Beginners (And How To Start)  to get your daily writing habit going.

More resources:

18 Incredible Benefits of Journaling  

13 Powerful Journaling Techniques (And How To Use Them)  

51 Inspiring Quotes About Journaling (To Get You Writing!)

Nature Journaling: An Essential Guide (+8 Tips To Start)

Journaling for Mental Health (And 30 Powerful Prompts)

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Dee Nowak is the founder of Vanilla Papers. She keeps a daily journal and takes long walks on weekends. After a decade of slow living in Cairo, she's on a mission to help travelers navigate Egypt and the Middle East like a local. She loves simple living, journaling and local cultures.

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Diy Craft Projects » 35 DIY Journal Ideas: How To Make A Journal From Scratch

35 DIY Journal Ideas: How To Make A Journal From Scratch

Published: May 28, 2021 · Modified: Jul 23, 2021 by Luke Allison · This post may contain affiliate links · This blog generates income via ads

If you love keeping a journal, do you know you can use at least five journals a year? sometimes more if you write a lot. Now, calculating the amount spent on buying each journal, you will realize it’s a lot.

The good news is, you can save yourself the cost of buying five journals and start making them yourself with little or no cost. Let me show you the best ways to do this!  We have put together 35 DIY Journal ideas that will show you how to make a journal from scratch, you should check it out.

35 DIY Journal_ How To Make A Journal From Scratch

Table of Contents

1. DIY Bullet Journal

It takes only 3 hours to complete making this bullet journal but it will take much more hours to use it. It requires basic steps like folding papers and pinning them together in a cover.

2. Basic DIY Bullet Journal

One great thing about this bullet journal is the elastic guide at the back of the journal to make sure the pages close together very well. It is very simple and straightforward nevertheless the free dot grid printable makes it even simpler.

3. How To Make A No Sew Journal

A very common method of making a big journal is sewing. Though this journal is big, it doesn't require sewing.

What the instructor did was get seven notebooks and glue them on top of each other. Then, she cut a piece of fabric and glued it to the back of the notebooks, securing them together even more.  She then covers the notebooks in cardboards.

4. Making A Journal For Beginners

As a beginner, a lot of things would seem challenging especially when there is no appropriate explanation and understanding. This is on the simplest DIY journal and it provides detailed explanations for the sake of beginners.

5. Homemade Journals

5. Homemade Journals

With a paper trimmer, cutting down papers and cardboards for the project become easier. Other materials that make the journal exceptional include printer paper, Crop-A-Dile punch tool, paper, leather, and embellishment for the covers.

Click for more details

6. DIY Journal

6. DIY Journal

Maybe due to your profession, you constantly need to note down some important information. This journal is the best item for you to trap that information. It is made from a notebook/journal. The first thing to do is to remove the old cover from the notebook then make a new cardboard cover for it.

7. DIY Mini Junk Journal

7. DIY Mini Junk Journal

Keeping journals is an amazing way to keep yourself abreast with some moments that are too good or too bad to let go of. This journal was inspired by the video of Johanna Clough. It is very simple and exceptional.

8. Easy DIY Art Journal

8. Easy DIY Art Journal

This art journal was made by a six years old child. The point is the art of making journals helps to improve kids' creativity. The girl put all her passion into making this art journal from scrapbooks, cereal boxes, paint, etc. You can encourage your kids to make this too. It's super amazing!

9. How To Make Your Journal

In this video, the instructor explains three types of journals. The first one is the bound bullet journal. To make this, you will need cardstock, scrap wood paper, dot grid / regular paper, and Elmer's rubber cement.

10. DIY Notebook

Making a notebook by yourself will give you the energy to cherish the note so much. You'll handle it with care, just like a baby. In making this notebook, you have to fold many plain papers in half and glue them together. Then, cut a brown cardstock for the cover.

11. How To Make A Journal

If you want to know how to bind your journal, this is the best video for you to learn.

Using a hole punch, you can easily bind your journal together within a couple of minutes.

12. How To Make A DIY Book Journal

I love bullet journals! They make journaling more fantastic. In this video, you will learn how to make two different bullet journals using different techniques and materials.

13. DIY Leather Journal

13. DIY Leather Journal

One thing that will always make DIY amazing is the ability to upcycled anything to something new. There is no room for anything to waste. This leather journal was made from recycled journals. Awl, wax thread, leather cords, cardboard, and leftover papers.

14. DIY Customized Book Journal

14. DIY Customized Book Journal

Once you try making this journal once, you will be hooked to it. Always trying to make more and more. The imperfection in the journal makes it even more exceptional; the uneven edge of the journal gives it a rustic look.

15. DIY Decoupage Journal

15. DIY Decoupage Journal

Decopodge journal! I'm excited just hearing the name because it's going to be a colorful project. One thing that makes Decopodge journal amazing is that you will be using a plain journal and numerous cut-out pictures, patterns, and logos from the magazine.

16. DIY Vintage Journal

Here is another adorable vintage journal! I found myself liking a vintage journal these days. They look fascinating. The supplies needed for this vintage journal include a leather sheet, scissors, pin, marker, ruler, faux suede cord, parchment paper, chalkboard paper, felt paper, and stapler.

17. How To Make A DIY Journal

You must have come across the word Canva before or probably you've made a design on Canva.com before.

Canva.com is a design website that allows you to create images, logos, and cards. The website supports external images, that is, you can upload your images on it and make a design with it.

The instructor made the front and back cover of the journal on canvas.com by uploading some external pictures into the site. It is very simple and straightforward once you follow the instructions given in the video.

18. How To Make A DIY Travel Journal

There are a lot of things you will need to jot down when you're traveling. Things like basic words in other languages, memorable places you visited, names of things and places, etc.

This personalized travel journal is the best way to make your traveling experience memorable.

Here is how to make one for yourself.

Get a big world map, cardboard, colored paper, glue, and string. Cover the cardboard with the colored paper and cut the map into pieces. Assemble everything and glue them together.

19. Vintage Journal DIY

One thing is common for all vintage journals, that is tea dying and rough edges. Vintage journals are very easy to make and they are exceptional due to the style and texture.

Most of the vintage journals used stitching as a mode of binding while some used glue. This journal was assembled with glue and covered with leather.

20. DIY Journal Notebook From Scrap Paper

20. DIY Journal Notebook From Scrap Paper

Making a journal by yourself means you have your interest under control. You can make it into anything that suits your desires.

This is made from gilded paper with a wood design. Other thick scrap wood papers are equally amazing. Then, download the "room makeover journal" pages to fit into the scrapbook paper. The whole project takes only 10 minutes once the materials are available.

21. How To Make A Handmade Journal

21. How To Make A Handmade Journal

You can make this! Anybody can! The first thing to do before starting this project is to download the free journal cover template. The link to download the template is listed in the link below.

22. How To Make A Handmade Journal

22. How To Make A Handmade Journal

Once you see a handmade journal, you'll immediately know it's handmade. I like handmade journals, they are very exceptional.

You can use any greeting card for the cover, but if you would like to stitch one for yourself as they did in this guide; you can glue the plain paper onto a decorated paper. Then, place them on cardboard and you're good to go.

23. DIY Gratitude Journal

23. DIY Gratitude Journal

Are you a journal writer? Do you need an adorable journal to keep your moments? This is the best for you. All you need to do is to get a notebook or a sketchbook and decorate it with some mixed media leaves. You will learn how to make your media leave in this guide as well.

24. DIY Sketchbook Journal

DIY becomes much easier when there is no need to stitch or bind. As a beginner, this is the best way to go. First, get some paper. Then, decide on the size of the journal you want to make and fold the paper. Here, the creator folded the paper into four.

The next step is to punch holes on the paper, she punches two holes on each paper. Then, she cut the fold into four individual pieces. She stacked them together and passed a floral wire in each of the holes.

25. How To Make A Junk Journal

This is a one signature junk journal and it uses a simple binding method. Here is the method;

Once you organize the paper, thread a string in a needle. Open the journal to the middle and start a hole at the of the journal. Pass the needle to the other side and prick it back in from the bottom of the journal. Pass the needle through the center again and prick it back in through the top. After this, cut the string and tie.

26. How To Make A Junk Journal

One thing that fascinates me about some junk journals or vintage journals is the tea dye. It gives the journal an exceptional look.

The first step to take in making this junk journal is to fold the papers, then organize the papers and put the signatures together. Then, start making the cover.

27. DIY Vintage Journal Notebook

This vintage notebook stands out among others. Here is how to make one; Fold some plain paper in half and use your hand to tear all the edges of the papers roughly. Then, soak the papers in coffee and allow them to dry. Once the papers are dried, take a needle and thread and stitch the pages together.

For the cover, cut cardboard to size the length of the pages. Then, tear some old newspapers into tiny pieces and soak them in water. Remove them from water and blend them, add glue to it and mash it up. Use it to cover the cardboard and paint it in black, brown, and golden color.

28. DIY Vintage Hogwarts Journal

28. DIY Vintage Hogwarts Journal

One thing I like about this journal is the vintage, rusty look. Because of this effect, everything used in this project is either brown or altered to brown. Brown brings out the ancient look.

It is made from scrap paper and cardboard, brown cardboard paper, hardback cover, tea, brown shirt, brown shoe polish, etc.

29. Easy Bound Journal DIY

29. Easy Bound Journal DIY

You've been making journals, but this time you decided you want to use another method. Binding! Learn everything you need to know about this bound journal in this guide.

30. How To Make A Simple Journal

30. How To Make A Simple Journal

The first step in making this is to cut out the leather and cardboard paper that is needed. Then, Mark the middle of both leather and cardboard. Get a strong glue that will be able to glue leather and glue the cardboard to the leather.

The next step is to prepare the pages and glue them inside the cardboard piece.

31. How To Make A DIY Journal With Tea Stained Paper

31. How To Make A DIY Journal With Tea Stained Paper

If you desire rustic pages, there is no other way to go about it than to soak your paper in tea or coffee. Here are other materials you need to make this! A foam core, fabric for the book cover, fabric for binding, button, embroidery needle, x-Acto knife, ruler, and twine.

32. DIY Bullet Journal

This is another bullet journal DIY. It is very simple and cheap. One very important thing about bullet journals is that you can customize them into anything you want. Learn how to make this in the video below.

33. How To Make Junk Journal Out Of An Old Book

If you're new to junk journaling, this is the best way to start. In this video, you will learn how to repurpose a book into a junk journal. It is very simple, the only place that requires special attention is the cover.

34. DIY Journal

This journal is made from acetate pad, freestyle pen, recollection chipboard, planer disc, disc power punch, recollection farmhouse paper pad, and AC Jen Hadfield sticker books. It is very easy and adorable. All the process involved in making it is clearly explained in this video.

35. DIY Easy Journal

To make this you need papers, cardstock, thumbtack, staple pins, and mushy tape. Fold the papers into half and stack them together, make two holes at both edges of the papers with a thumbtack.

Cut the cardstock to size the paper and punch holes in it as well. Assemble the papers and the cardstock and make sure the holes are in line with each other, fix the staple pins through the holes and you're good to go.

There you have it! 33 DIY journal guides. All you need to know about the process of making a journal is well explained in each guide. The comments section is now officially opened for questions or contributions regarding this post.

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Compass and Ink

If you’ve been wondering how to start a travel journal, you’re in the right place! I love travel journals and am slowly working up to a solid collection of them from my various travels throughout my life. From wandering in Europe to roadtrips in the US, you can start a travel journal for almost any trip you take.

It’s a worthwhile thing to do, as the further you get away from a trip the more the memories fade. I love having my journals to go back to as it helps jog my memory on details I might have forgotten or how a place made me feel. Plus, I’m one of those people that loves travel photos – whether they’re my own or someone else’s. I like seeing far away places through the lens.

There are a variety of ways to get started travel journaling, and it might seem a little daunting at first but don’t let this scare you off!  You just have to find the version of travel journaling that’s right for you. So here’s an outline of a couple different versions, but remember, as always, your journal is your own and the beauty of journaling is that it can be whatever you want it to be! I’m just here to help spark some ideas for you.

Transparency Note: This post contains affiliate links. That means if you choose to purchase through my links I will make a small commission through no extra charge to you. You can read more on the  privacy policy and disclosure .

How to Start a Travel Journal: Kinds of Journaling

travel journal spread and supplies

Just the Facts Travel Journaling

This is the easiest way to start a travel journal. It involves nothing but a notebook, a pen and jotting down the things you saw, foods you ate, and where you stayed. You can create a daily log that just highlights where you’ve been. You can use a separate notebook for this or you can incorporate it into another form of journaling or planning you do. A great way to do this is to incorporate it into your bullet journal !

Storytelling Travel Journaling

This is taking your just the facts to the next level. You can go beyond the facts to explore the sites, describe the smells and tastes of the food you had, the feel of the cobblestones under your feet, or maybe something less romantic – like how your flight had rough turbulence and then the airline lost your luggage and you had to improvise for two days until it finally arrived at your hotel (who hasn’t been there at some point, right?).  This is where you take your facts and make them a little more vivid with your imagination.

Envelope Travel Journaling

This version of travel journaling uses some combination of one of the above along with saving lots of odds and ends that you collect on your trip.  Your receipts, ticket stubs, post cards, the napkin from the cafe where you had your first real cappuccino in Italy, the brochure from the museum you visited, and so on. You’ll want to make sure the journal you have has lots of pockets and envelopes and other places to stuff those things so you can bring them back with you. They are a low-key way to illustrate your trip.

Scrapbook Style Travel Journaling

This version is the slightly more complicated version of the previous way of starting a travel journal. It involves taking some of those odds and ends, some photos that you’ve taken along the way (do you know they make awesome pocket sized printers these days?) and gluing them down in your journal with washi tape or some other kind of adhesive. You can get super creative with this, adding doodles and drawings and other elements to it or you can just keep it simple. Writing is up to you – but I highly recommend at least jotting down the places and times you were at when you collected things. Down the road these will be helpful reminders!

Sketchbook Travel Journaling

Do you love to sketch and doodle? Do you see a place and your fingers start itching for a pad of paper and a good pencil? Maybe you just find the idea of sitting in a plaza in Europe sketching the outline of a 15th century building inspiring. If so, this might be the right way to start a travel journal for you then.  All you really need is a sketchbook and a pencil, but this is also a great way to incorporate details into any other form of travel journal you create. Even if you’ve never tried sketching before, you should give it a go. You might be surprised with what you come up with, and if nothing else it gives you the opportunity to find a nice cafe table or park bench to set up and people watch from!

Just remember, you should do the kind of travel journaling that appeals to you. Don’t compare yourself to other journalers out there and don’t think that because your travel journal isn’t perfect that it isn’t worth doing.  Checking out other travel journals is an opportunity for you to have inspiration, not dictate how you have to do your own journal.  Besides, it’s the imperfections that make your travel journal great!

Supplies to Start a Travel Journal

The kind of travel journaling that appeals to you above will help you start to decide what kind of supplies you might need. You may only want a notebook or a pen, or you may want to create a small pouch of things to take along with you. Just remember to keep your supplies as minimal as you can. You don’t want to have to carry around a bunch of extra things you might not even use. And while sketching in a plaza might seem romantic, it won’t if you have to bring an entire office worth’s of supplies along with you.

The things I’d highly recommend bringing with you are:

  • A journal – whether you want to make your own journal or you want to just pick one up. You can go the simple route and just get a blank notebook or bullet journal, or you can find a version that has prompts ready to go for you.
  • Pens or pencil – I like taking something erasable, so I’d recommend a mechanical pencil or an erasable pen. I love these frixion pens !
  • Washi – Whether you want to decorate a page or just need a practical way to get your ticket stub to stay stuck to the page, washi can serve all these purposes. And the best part is that if you change your mind later, you can easily remove it and move things around.

Beyond those, it’s really up to you. What will make you feel motivated to journal?

How to Fit Travel Journaling Into Your Trip

You might be really excited about the idea of a travel journal, but there’s just one problem. You have big plans for you trip – whether its spending time relaxing on the beach or packing in as much sightseeing as Paris can offer. When the heck are you supposed to take time to travel journal?

There’s no right answer, but I do have a few suggestions.

Take your travel journal with you in your day bag or purse. You never know when you might have to wait in a long line, or you might have some extra time at a restaurant to jot down a few words. Or if you’re sketching, you never know when you might feel inspired. There have been numerous times I’ve ended up in a park or with time to spare while waiting for my food to come at a restaurant that I could have used to jot down a few words.

Journal at the end of the day. Whether it’s after you get back to your room at night or right before you go to sleep, there’s usually some extra time at the end of the day where you can squeeze in some travel journaling. And best of all, the memories are all fresh in your mind. This is my second favorite way to get some travel journaling in when I’m on the road.

After the Trip…What to Do With Your Travel Journal

I like to bring it home and add additional pages I might not have thought about while I was on the road. It’s also a great time to write a sort of “wrap up” entry, to summarize the trip.  You can also sneak in some extra photos or finish any pages you didn’t get a chance to.

If you have a significant amount of leftover blank pages, you can reuse the journal over and over again on future trips until you fill it out. Or you can choose to just keep one journal per trip. It’s up to you.

After the trip find a place to store your travel journal so that you can preserve it (and find it when you’re ready to head out on your next adventure).  You can keep it on a shelf or in a drawer, but to keep it safe long term it’s best to keep it somewhere where the temperature and humidity are moderated (aka not a basement or an attic). 

What About Previous Trips?  

Also, if you have a trip that you’ve already been on and wish you would have kept a travel journal – you can go back!  I’ve started doing this myself with trips that I’ve taken and didn’t keep a journal on. I still have dozens (okay hundreds) of pictures that are just sitting on drive somewhere and lots of memories.  When I have some free time and feel inspired, I go back and add to the journal. Better late than never, and the sooner you get those memories down the better.

Plus, getting those photos off a drive and into a place where I can page through them makes them so much more meaningful.

Like it? Pin it to your board for later:

how to start a travel journal

Explore Your Worlds

Travel journal examples and how to get the most out of a travel journal

A travel journal: your new best friend.

Travel journal examples can spark ideas for your own journal. This matters a great deal because a travel journal can be one of your most helpful travel — make that life — tools. It can serve myriad purposes from recording your thoughts, emotions (an important aspect many overlook) and experiences to being a repository of creative ideas and even artwork. You can use it as a scrapbook, planning tool, contact book, organizer, reference book (for vital information such as passport numbers, hotel addresses, places to visit, etc.) and even a place to hide certain valuables.

It’s simple enough to put information into your travel journal. The hard part is being able to find or extract that information easily later on. But don’t worry. I’ll show you travel journal examples, techniques, hacks and tips for that and more based on decades trying a wide variety of travel journals and approaches. You’ll find these useful whether you’re an old pro at journaling or even if you’ve never used a travel journal before. And be sure to read all the way through this article since the Additional Resources section at the end is loaded with inspiring and helpful travel journal examples and ideas.

Getting started

The first and most important thing to remember is that there is no one right way to set up your travel journal. In fact, I’ve found that the best approach is to just start with something and learn as you go. My first travel journal was basically a daily diary: “Today I did this, etc.” Now, however, I use it in a very different matter. But it all comes down to this: What is the purpose of your travel journal?

First travel journal pages

Two typical entries from my first travel journal on my first trip to Europe in high school. I have upped my travel journal game a bit since then, or so I hope.

This is such an important question because it will guide what kind of notebook/journal/sketchbook you use, how you organize it and how you interact with it. If you’re just starting out, you may not even know your purpose other than to record your experiences. That’s fine. Start there. Then refine over time.

For me, I see my travel journal as a collection tool for travel drawing and notes where I gather ideas, sketches, some to-do’s, trip details and anything else that interests me. But the main difference between this and most journals is that as a tool, I want to use my journal after I return. Not just for nostalgic reminisces on my trip, but to glean from it what I’ve learned, gained and become. I’ll explain this more momentarily.

Picking the right journal

Again, I’m not sure there is a universal “right” travel journal. Your goal is to find what works for you. You can start by determining if you want a blank notebook or a travel journal that comes with prompts, quotes, organizing categories, etc. Here’s a helpful list of 17 travel journals to give you a sense of travel journal examples and possibilities. Mostly, consider if you want to do travel drawing or even painting in your travel journal. If so, you’ll want thicker paper that won’t warp with the water or bleed through with ink. You likely will want blank pages, as opposed to lines, grids or dots.

Different page orientations

Just as there’s no right or wrong size (just what works for you), so too is the orientation up to you. As you can see here, I sketched holding the journal in a portrait orientation (left page) but wrote (right page, partial) using a landscape orientation. Both work.

If you want to use it as a form of a scrapbook, get one with pockets or that is expandable enough for when you’ve doubled the thickness with all those tickets, stamps, samples of currency, bottle labels and other elements you’ve glued to the pages.

Buying a nice looking or feeling notebook or journal can be motivating. But getting too nice of a notebook to use can be intimidating: You’ll be afraid to do any travel drawing or mess it up. Thus, I suggest starting somewhere in the middle. Find a journal or notebook that will hold up well (hard covers help in this regard), but isn’t so expensive you’ll only want to use it on special occasions. 

Patterned paper pages

Even fancy patterns on your pages can be fun. I tend to prefer blank pages, but sometimes I’ll try different patterns just to mix things up.

Your travel journal is more of a workhorse than a show pony (though sometimes a bit of that too later on). You’ll get far more out of one you use all the time, where you write, do travel drawing or urban sketching, doodle and record with the intent that only you will ever see it. If you choose to show it to others later, fine. But don’t make that your main goal, at least as a beginner, or you’ll never get the most out of your journal.

How will you use your travel journal?

Back to purpose, you can choose to have a general-use journal or one devoted only to your trips (or to a particular trip). I have done both, and there are pros and cons to each. A journal for all situations allows you to connect everything you do so that if a great work idea hits you on a trip, you can reference back to a meeting about that, etc. You can also find things easier in some ways since your whole life, trip or home/work, is laid out in a chronological fashion in one book.

Daily entry journal

Here’s a recent journal of mine that I use daily, as well as for trips. You can see the basic outline for this article here that I wrote on the plane on a business trip. How do I know it was on a trip? From the notation that the sketch was done from a photo in the airplane’s magazine somewhere between Baltimore (BWI) and Seattle (SEA)

A really popular approach these days to general journals is the Bullet Journal . Many people swear by this way of organizing their journal and their life. I love many of the ideas found in bullet journaling. But I choose not to follow that approach completely. Why? Bullet journaling is primarily intended as a productivity tool. I personally don’t find it helpful in that regard because, for example, tracking all my calendar events and moment-by-moment to-do’s in a journal slows me down.

Combine digital and analog

Instead, I use a combination of Outlook, Trello , Evernote and Scrivener (the latter two for organizing ideas and writing projects or content) on my phone and computer. The main reason for tracking tasks digitally is that they roll over automatically. I don’t have to constantly move them manually from one day, week or month to-do list to the next.

But the main reason I don’t use the bullet journal methodology for my travel journal is that when I travel, productivity is not my goal. Exploration and discovery are. I use my travel journal to capture what I learn as I explore the world around me and the world within me wherever I go.

Page from China travel journal

On a trip, I’m less interested in productivity than in explaining why this sketch was hard to do well.

In the last few years, I’ve taken up sketching and even watercolors, so for me, I now maintain a separate travel journal for each major trip. I use one that has thicker watercolor paper, so on a three-week trip, I can pretty much fill up the whole book. But for shorter trips, I do use my day-to-day journal. And I’ve even done both: Used my day-to-day journal to record words and a smaller sketchbook for travel drawing or watercolors. Again, no right or wrong way to do this. Just start with an approach and build from there.

Organizing your travel journal

What follows is how I organize my travel journal. It’s the same way I do my day-to-day journal but with some additional pages in the end for travel-specific information. My purpose, remember, is to capture ideas, information and experiences and then to be able to use these later. For that reason, the most helpful part of my journal is the index. I’ll explain that in a moment along with travel journal examples, but here’s what else goes into my journal.

Starting with a brand new empty journal

The first thing I do with a new journal is to put my name, cell phone number and email address on the inside cover.

Next, if the journal doesn’t have a rear pocket, I make one or glue/tape in a small envelope that fits on the inside of the rear cover.

If you glue in your own, consider hiding a few large denomination bills, both dollars and the local currency, behind the envelope or anything else you tape or glue inside the covers. It’s a great place for hiding back-up money. It works because once you start using your travel journal regularly, you’ll find it is one of your most precious possessions. You’ll learn to guard it like your wallet, passport or phone.

Stacks of travel journals

These are just some of the many travel journals I’ve filled up over the years.

In addition to the pocket or envelope in your journal, consider bringing a quart or gallon-sized zip lock bag to hold all the small items you pick up along the way. I used to shove them into pockets in my carry-on bag, but having a single location now keeps them from getting lost or mangled. And it keeps my travel journal from looking like George Costanza’s wallet on Seinfeld . This same bag can hold a glue stick, paper clips or anything else you want for adding items to your journal.

Start in the front and work back

I track everything chronologically noting the date at the top of each day’s entry. If it spans multiple pages, I’ll write “(cont.)” after the date on later spreads so I know to keep looking for the start of that day when I review the entry later.

I work in this chronological fashion for recording most of my entries because I find it flows better to write the item down right away and then figure out how to classify it later. I set up indexes in the back for classifying and locating the entry. But that comes as a review step, not a creative or collecting function.

What to write

Starting at the front section of the travel journal, I may use the very first page as a title page if the journal is devoted to a single trip. Otherwise, I skip over that page and then start with the date of the start of the trip and then just keep going from there. Here are the types of content I write/draw along with some of my travel journal examples:

Sketching pages

Sometimes, I’ll devote a whole page or spread to nothing but sketches.

  • General thoughts . These make up the majority of my journal and are what you’d expect in any journal.
  • Sketches . I’m still just a beginner, but I’ve committed to one sketch per day, at home or on a trip. Sometimes they are involved. Others (most of the time), are just a quick gesture. But the discipline helps improve my skill.
  • A daily log . At the end of each day, I do a very quick list of summary activities, where I went, who I met, what I did. I actually note it like this: “(Log 11/27/19 – Wed.):” so that I can see at a glance what were log entries versus other ideas. For logs, the shorter the better. Here’s where bullet journal techniques can help: Record a few words as a bullet rather than full sentences. At the end of every daily log, I also record two specific items in addition log entries themselves, gratitude points and what I’ve read or watched.
  • Gratitude points : I jot down what I call a Goodness Journal (abbreviated as GJ) entry. This is the highlight of my day for which I am most grateful. On trips, this can often end up being multiple points.
  • Read/Watched : The second additional component is what I call Read/Watched (R/W) where I list any books I’ve read that day or any movies, programs, concerts, etc. that I watched. It can include podcasts and anything else you want to track. Before I started doing this, I’d get to the end of the year and couldn’t recall all the books I’d read. Now I can just by referring back to these entries.
  • Insights and Ideas . Most of my journal at home is filled with these. On trips, these happen more on plane, train or bus rides than every single day. But they could happen any time which is why I keep a pocket-sized travel journal with me or at least a note card or my phone so I can write the idea down immediately.
  • Quotes . These can be formal written ones I encounter or snippets of conversations I overhear. As a writer, I want to always be gathering dialog examples or clever turns of phrases.
  • To-dos. Yes, I said I record these digitally for the daily tasks. But sometimes on trips, you have opportunities for dreaming and planning. I mark all to-do’s with a checkbox I can fill in later. I like the bullet journal way they do this as well (a dot instead of a box).

Stamped page

I had a gentleman in China demonstrate his woodblock stamps by stamping some examples in my journal. You can paste in stamps, tickets, receipts, postcards or any other artifacts from your trip onto your journal pages as you go (if you remember to bring some glue or paste).

  • Descriptions . These are either quick notes on what I’m seeing, hearing, tasting or tasting, or longer ways to capture the details of a place. See Look Closely for details on how to do this as a way to learn to see details better or to write better based on your travels. I also make sure to write down the names of places, people, food, local expressions and anything else I want to write about later. Don’t assume you’ll remember it or can look it up later. Write it down.
  • Miscellaneous . I’ve had artists draw in my journal, had people stamp it (see photo above), record different colors of beverages spilled or intentionally dripped on it and a wealth of other things added. Be open to how you can use your journal. Or for fun, try this exercise: Come up with as many ways as you can think of to use your travel journal on your next trip.

The back of the journal

The front of the journal is used for a chronological input of information each day (or whenever you choose). The goal there is to record the idea, insight, drawing or information just like in a diary. The back of the journal is where you’ll organize it all for later retrieval.

Working from the last page backwards, I set up a series of index or topic pages (see the list below) where I record anything related to that topic either verbatim (if I have the time and forethought to write it down there such as contact info or a quote I came across) or as a page number reference and summary line from the front of the journal (hence the reason these back-of-the-journal pages are called Index Pages).

For me, I find that most index sections only require one page (e.g. for Contacts or Travel Details) but I leave two pages for Ideas or Vocabulary since they tend to have more entries. I write small (some would say ridiculously small), so if you don’t, you may want to leave more room.

Review your entries and record them for easier retrieval

I don’t assign page numbers as I write in the front of the journal. Instead, I jot down a page number later, maybe daily, maybe weekly, as I review my journal. Writing down the page number during the review phase shows me which pages have been indexed. No page number indicates it still needs to be indexed. As I review each page, I also code the entries themselves on the journal pages by highlighting the topic or assigning a word or letter to let me know what it is. For example, if there’s a quote, I will write “Quote” and circle it right before the quote. For blog ideas, I’ll write “blog” and circle that, etc. If  an idea that has distinct merit, I’ll draw a star next to it. Particular project ideas get a corresponding code, e.g. if it’s about  my book on Hidden Travel,   I’ll write “HT” and circle that. The whole point is to make it easier to spot the entry when you’re reviewing the page later.

Quote example page

Here you can (hopefully) see how I’ve written and circled page numbers at the top and put a box around the word “Quote” on the left page and “Visual appeal article” on the right page. Then, on the Quotes index page, I’ll write “108” and circle it with a quick notation like, “E.B. White on saving/savoring the world.” On the Ideas index page, I’ll write “109” and circle it with the notation, “Visual Appeal article questions.”

In case you’re wondering why the index/topic pages go in the back and not in the front like a table of contents, it’s because I often add topics as I progress through the journal. Working from the back gives me room to add new pages whereas if I’d started from the front and I didn’t guess correctly, I’d be out of room before running into my journal entries.

Travel journal examples of Pre-Trip Items

Some of my index/topic pages get filled in (or at least started) before my trip either as planning or to load my travel journal with important information to have on my trip. Here are some travel journal examples of the key sections.

Shot list

Here’s a travel journal example of a shot list from my China trip journal. I tend to write pretty small in the back section of a journal! The whited out area was my passport number in code. Writing key information on pages with other entries makes it even less obvious this is something valuable.

  • Vocabulary. On trips to countries where I’m learning the language, I’ll add new vocabulary words here usually starting long before the trip. These are key words to practice, as well as new ones I pick up as I travel.
  • Shot list . When planning my trip, as a photographer, I make a list of specific places, scenes, techniques I want to try or even times of day I want to shoot. Check out my Beginner’s Guide to Making Awesome Travel Photos for more on this and other travel photo techniques. In addition, as I review guidebooks or articles, I’ll add interesting places to this list. Even if you’re not a photographer, you can make a list of “must see” places or “must do” experiences or activities. Writing them down really helps because it makes it so easy to find all these in one place rather than hunting through a guidebook or other pages on your trip.
  • Themes and Moments . This is yet another pre-trip fill-in page. I try to come up with a theme or quest for each trip. Writing down ideas about that or defining it really adds to the anticipation of the trip. On this page, I’ll also jot down ideas for creating magic or defining moments for others on the trip. This includes ideas for the activities or contact info for places or people that will be part of the activity.

Travel journal examples of elements to add as you travel

Here are some typical index/topic pages in the back of my travel journal that get filled in as I go:

  • Contact information . I keep a separate page to record the names, email addresses, etc. of people I meet along the way. If, in a hurry, I just write down a name and email address in the front-of-the-book journaling section. I’ll later record the page number and contact name on the page here so all I can find all my contacts in one place later.
  • Ideas . This becomes a catchall for any creative ideas I’ve had. I normally start with the page number(s) followed by a brief summary such as “27 – 29: Dining room chair design” or “73: Article on architecture styles in Morocco.”

Ideas Index Page

Here’s a specific travel journal example, the Ideas Index Page from my China trip journal. I had started the page on the left as a vocabulary list but made room from more ideas when I ran out of space on the page on the right.

  • Books and Movies . This too is a catchall for any form of entertainment I want to read. I constantly get book and movie (and even song or podcast) recommendations as I travel that I add here with an open check box. I also record books I’ve finished to this list noting those with a checked box.
  • Quotes . As noted above, these may be written quotes I come across or snippets of dialog I pick up. I either write the quote here directly or reference the journal page where I wrote the quote with a reminder such as “53-quote from Leipzig waitress on timing.”

Things I Notice page

You can do a trip highlights page on the flight home, but sometimes it helps to record a summary of details in the midst of your trip of things that stand out to you.

  • To-do’s. I said I like to keep my travel journal free from productivity and time management, but I always have big-picture to-do activities that arise on a trip. I’ll record these as I go in the journal section, but for longer-term ones I don’t want to lose track of, I sometimes add a to-do index as well in the back of the journal. This can also be a great place to record future planning ideas for things you want to accomplish after your trip.
  • Trip highlights . I’ll normally note the big moments in the journal section as they occur. But often on the flight home, I like to review these and capture them all in one place with the page reference and a brief notation. I may also add in additional ones at this point because sometimes, you don’t realize how powerful or meaningful a moment was at the time.

When your journal is full

Eventually, you’ll fill up your journal with entries. You’ll then review and have every page numbered with key entries noted in your index pages. Then what?

I use Scrivener (for writing projects) and Evernote (for others) as software/apps to track ideas over time. Thus, when I finish a journal, I go copy the content from my index pages into one of these digital programs.

There are several reasons for this. First, it helps to have all your ideas over time in one place so you can view them easier. Second, with the online tools, I can tag content by subject making retrieval later much easier. Most of us focus our efforts on having ideas and maybe writing them down. But those ideas won’t serve you well if you can’t find them later. Finally, putting everything into one place helps me see patterns and related ideas which, in turn, sparks new ideas.

It all relates to the concept of Collect, Connect and Share. If all you’re doing is collecting, you’re missing out on the main value of your journal.

Make a copy

This may be overkill to some, but my journals are precious repositories of life. I would hate to lose them. I could dictate the contents and transcribe that, but I don’t have that kind of time. Instead, Evernote comes to the rescue.

The Evernote app has a photo function. I open the app and take pictures of every spread or page of my journal. I save the results as an Evernote file and can even tag it by date, country or other criteria. It then resides on the cloud (and I also do a back-up on a drive at home). That way, if the original gets lost, I know that all those memories are secure.

Let’s review

Here’s a summary of the key points:

  • Know the purpose for your journal
  • Choose the type of journal based on your intended purpose.
  • Start with something that’s not too nice so that you’re not afraid to mark it up.
  • Keep daily entries in the front and a list of index pages in the back of the journal.
  • Periodically review your journal entries. As you do, number each page and record that page number and a brief reminder on the appropriate index page.
  • At the end of each journal, photograph each page and save to a secure location. Then enter the index information into whatever tool you use for tracking all of your ideas over time.

Additional resources and travel journal examples

Here are other resources and travel journal examples to both inspire and help you get the most out of your travel journal:

  • A helpful article with visuals of different travel journal examples
  • Writer and artist Austin Kleon’s comments on notebooks 
  • Travel journal examples (and notebooks) of author Robert MacFarlane 
  • Some additional travel journal examples and notebook types
  • The Sketchbook Projec t, one of my favorite places to visit in Brooklyn, NY and a great source of inspiration for sketchbooks. If you’re looking for a single place for travel journal examples, it is this one. Here are just a few screen shots of some random travel journal examples I looked up by Julia Yellow . There are thousands of such journals at this site.

Travel sketch

  • If you really enjoy the travel drawing aspect of a travel journal, you might want to connect with the whole Urban Sketchers movement and see travel journal examples that include urban sketching. Here’s an example of an urban sketch by Stephanie Bower . I took some of her architectural sketching courses online at Bluprint and they were excellent.

Sketch of Croatia building

Parting thoughts

Finally, if you want even more travel journal examples and information, be sure to read Lavinia Spalding’s excellent book on the subject, Writing Away: A Creative Guide to Awakening the Journal-Writing Traveler. Here’s one of many great quotes from the book:

“If we’re committed to honest investigation, the travel journal can be a cornerstone of growth and a catalyst for great work, providing a safe container for astonishing discoveries and the life lessons we take away from them. We write words in an empty book, and an inanimate object is transformed into a living, breathing memoir. In turn, as we write, the journal transforms us. It allows us to instantly process impressions, which leads to a more examined layer of consciousness in both the present and the future. It’s a relationship, and let me tell you, it’s no cheap one-night stand.”

You might want to consider writing that quote down in your travel journal. Either in the daily entries or on the quotes index page. Or however you want to do it. It’s your travel journal and the possibilities are endless.

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Thanks Steve! Informative and creative. Your sketching is lovely, too! Merry Christmas to you and the fam

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Thanks, Alan. I was just editing a section in my upcoming book, “Hidden Travel,” on the subject of sketching and the advice I was given by Gabriel Campinario, founder of Urban Sketchers. He told me to never apologize or say, “Oh, I’m just a beginner” when someone compliments your sketching because no matter how bad you think it is, it is still better than that of the 99% of the population who never attempts to draw. So I will leave it at, “Thank you!”

[…] I mainly get inspiration from a Reddit group called Journaling, and also I get a few ideas on making travel journals. Despite it being fun to do having a physical notebook, at times it can be difficult to finish them […]

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You’ve inspired me to resume creating tiny travel journals, with scrapbook like additions. I use photo double sided stickies, not glue. Someone asked what do I do with these? As if creating isn’t pleasurable. I often use them as primary sources to create photobooks. Along with my Bird lists.🐦😁.

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Artsy Fartsy Life

How To Make A Travel Journal

By: Author Tara Jacobsen

Posted on Last updated: March 5, 2021

Categories Adult Crafts

Tips and ideas for keeping a fun and creative travel notebook or diary. A travelers notebook is such a fun way to document your trips and remember all the neat things you did on your trip.

How To Make A Travel Journal

Have you ever gone on a vacation and once home, forgot the small details of the trip?  Or looked at pictures a month, year or more later and can’t remember what they were about or who was in them?  

It happens to the best of us and even if you’re sure you’ll remember everything about a vacation or trip, you won’t.  The solution is very simple: keep a travel journal.  

It will help you remember more about your trip, learn more about where you are going and reflect on your journey as you go.  All those things will later be a fantastic way to refresh your memory about each trip you take.

Free Playing With Color Guide

Making and keeping a travel journal is simple, really, and you can do it one of two ways; start it before you go and pre-populate your pages in the journal leaving space to write each day about your adventures; or you can keep notes as you go and then design your journal once the trip is over, much like a scrapbook.  

Keep one for each trip you take, short or long, or make one journal for all your travels.  It’s all up to you. I tend to make one journal (a travelers notebook style) and then add pictures and notes in there!

travelers notebook

Picking Your Style Of Journal

There are a million different kinds of journals you can use for your travelers notebook! Here are some ideas to get your wheels turning:

Midori travelers notebooks – I use a Midori style travelers notebook! If you don't know about these, they are tall skinny books that you can hook into a cover with a rubber band that goes around it to hold it closed. (shown above)

Leather journal – If you are doing a once in a lifetime trip you might want to get a special leather journal! That leather cover will keep all of your memories safe and sound!

Leather notebooks – My Midori travelers journal has a cloth cover, but using a leather cover is a great way to have a keepsake that you can treasure forever!

Colorful illustrated journal – If looking at a big blank page freaks you out, a fun thing to do is get an old fashioned illustrated book or even a modern travel guide of the area you are visiting to use as the base for your journal!

Personalized Journal Travelers Notebook

What To Write In Your Travelers Notebook

As you make entries into your journal (or make notes for it later), write down everything.  The minutiae, the good stuff and the bad stuff.  Don’t self-censor!  

Not all entries have to be award winning, but be sure to capture it all as you go, at the end of each day before you go to bed.  

Ask yourself, what did I do?  Where did I go?  Who did I meet?  What did I eat?  What did it smell like or sound like?  What did I learn?  

I wanted to remember that my son thinks Caesar Salads are the height of fine dining so I made sure to note that by the picture I took of him!

How To Use Your Trip Ephemera

If you’re taking your actual journal with you, take a glue stick as well and put in things like ticket stubs, brochures, postcards… if you can draw, make sketches of things.  

I find that there are two kinds of ephemera for me, stuff I can glue in and stuff I want to keep for later.

For example, I can glue tickets in anywhere! I think I want them, but really don't care. Postcards on the other hand are fun for me, so I tend to clip them on with bulldog or paper clips or put them in a tuck spot so I don't have to worry they will get ruined by glueing them in!

how to make travel journal paper

Leave room on each page to add pictures you took that day later OR do like I did and get a Sprocket printer so you can print out your pictures as you go along! It is tiny and uses “no ink” paper so I can make my pages up as I go!

 Lastly, end each journal page with what about that day you are most grateful for, because remembering that the trip was a gift is most important.

Travel Journal Supplies

You can also start your journal before you go on your trip (more about that below), but to get started here is a list of suggested supplies:

  • A travelers style notebook or other type of journal with blank pages. (fun addons… 5 Must Have Accessories for Your Travelers Notebook )
  • Notebook refill books
  • Glue sticks or mod podge
  • Photos, tickets, brochures, stickers you got in particular places – whatever it is you collect on your trip
  • Washi Tape (optional for decoration) – I make small cards of washi tape with short pieces so I don't have to take a bunch of different rolls! (check out 9 Creative Ways To Store Washi Tape to see it in action!)
  • Scrapbook paper for interesting backgrounds

Preparing Your Travelers Journal Before You Go

Now you can set up your journal before you go and use it as a trip planning guide remembering that you are going to document your travels as you go!

Start off with the brochures you are using to plan the trip, your itinerary, and ask yourself the following to help you plan the best trip ever:

  • What do I want to see on my trip?
  • What do I want to do on my trip?
  • Are there foods I want to try?
  • Why am I going on this trip?
  • What would I like to learn?
  • What do I imagine it will be like on my trip?
  • What are my expectations?

Now do your homework and figure out how to do the things you want to do.  Put in contact information for the site or people, tour information, etc.  That way you not only make your itinerary, but you have a central spot to find it later when you need it.

Taking Notes During Your Trip

If you want to just take notes during the trip, take a notebook and jot down things as you go.  

During the day, jot quick notes about thoughts, tidbits of information on things you learned, people’s names, sounds, smells, all your quick observations that are usually quickly lost.  

I tend to use sticky notes in the page I know I am going to use for that trip! I write down things we did and special events to remember. That way, when I am ready to do the page I have the notes, but they aren't “stuck” in a certain place!

At the end of the day, write out your experiences at length, including your notes, while it’s all fresh in your mind.  Ask yourself these questions as you write:

  • Who did I meet today?
  • Were the locals welcoming?
  • Did you learn something new?
  • What did I eat?
  • Was it good?
  • Did I get any new recipes for things I liked?
  • What did I like most about today?
  • What did I like least about today?
  • What did I learn about me today?
  • Did I do something challenging?
  • How did it add to my life?
  • Would I recommend what I did today to anyone and why?
  • Was there something I wanted to do that didn’t happen?

Pro tip! If your handwriting is a little wonky, like mine, you might want to use a notebook with lined pages or a grid so you can follow that and make it look less messy!

Doing Your Travelers Notebook Later

If you are just collecting notes and ephemera as you go, when you get home you will want to start putting together pages for each part of your trip!

Set your travel journal up almost like a scrapbook.  Print out the photos you want to include and gather your stuff together, maps, travel magazines, scrapbook paper, tickets, business cards, etc. and organize them by city or country or by day or site visited.  

Now choose a background and add it to your page, if you want, and place the things to go with it and arrange them on the page, then paste them down.

Whether you set up your pages ahead of time and use the journal, or make notes each day as you go and transfer them to the journal (so you can decorate it so it’s more closely related to your actual trip), use the time making the pages to compare your expectations with what actually happened.  

Reflect on how that changed your trip for the better or not, and so on.  Then set the stage for your next adventure by ending with the place you want to go next!

How To Make A Travel Journal

How to make a super fun travel journal to keep track of all the details of your trip!

  • Travel Journal or Travelers Notebook
  • Notebook Refill
  • Sticky Notes
  • Bulldog Clips or Paper Clips
  • Washi Tape or Stickers
  • Sprocket No Ink  Printer (optional)
  • Ephemera From Your Trip (ticket stubs, brochures, napkins, matchbooks)

Instructions

  • Get all your supplies together in one place (I like to use a cute little bag I can throw into my pocket book)
  • Start collecting fun ephemera from your trip
  • Write down fun events and people you meet
  • Use sticky notes to record what is happening (you can move them around later!)
  • Print out pictures from your trip
  • Start making pages of your travels!

It can seem like everyone else makes the most amazing travel journals, but when you start they will be a little wonky. Remember, it is just for you to remember your trips and they will get better over time!

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100 Travel Journal Ideas & Prompts For Any Adventure

100 Travel Journal Ideas & Prompts For Any Adventure Cover

There’s nothing like traveling somewhere new and experiencing once-in-a-lifetime moments. You can never have enough travel journal ideas to help stretch out those moments a little further, to make them last a little longer.

One way we can remember those moments is with a pen and a journal. Having lots of travel journal prompts is a great way to make sure you can relive your favorite memories you’ve made while traveling. 

Here are 100 travel journal ideas and prompts for any adventure.

We’ve taught you how to create a travel journal , but the list for creating and writing in these little books of paper goes on and on. Whether you want to draw, collage, write, use bullets, or simply write from prompts. There are so many ways to keep a travel journal.

First things first, check out a paper journal or a digital journal app, like Journo.

how to make travel journal paper

Journals like the Quintessential ‘North Star’ Travel Journal , the Personalized Boarding Pass Journal , and The World is a Book’ Travel Journal are great options for starting your first travel journal.

If you’re looking for something more digital-friendly, download the Journo app . Create your own story with Journo – From classic journal writing to travel maps, and photo books, you’ll be able to document your adventures, print your journals, publish your travels online, and much more.

We give you the tools you need to immediately start writing your own amazing story!

Determine when you want to create your travel journal. 

Do you want to write out prompts before your trip starts? While you are traveling and exploring new places? Or after you come home?

Travel journals are created by you and for you, so you can decide when and where to start creating the perfect journal for you.

Determine the overall layout and aesthetic of the journal.

Before we get to writing, take a look at different creative ideas of physically crafting your journal on Tumblr and Pinterest. Some people turn theirs into a sketchbook of each place they visit, then add more as they go along.

Will you add art? Will it strictly be journal entries or prompts? 

Consider making it a bullet journal, or parts of it. 

how to make travel journal paper

Bullets and lists are a great way to remember your favorite things about a place or a road trip. But they are also great for writing down before you leave – list things you want to see, experiences you want to have, locals you want to meet.

The opportunities for lists and bullets are endless! You can craft your trip around lists too. Do you want to learn about a new place through their coffee shops? Bars? Parks? Public transportation? I vow to explore London through it’s coffee or tea shops. What’s on your bucket list bullet list?

Be prepared to decoupage.

Decoupage? That sounds like a fancy term, and it is. But this is your journal, so it can be whatever you want it to be! Tape in receipts, notes, and all the little pieces of papers that end up in your carry-on. Include brochures, maps, tickets, and draw sketches too. Make it look pretty, or not. It’s yours! 

Create a photography challenge or photography bingo. 

how to make travel journal paper

This is a fun way to ensure you see all you want to and take pics of all the fun things at your travel destination. Simple create a bingo board in your journal, and then list things in the boxes that you’d like to have pictures of.

This can include landmarks, sights, street food , nature, textures, flowers, sunset, ‘in my bag’, and so many other fun ideas. A great way to get creative in your travel journal!

Psst! If you’re using a digital journal like Journal, you can add these photos right onto the app whenever you take them. 

Now it’s time to start writing. 

Here are 100 writing prompts to get you started: 

General writing prompts.

how to make travel journal paper

Write a postcard to a friend or family member from a place you’ll never forget.

You’re traveling around the world in 180 days, what will you bring?

You’re going on a 5-country tour of Europe: What do you eat?

Write a letter home to your best friend describing what you miss about home.

Taking a cruise with your best friend, but when you arrive at the ship you find it’s a senior citizen cruise. Describe your first day.

Your flight is cancelled and you are stuck in the airport for 34 hours. Write about your time at the airport.

How can you feed your sense of adventure, without leaving home?

What’s more important, the journey or the destination?

How has travel changed your life?

What is one event around the world you would love to attend? Why? 

If you were a tourist in your own city for a day, what would you do? 

If you could go on a trip with anyone, dead or alive, who would you go with and where?

Share a time when you got lost while traveling. 

What fear have you overcome while traveling?

Write a review of the best hotel, hostel , or Airbnb you’ve ever stayed in.

Write about a hike or outdoor experience you enjoyed – using all five senses.

If you were to write a travel memoir, what would the first chapter be?

Think of the most beautiful place you’ve ever been to. Describe it using all five senses.

Think back to an interesting conversation you’ve had while traveling and begin your story with that dialogue.

What do you think is the biggest misconception about travel? 

What is the biggest lesson that travel has taught you?

Choose a trip you haven’t written about yet. Choose a different time period, and write about the trip as if it happened in that time period.

Visit a beautiful beach. A message in a bottle washes up onto the shore. What does it say? 

Imagine you had an extra day on a trip you loved. What would you do?

Write a letter of gratitude to someone who showed you an act of kindness while traveling.

Write about a trip with multiple destinations, from the perspective of your backpack.

What is one thing you’ve learned from a local while traveling? 

Write about a road trip you went on, from the perspective of someone or something else (maybe your car, wallet, side mirror, etc.).

Remember a time when you met people while traveling that felt like family. 

Have you gotten out of any sticky situations on the road? Tell us! 

If you could change anything about any of your trips, what would it be and why? 

What languages do you speak?

What countries and places around the world fascinate you?

What is your next adventure? 

Have you fallen in love while traveling? Talk about how you met and how your love progressed. 

What have you explored locally or regionally in your home country that has made you feel adventurous? 

Where would you go to learn more about your ancestors? Is it a dream trip? 

What is one destination that you will never forget?

What is one destination you could permanently move to? 

Where do you get your sense of wanderlust from? 

What’s the weirdest food you’ve tried around the world?

Would you rather see a bunch of cities in one trip for a shorter amount of time or spend more time in each city, and visit fewer? Why?

Have you visited any of the Wonders of the World?

Have you visited any UNESCO World Heritage sites? Which do you want to visit?

Have you visited any sites lived in or frequented by your favorite musicians? Or celebrities?

If you could speak, write, and read one additional language to your own, which would it be? Why?

What is the best local fast food you’ve had in a foreign country?

Do you prefer to travel alone? Or in a group? 

Which literary city would you love to visit? Why? 

What’s your favorite travel show? Why?

Prompts before you go

how to make travel journal paper

What is on your bucket list at this destination? 

What have you enjoyed about planning this trip the most? 

Why did you choose this itinerary?

What are your expectations of this destination or experience?

What are you most excited about? Why?

Are there any local delicacies you can’t wait to try? 

What is something new you want to try at this destination?

What souvenir do you want to bring home? And for whom?

What do you want to learn on this adventure?

What have you researched about this destination already? 

Is this a solo trip or are you traveling with friends or family?

Are you hoping to relax or go on adventures on this trip? 

What do you know about this destination? 

Give yourself a piece of advice before you leave on the trip. 

Prompts while you’re there

how to make travel journal paper

What was your first impression of your destination? What did you see, hear, smell first?

Draw a local landmark. 

Describe your hotel lobby/room or Airbnb residence.

What did you experience today that you enjoyed? Even the small things…

What was the worst thing that happened today?

Did anything make you smile, laugh, or cry? 

Did you try something new? 

What has been a total surprise about this destination? 

What are the cultural differences between your culture and theirs?

Which traditions would you like to adopt? 

Describe how people dress for work and play.

What meal can you eat again and again? 

How do the people here spend their time on the weekends?

What emotions have you felt during this trip?

Are there any current events at your destination that are affecting you?

How did an experience, person or place make you feel today?

Have you met any locals? Describe them.

Did you learn any new words or phrases today? How did you learn them? 

Sketch a moment you want to remember.

Describe an everyday activity you observed. 

Have any of your perceptions or opinions changed?

What will you miss when you return home?

Have you tried a local beer or wine yet?

Prompts after you’ve left

how to make travel journal paper

Overall, would you visit again? 

Would you change anything about the way you visited – the accommodations, the transportation, activities, etc.?

What was your favorite meal? 

What was your favorite tour or activity?

What were the highlights of your trip?

Did this adventure help you grow?

Where do you want to go next and why? 

What is one thing you wish you would’ve done?

Recall something funny that happened on this trip.

Were there any trip disasters?

Describe your favorite day or evening on this trip.

How did you feel when you arrived home? 

What’s one piece of advice you would give someone else going on this trip? 

Now that you’ve seen our list, what do you think? Leave us a comment below! 

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103 Ideas to Make Your Travel Journal Come Alive

By: Author Valerie Forgeard

Posted on April 6, 2024

Categories Travel

Are you looking for a unique way to document and remember your travels? A travel journal is a perfect solution! It will help you reflect on all the amazing experiences you have while traveling and can also be used as a creative outlet.

With this guide, we’ll provide you with 103 travel journal writing prompts for documenting your travels in an engaging and meaningful way. From creating maps to writing down local phrases, these tips are sure to inspire your next great adventure.

So grab a pen and paper or a digital journal app, and get started with these travel journal examples:

  • Before you leave, write about your excitement and anticipation for the trip
  • Your goals and expectations for the upcoming trip.
  • A list of places you want to visit and things you hope to see and do.
  • A packing list and any last-minute preparations you need to make.
  • Reflections on your feelings and concerns about the upcoming trip.
  • A budget and financial plan for the trip.
  • A list of the people you will be traveling with and your relationships with them.
  • A list of necessary documents or items you need to take with you.
  • A list of personal goals or challenges you would like to accomplish during the trip.
  • A list of the things you look forward to most during the trip.
  • Write down how you feel about leaving home for a while.
  • If you are traveling, record your itinerary, including the dates and cities you will visit.
  • Include maps and diagrams of the places you visit to help you remember your travels.
  • Include ticket stubs or other memorabilia from events or activities you participated in during your trip.
  • Describe the places you visited and what you saw, including landmarks, natural attractions, and cultural experiences.
  • Write about how it felt to wake up in a new place for the first time.
  • Write about where you are right now.
  • What is going on around you?
  • What can you see?
  • What do you hear?
  • What does it smell like?
  • What can you taste?
  • What can you touch?
  • What do people do?
  • How do they behave?
  • How is this place different from home?
  • Include photos and drawings of the places you visited and exciting objects or souvenirs you collected.
  • Write about the people you met on your trip and the friends you made.
  • Record your thoughts and feelings during the trip.
  • Write about any challenges you encountered on your trip and how you overcame them.
  • Make a list of the local foods you tried and your favorite dishes.
  • Write down recipes for your favorite dishes.
  • Write about unexpected events or adventures you had on your trip.
  • Write down the most boring moments and what went through your mind (e.g., waiting at the airport).
  • Write about unexpected detours or deviations from your original travel plans.
  • Reflect on what you learned on your trip and how it affected you.
  • Use the journal to plan future trips and list places you want to visit.
  • Record your travel expenses and budget so you can better plan future trips.
  • Write down any experiences you had with the local language or communication that stuck in your mind.
  • Write down any language barriers you encounter and the solutions you find.
  • Make a list of the local music and art you discover on your trip.
  • Write about the local history and culture of the places you visit.
  • Write about your accommodations and unique or memorable experiences you had there.
  • Write about memorable travel companions and the shared experiences you had.
  • Reflect on how your travels have influenced your perspective and worldview.
  • Write about spiritual or religious experiences you had during your travels.
  • Make a list of local media you consume while traveling, such as television shows or movies.
  • Write about lessons you have learned or insights you have gained on your travels.
  • Write about memorable moments of self-care or relaxation you had on your trip.
  • Make a list of local hobbies or interests you discovered or pursued on your trip.
  • Write about memorable personal growth or self-discovery moments you experienced on your trip.
  • Create a list of things you want to accomplish when you return from your trip.
  • Create a list of things you need to work on to improve yourself.
  • Write about local fashion or style.
  • Write down any notable modes of transportation you used, such as long car rides or flights.
  • Write about memorable experiences you have had with local sports or outdoor activities.
  • Write about local festivals or events you attended on your trip.
  • Write about your favorite place.
  • Describe the most memorable moment on your trip.
  • Write about memorable experiences with local media or entertainment.
  • Note your observations about local politics or current events (if you are in a safe and democratic country. If not, it is best to wait until you are back home).
  • Write about memorable experiences you had with local flora or plant life.
  • Write about experiences you have had with the local weather or climate.
  • Write down memorable experiences you have had with local spirituality or religion.
  • Make a list of local historical sites you visit on your trip.
  • Write about memorable experiences you had with local customs or traditions.
  • Write down what you like about the local culture and why.
  • Write down what you can not understand about the local culture and why.
  • Record memorable or humorous moments of your trip.
  • Record essential moments of cultural exchange or connection with locals.
  • Write about cultural differences you encounter on your trip.
  • Make a list of the local markets or shopping you visit and the unique or interesting items you find there.
  • Write down what you experienced while shopping or visiting local markets.
  • Write about any unexpected detours or deviations from your original travel plans.
  • Write down any memorable encounters you had with wildlife on your trip.
  • Write about spiritual or religious experiences you had on your trip.
  • Write your opinion about local media you consume on your trip, such as television shows or movies.
  • Write about memorable mishaps or disasters you experienced on your trip and how you handled them.
  • Write feedback about the books or literature you read on your trip.
  • Write down anything that comes to mind – anything you think is interesting or important, like a funny story or an interesting fact.
  • Write a poem about your trip.
  • After you return, make a thank-you list of the people and things that made your trip special.
  • Make a list of things you wish you had known before the trip or mistakes you made that you would like to avoid in the future.
  • Make a plan to stay in touch with the people you meet and connect with the places you visit.
  • Write a reflection on your overall travel experience and how the trip affected you.
  • Did it have a positive impact on you?
  • Would you have changed anything about your trip?
  • Would you travel to the same place again? Why and why not?
  • Would you live there? Why and why not?
  • Who would you advise to travel to the same place as you?
  • A summary of your best moments and memories from the trip.
  • List any new skills or hobbies you learned or developed during the trip.
  • A discussion of any personal growth or self-knowledge you experienced during the trip.
  • Describe the best thing that made the trip special.
  • Describe the people that made the trip special.
  • A set of goals or resolutions for future travel or personal development.
  • A creative text, such as a poem or short story, inspired by your trip.
  • A review or recommendations for places you stayed, activities you did, or restaurants you ate at.
  • A reflection on challenges or difficult moments you experienced during the trip and how you overcame them.
  • An expression of your hopes and dreams for future travel.
  • Express your hopes and dreams for future travel.

What Makes a Good Travel Journal

When traveling, there are many things to keep in mind. You must ensure you have the right luggage, a good itinerary, and enough money to enjoy your stay. However, one of the most important things you should consider when traveling is a good travel journal.

A Good Travel Journal Should Be Able to Record All the Memories of Your Trip

It should also withstand wear and tear and be used long after you return home. Travel journaling should also be easy to read and have enough space to write down everything that comes to your mind while traveling.

When looking for good travel journals, there are a few things you should look for:

  • Durability – A good travel journal must be durable enough to withstand the wear and tear of travel. It must also be able to withstand pressure or shock if dropped or damaged by water or other liquids when carried in your luggage during air or bus travel.
  • Esthetics – The appearance of an item is as important as its function in making an impression on others who see it; this is true even for something as simple as a bullet journal. If you’re using your journal to record memories and experiences, it needs to be visually appealing.
  • Portability – To make traveling more manageable, choose a travel journal that is easy to carry around and light enough to carry it around without too much hassle. You don’t want to worry about the weight of your bag when walking around town or going up the stairs at the airport!
  • Functionality – The most important aspect of any item is how well it works and serves its purpose. A traveler’s notebook can be as beautiful or expensive as it’s; if it doesn’t have enough pages for your needs, there’s no reason to buy it in the first place!
  • Size – You should ensure your travel journal is small enough to carry with you easily but large enough to write down all your trip details. Some travel diaries come with pockets where you can keep receipts and other important items like tickets and receipts. Some also have special sections where you can put pictures of people and places you visited on your trip.

However, You Can Also Opt for a Digital Diary

If you’re planning a trip soon, you might want to consider a digital travel journal.

A digital travel diary is an electronic device you can use to record your traveling experiences. The best part is that it’s both eco-friendly and extremely convenient.

Here are some of the main benefits of using such a device:

It’s Environmentally Friendly

A digital travel journal is an excellent way for eco-conscious travelers to record their experiences without using paper journals or notebooks. This means less environmental impact, which is good news for everyone. Plus, you don’t have to worry about losing anything important, as all content is stored digitally, making things easier for everyone.

It’s Easy to Manage Content

Another great advantage of a digital travel diary is that it’s easier than ever for people who want to stay active while traveling, as they can take their content with them wherever they go. This means no more bulky paper journals or notebooks in your luggage! You don’t need extra space either – everything fits in your bag.

Easy Access

You don’t have to carry around a heavy book wherever you go. You can store all your writings on a smartphone or tablet for easy access wherever you go. This is handy when you want to add photos, drawings, or audio recordings to your journal.

It’s More Flexible

With digital diaries, you can change the way you record information depending on how you want to use it at the time. For example, suppose you’re traveling alone and need some quiet time but still want to access your diary. In that case, you can write down some thoughts in a Word document on your laptop and then save them to Evernote or other cloud-based software so you can use them later at your convenience.

It’s Organized

Digital diaries are very easy to organize, which makes them much more helpful than their paper counterparts. You can create multiple sections for different types of information, such as places you visited or things you did during your trip, so you can easily find everything when you review your diary later.

You Can Customize It

Digital travel diaries allow you to insert photos, videos, and other media directly into the entries, making them even more engaging than traditional paper diaries.

How to Stay Disciplined With Your Travel Journal

One of the most common questions I get from people who want to keep a travel journal is, “How do I keep it up?” It’s not easy. Anything that requires discipline is hard to keep up, whether you’re trying to lose weight, write every day, or remember to drink water. You have to be disciplined, or it won’t work.

The problem with getting started is that it seems like a big commitment, and when you’re exhausted after a long day of travel, it’s easy to throw up your hands and say, “I can’t write!” But if you want to keep your travel journal for the long haul, you need to start small and slowly increase over time. Here are some tips:

  • Take 10 minutes every day (or at least once a week) . This may sound impossible if you travel for work and have little control over your schedule, but if you can take 10 minutes yourself, it’s on vacation! Make sure this time slot is reserved on your calendar, and treat it like an appointment – don’t cancel it unless it’s an emergency!
  • Be specific . Instead of saying, “We went snorkeling,” say, “We went snorkeling off the coast of Bali and saw some great fish.” Or instead of “I had a great time,” try something more descriptive like, “I laughed until my sides hurt at the Comedy Club on Bourbon Street in New Orleans.” The more specific you’re, the easier it’s for others to imagine what you did and how much fun they had.
  • Use photos for inspiration . If you don’t want to write about your trip immediately, use photos as inspiration first. Take some time to look through the photos from each day or evening of your vacation, and think about what happened in each photo.
  • Make notes of anything important . Every time something interesting happens to you or someone else on your trip, write down exactly what happened so that when you’re back home and want to write about it, you’ll have all the details at your fingertips!
  • Be honest . Don’t try to make yourself look better than you’re – write how it was. If you went snorkeling off Bali and saw great fish, write about that instead of saying, “We had a great time.” The more specific and concrete you’re, the easier it’s for others to imagine what they’d have done if they had been there too.
  • Use photos for inspiration . If you don’t want to write about your trip immediately, look at the photos first and think about what happened in each photo. Take some time to look through the photos from each day or evening during your vacation and think about what happened in each. This will inspire your writing later when you finally get around to writing about it!

From Personal Travel Experience, It Pays to Write a Travel Diary

Traveling is exciting, but it can also be stressful and exhausting. Whether you’re in the city or the middle of nowhere, many factors can affect how you feel when you’re away from home.

Writing a travel journal helps me process my experiences and keep my feet grounded amid all the chaos. It also allows me to reflect on all the beautiful things I experienced on my road trip.

A travel journal is a beautiful document in many ways:

It Helps You Remember the Details of Your Trip

Have you ever been somewhere where you wish you could remember more details? It can be difficult to remember every detail if you don’t write it down immediately after the experience. A travel journal can help you remember everything from sights and sounds to tastes and smells.

Dates and Locations Are Recorded

A big advantage of writing down travel experiences is that you get a better sense of timing compared to other methods, such as photos or video recordings since they’re usually taken at the end of the day or week rather than throughout the day. The date and location can also be helpful if someone else wants to take a road trip and know what to expect.

You Can Use It as a Reference Book

A travel journal is like having a personal encyclopedia at your fingertips. Whether it’s something as simple as directions or recommendations for food or lodging, or something more complex like historical facts or cultural information, having all this information in one place can be invaluable when planning future trips or even reminiscing!

It Gives You a Chance to Reflect on Your Experiences

Many people find it easier to reflect on their experiences by writing them down than trying to remember everything in their head (which can be frustrating). Travel journals are great for reflecting on our experiences because we naturally want to remember everything we experienced on our trips!

It Helps Keep Track of Your Budget

If you’re traveling on a limited budget, keeping track of your expenses can be difficult if they’re not written down somewhere. A travel journal is perfect for recording your food, transportation, lodging, entertainment, and souvenir expenses.

You’ll Have Something Interesting to Read Later

Travel is fun, but there are times when it can get frustrating or stressful. When that happens, it’s nice to take time out of the hustle and bustle of travel and sit down with your travel journal to reread all the great moments you experienced.

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How to Start a Travel Journal: 8 Rules for the Road

Learn how to start a travel journal with these 8 rules to make travel journaling simple, easy and fun process, no matter where your adventures may lead you.

how to start a travel journal

It’s May, summer vacation season is just a few weeks away and the travel bug is biting me hard as I think about different places I want to go – So today I thought it might be fun to talk about how to start a travel journal – even if you don’t have any immediate plans for adventure.

how to make travel journal paper

Starting a travel journal isn’t much different from starting any other kind of journal, but I do think there are a couple of things you can do to make the whole process a LOT more fun and way less stressful.

I know the hardest part of any type of new journal sometimes can be just getting started, so my hope is these 8 tips will help you get on the right path to decide what you want to do and what works best for you.

#1. There Are No Rules for What a Travel Journal Is or Has to Be or How to Use It

how to make travel journal paper

If you search for “travel journal” online – you’ll find all sorts of different things and examples. You might see pretty planners , you might see scrapbooks, you might see junk journals , art journals , sketchbooks, traveler’s notebooks, travel writing prompts, digital photo apps – and the list goes on.

Just trying to define what a travel journal is exactly can cause a lot of confusion! Fortunately, there really aren’t any rules for what your personal method for documenting a trip looks like.

I know the title of this blog post says “8 Rules of the Road”, but I assure that is only for alliterative purposes. There are NO rules when it comes to journaling. The only thing that matters is it is something you enjoy doing.

Your trips and adventures are unique to you – and so it only makes sense the way you want to document, record, or experience them would also be unique to you.

There’s no wrong way to keep a travel journal, and don’t worry about trying to make it look like the bazillion beautiful examples you might see online.

Don’t feel like you have to make elaborate sketches if you can barely draw a stick figure. Don’t worry about writing detailed journal entries of the day if writing is not your thing. You don’t even have to collect ephemera if it’s not something you enjoy.

Now this “rule” is out of the way, let’s go to the next one – it might surprise you! 

#2: You Don’t Have to Go Somewhere Exotic to Enjoy a Travel Journal

how to make travel journal paper

One of the biggest things that stopped me from starting travel journals in the past is that we weren’t really traveling anywhere all that exciting. 

Most people I know regularly go to all sorts of cool destinations. They tour Europe, they visit glaciers, they backpack & hike through canyons, they sip cocktails on the beaches of Mexico… 

In contrast, we’ve been doing things like going camping and the occasional drive to Ohio and Philadelphia for family events. Considering we live in Pittsburgh, it’s safe to say we weren’t exactly jet-setting across the world – we barely left the turnpike!

If I actually do the math of how much I traveled in the past year, I think I covered more miles just by taking the kids to school every day and running errands.

Like Theodore Roosevelt is famous for saying, “Comparison is the thief of joy.”

Don’t get me wrong – I definitely do appreciate the few trips we’ve made in recent years. It just made me wonder, Who on earth am I to keep a travel journal? What would I even write in a travel journal if I wasn’t going anywhere exciting? 

And then, while on one of our camping trips I had a revelation when I stumbled across this little gem of a brochure for a place called Historic Pithole City.

how to make travel journal paper

Yes, really, there is a place named Pithole city. Or rather, there was a place known as Pithole City. To be bluntly honest, it’s not even a city. It’s mostly just a field. A big, empty field.

This well-timed irony of a tourist attraction is what made me realize travel doesn’t necessarily have to be somewhere exotic to be interesting or journal-worthy.

The site of a vanished ghost town might not exactly be Barbados, but that doesn’t make it any less inspiring or not worthy of documenting. 

This brochure helped me come to my senses and realize you don’t have to go anywhere all that exotic to have a good time exploring the world. This brings me to the next important thing to remember when keeping a travel journal…

#3. You Are Here: Traveling is a State of Mind

how to make travel journal paper

After my revelation that you can explore the world without trekking any far distances, I realized maybe travel isn’t so much a physical place to be as much as it is a mental and emotional state of being.

It’s the attitude of wonder, an insatiable curiosity, a desire to explore…and that of course is what makes a lot of us the creative artistic types of people that we are!

I really like the wisdom in this quote:

“The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.” – Marcel Proust

Realizing this made me really excited to make all sorts of different travel journals – no passport required. Best of all, should I eventually start making plans to visit more exciting places, I will have lots of practice because I love documenting and recording the different things I discover.

#4: Start Filling the Journal Before You Go

how to make travel journal paper

If you are anything like me and love any reason to start a new journal, there’s no reason to wait to arrive at your destination!

Some trips can take months of planning and preparation, especially if you need to book far in advance around busy seasons and holidays. This is a great time to start documenting all those plans. To-do lists, checklists, lists of lists – these all make fun ways to get past a blank page.

The excitement and anticipation of planning a trip can be just as much fun as actually being on the trip, especially if it is a place you’ve always wanted to visit and you enjoy researching different places to see and things to do.

If you love the idea of a journal filled with pictures and artwork, you could even start filling the pages with different photos, vintage travel images, traveling quotes, etc long before you even leave. This can reduce the amount of things you need to take, especially if it’s already on the page.

There are all sorts of great ways to start filling and prepping your journal ahead of time. You can also include printed out information for directions or flight information or simply just make some notes.  All these things will be nice ways to remember what you did before the trip.

#5: You Don’t Need to Bring Everything, Or Even Anything

Where you plan to go and how you are getting there is probably one of the biggest deciding factors on what kinds of journaling supplies you should pack or if you even want to pack anything. 

I’m the kind of person who could have a beautifully prepped journal ready to go, and then forget it at home in the rush of getting 5 people in the family everywhere we need to be.

I’m also the kind of impromptu traveler who believes you truly only need to pack 3 things: Keys, Wallet, Phone.

While there are plenty of great art supplies and special journals perfect for traveling, don’t be tempted to lug everything with you.

I’m a total minimalist when I go places – I would be quite content with nothing more than a composition notebook, a ball point pen and a glue stick in a backpack. 

Jerry Q Art 18 Assorted Water Colors Travel Pocket Set- Free Refillable Water Brush with Sponge - Easy to Blend Colors - Built in Palette - Perfect for Painting On The Go JQ-118

Note: If you are going to different countries, you will also definitely need to consider things like going through customs and making sure the things you bring in and out are not going to cause any issues. Sometimes it’s easier to just get the supplies you want once you get there. 

#6. Be a Collector

As someone who loves to collect all sorts of types of ephemera, I love picking up anything on my travels that can fit in a notebook. Marketing brochures, maps, ticket stubs, receipts, magazine and newspaper pages – if it’s flat I’m going to put it in my journals.

These little things can really help you preserve a lot of memories you might not necessarily remember years from after the experience is over. It’s also a great way to share your adventures with a friend.

One important thing to remember if traveling abroad and going through customs is many items such as food, plants, and other things can be heavily regulated. This is important to keep in mind, because some things might be better to just take a picture of rather than actually bring back with you.

You definitely don’t want your journal confiscated, be detained for hours, or risk a $10,000 fine for having a seemingly innocent thing like an undeclared tea bag you forgot you taped onto a journal page!

If you are a U.S. Citizen and or visiting the U.S. from another country, you definitely want to make sure you are familiar with the CBP guidelines and regulations. It might even be helpful to include a checklist in your journal so you don’t accidentally forget what things can and can’t be brought back into the country or need to be inspected first. 

Going through customs can sometimes be a stressful experience, but usually if you are prepared and familiar with all the different rules and regulations, you should be able to visit most places with relatively little issue.

#7. Don’t Make Journaling a Chore

how to make travel journal paper

Everybody has different styles of how they like to travel. Some people like a trip jam-packed with a lot of activities, others might like a more laid back approach.

Some people like me consider journaling to be as essential as breathing, eating, and sleeping. Another person might think the thought of keeping a journal sounds too much like homework or a chore. 

When you go somewhere new, it’s important to not stress about whether or not you are actually able to write every single thing down or even have time to draw and write as much as you want.

For example, if you plan on painting with watercolors, it only makes sense to use a journal with mixed media or watercolor paper. If you mostly plan on making a smash-book junk-journal style book you could probably get away with a simple composition notebook.

It’s all a matter of personal preference and what you plan to do – so don’t stress it too much! Worse case scenario, you can always jot things down in a simple notebook while you’re traveling and then transfer it over into something a little more cohesive and organized once you get back.

#8. You Can Always Add More Once You Arrive Back Home

In the spirit of packing minimal supplies and keeping things simple so you can actually enjoy the trip, another thing to remember is you can always add more to the journal once you are back home.

For sure it is better to capture and document as much as you can while the memories are fresh, but a lot of the “making it pretty” can be done once you are back home and have the luxuries of your favorite art supplies readily available. 

Waiting until you get home to jot down some reflections on the trip and add in finishing touches like washi tape and stickers will give you a great opportunity to remember the moments that made it special.

Another thing you might want to do once you get back from the trip is actually print out any photos you may have taken and include them on your pages. A travel journal is a great way to motivate yourself to actually do something with all the photos you’ve taken!

Have you ever kept a travel journal? What are some of the things you do to make it easy and fun? What are some of the places you’ve traveled to? And of course if you have any travel journal tips you would like to share or questions I would love to hear from you in the comments section below!

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I love travel journals! And yes, the key is to prep one before you go! Also, we have actually been to Pithole City when we lived in Erie, PA. We thought it was very interesting, too. A little historic gem. Thanks for your travel journal ideas!

That’s too funny Ann – It is very interesting place for sure! Travel journals are definitely fun to make!

Nice post! I hope to start one this year once we can start travelling again!

I did the same thing, wasn’t using or putting a travel journal together because I wasn’t going to a major destination, and then even when I did (Alaska, East & West Carribean cruises) I STILL didn’t journal, I did pick up maps, magazines & kept all our tickets, have tons of photos! I recently managed to put everything related to those trips in a ArtBin storage bin and I’m finally putting it all together – what I learned from this is, definitely better & less stressful to put your travel journal together prior to your trip, as you go thru your trip, write down things you see, or places you went that you enjoyed, maybe a specific memory! I’m looking at some photos going where was this? Very frustrating! So I’m really regretting not jotting things down just as a reminder. So then, we went away Dec ’19 and I was prepared! What a difference! Looking back at that journal I can flip thru the pages & enjoy it! Thank you for putting this together, it’s very helpful! ~Silvana in FL (oh, and sorry for all the rambling lol)

Hi Silvania, I’m so glad you made one for your trip last year and hopefully the ones from past trips will come together quick now you’ve got everything sorted. And no worries about rambling, i think all of us as artists do it, I always enjoy every comment like yours, they make me smile. 🙂

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Savvy Travel Advice

14 Best Travel Journals for Travelers – Guide to Choosing the Perfect Travel Journal

Last updated: January 19, 2024 - Written by Jessica Norah 32 Comments

A travel journal can be a great way to record one’s memories and experiences while traveling. Laurence bought his first travel journal in 1999 to use on a trip to Namibia. I bought my first travel journal back in 2012 for a trip to France. We have both been keeping travel journals on most of our trips ever since.

Although I don’t do it often, I love re-reading my old travel journals. They bring back a lot of memories, and help me remember all the little things that happened that I may have forgotten, the good, the bad, and the hilarious.

I also find my old journals very useful in recording details, such as a guide’s name, the duration of a hike, or which restaurant we ate in during a trip which may not be something I can tell from a photo. This has helped us add details to travel blog posts, return to favorite spots, and give more specific travel advice to friends and family.

Over the years, we have used a lot of different journals for travel writing, from basic composition notebooks to custom handcrafted journals. We have used, gifted, and reviewed dozens of different types of journals.

This guide was written to help travelers find the best travel journal for them. Whether you are looking for a personal journal for an upcoming trip or looking for help in buying a travel journal as a gift, we’ll give you all the information you need to choose the best travel journal.

We’ll share what to look for when buying a travel journal, including things like size, page count, paper quality, closure types, and sustainability. Then we review a wide selection of different travel journals so that you can find one that suits your criteria, style, and budget.

best travel journals for travelers

Table of Contents:

14 Things to Consider When Buying a Travel Journal

Travel journals all have a lot in common, but there are also a number of differences. We’ll discuss the main factors you’ll want to consider when choosing a travel journal.

For many people, a journal for traveling is no different than a regular journal or diary. But there are things that may be more important to you for a journal that you take on a trip rather than one that stays next to your bed. These may include factors related to portability (size and weight) and durability (cover type, binding quality, closure type).

There is no perfect journal for travelers. My favorite travel journal is not necessarily the right one for you. Also the ideal journal may also depend on the type and length of your trip. A journal that is good for writing about short weekend trips may not work well on a month-long backpacking trip.

As you read this, I’d recommend making a list of the things that are most important to you in a journal. What size is right? What type of paper does it need to have? Do you want a guided or unguided journal? These notes can then help you narrow down the journals on our list and find the one that is perfect for you.

Journal Size

One of the more important factors to consider when buying a travel journal is its size or dimensions. The size of the journal that is best for you will depend on your needs.

For instance, someone who wants to be able to carry their journal in their back pocket or jacket is going to want a small journal. Those who plan to sketch or glue things onto pages (e.g., tickets, photos, flyers) of their journal may want to think about what size will be best suited to that.

I would recommend grabbing a book, journal, or piece of paper that you have handy at home and measuring them to get an idea of what size you prefer. You can fold or tear a piece of paper until you get the size that you think would be ideal, then you can search for journals with similar dimensions.

In most of the world, you likely see a lot of travel journals with sizing that says A5, A6, or B5 which are a standard size measured in millimeters. These are referring to the International Standard (ISO) paper sizes . For instance, A5 paper is 148 mm X 210 mm (5.8 inches X 8.3 inches).

However, if you are in North America or Central America, you are less likely to see journals advertised in ISO sizes. Countries such as the United States and Canada generally use North American paper sizes such as letter and legal paper sizes, which are measured in inches. You are much more likely to see journals that are designed to inch measurements, such as 5″ X 7″ or 7″ X 9″.

Generally if looking at measurements for journals, the first number will refer to the width and the second number refers to the height. So a 120mm X 170mm journal would be 120mm wide and 170mm high.

There is no “best” size for a travel journal, it just depends on your needs. I would just recommend not going any smaller than 3.5″ X 5″ or larger than A4 or letter-sized paper.

For some guidance from popular journal brands, Paperblanks has said its Mini (4″ X 5.5″) and Midi (5″ X 7″) sizes are the most popular. Moleskine has said that its brand’s “Pocket” (3.5″ X 5.5″) and “Large” (5″ X 8.25″) sizes are two of its most popular sizes. Leuchtturm1917 says its Classic A5 (5.75″ X 8″) and B5 (7″ X 10″) are two of its most popular sizes.

If you are looking for your first travel journal and have no idea what size to go for, I’d suggest either A5 (5.8 inches X 8.3 inches) or a “Mid-sized” one. So something that is approximately 5 inches X 7 inches (127 mm X 178 mm) to 6 inches X 8 inches (152 mm X 203 mm).

I have used a variety of journals of different sizes and tend to prefer more medium sized ones. We keep ours in our day bags or backpacks.

My current favorites are the Slim sized notebooks from Paperblanks which are 90 mm X 180 mm (3.54″ X 7″). Laurence typically uses the Midi sized ones which are 130 mm X 180 mm (5.1″ X 7″).

best travel journals for travelers journal sizes

Journal Weight

Weight is another factor to consider when choosing a travel journal. The weight is going to be affected by the cover type, the number of pages, and the overall size of the journal. Generally, journals with hard covers are heavier than those with soft covers.

Note that most journal brands do not note the weight of their journals online or on the labeling. But most journals are designed to be lightweight and portable, so this is probably mostly a factor to consider for those wanting a larger sized journal.

The weight of a journal is going to be more important for those who are backpackers or light packers. Those looking for a more lightweight journal, should consider a soft cover journal that is smaller in size. A refillable journal may also be a good option as you can control the amount of paper in it.

Most standard or mid-sized journals are fairly lightweight so this is not normally a big factor of consideration for us. Our travel journals generally range between 150 grams to 400 grams (6 oz to 14 oz), with most of my journals being around 8 ounces or 230 grams.

Number of Pages

The number of pages you will want is going to depend on how much you write, the length of your trip, and the size of the journal pages. It is also good to think about whether you want a travel journal for a single trip or if you want one that will last for several trips.

The number of pages will affect the thickness and the overall weight of your journal. So we would generally recommend trying to keep the page count under 250 pages.

It is important to note the difference between sheets and pages. A sheet of paper has 2 sides that you can write on. So if you see a journal specification that says it has 96 sheets, this means it would have 192 pages. Most journals will just advertise the number of pages you can write on, but you do occasionally see it noted in sheets.

I generally write 3-5 pages per day, so if going on a 2-week trip, I’d want to make sure to have at least 70 pages. If going for a month, 150 pages. For instance, a 176-page Paperblanks Slim journal lasts me about a full month of travel.

If you are not sure how many pages you want in a journal, most journals contain between 120 and 200 pages. So I think any journal with a page count in that general range is probably a good place to start.

If you are going on a particularly long trip, say over 3 months in length, you might want to consider starting with one journal and then getting new journals along the way as you fill them up. You might want to mail home your completed journals (recommend backing them up digitally first through) to avoid lugging them around the world.

man writing in travel journal best travel journals for travelers safari

Type of Paper

The type of paper is something most people will want to consider when buying a journal. The main question for me would be how do I plan to use the journal. For example, you will likely want a different type of paper if you would like to use your journal for both sketching and writing versus someone who solely wants to be able to write in it.

Here are some of the things you might consider regarding the type and composition of the paper in a journal:

  • Is the paper blank, lined, dotted/bulleted, or squared/graph paper?
  • For lined/dotted/squared paper, does the spacing between lines or dots matter to you?
  • Is it designed to be written on both sides of the pages (e.g., is both sides lined/dotted)?
  • Is it smooth or textured?
  • Is the paper acid-free? (acid-free paper ages better)
  • Is it designed primarily for writing or sketching?
  • What color is the paper?
  • Is it made from wood or cotton?
  • Is the paper made from a certified sustainable source (e.g., Forest Stewardship Council [FSC] certified)?
  • Is it suitable for certain types of writing instruments such as fountain pens, pencils, or charcoal?
  • Is the paper perforated?

Most journals are made of acid-free uncoated paper with a smooth texture that is designed to be used on both sides. Most paper used in made from wood pulp and is generally white, off-white, ivory, or cream in color.

Of all the above listed factors, the most important thing for most travelers is probably the type of page ruling in the journal (whether lined, dotted, blank, etc.). You probably already have a preference for the type of paper you write on. For example, I always choose journals with lined paper.

Note that a dotted, dot grid, and bullet journal are generally all referring to the same type of paper. Similarly, graph, grid, and squared paper are generally referring to the same type of paper.

Journal paper types best travel journals for travelers

The other thing you should consider is the type of writing instrument you plan to use. If using a regular ballpoint pen (the most common type), most journals should work just fine. Those with gel pens or fountain pens may want a slightly heavier than usual paper to avoid the ink going through the pages.

Those wanting to use pencils or draw with charcoal may prefer more textured paper. Those planning to use watercolor will need much thicker paper.

I would recommend avoiding notebooks with perforated paper unless you definitely plan to tear out pages. Perforated paper is much more likely to tear and come out of your journal.

I personally only use my journal for writing and strongly prefer lined paper. All of my travel journals have lined smooth acid-free paper that is designed to be written on both sides. But some people may prefer unlined paper or bullet journals; it really just depends on how you plan to use your journal.

Paper Quality

There are different things that you can look at in terms of evaluating paper quality such as the material, weight, thickness, finish, grain, etc. The majority of these things are not going to be that important to most people.

The paper used in travel journals is almost always made from wood pulp, but you might also see some premium journals or handmade journals using cotton or linen paper.

The main thing to look at when assessing page quality is the weight of the paper which is typically measured in grams per square meter and may be denoted as the gsm, g/m², or g/sq m. This is the most common indicator of paper quality that is provided to consumers.

Note that in North America you’ll likely come across the U.S. paper basis system where paperweight is measured in lbs (such as 70lb or 70#). But normally measurements are also given in the metric gsm as well. For example, 70lb paper is typically equal to about 100 gsm.

As you look at journals, you’ll notice a fairly wide range of paper weights from about 60 gsm to 140 gsm. I would recommend looking for a journal with paper between 70 gsm and 120 gsm.

Note that the size of the journal can affect the paperweight with thinner paper often used in smaller journals. For example, the smaller sized Paperblanks journals often have 85 gsm paper whereas the larger ones have 120 gsm paper.

For most people, the gsm of the paper isn’t going to matter very much. But if you plan to use a fountain pen, marker, etc. then the paperweight and type is going to be much more important. For example with a fountain pen, heavier weight papers are generally better able to resist feathering, ghosting, and bleeding.

We have had journals with a range of paperweights, from 70 gsm to 120 gsm, with most being around 85 gsm. On most of our journals, we have just written with various ballpoint pens and had no issues.

I also have a Platinum #3776 Century fountain pen and it seems to perform fine on most paper in this weight range but it can vary. The biggest factor seems to be how smooth the paper is, as the pen generally does better on smoother paper.

Fountain pens users may want to read reviews by fellow fountain pens users to judge performance of any particularl journal. However, the way that a fountain pen will perform on a specific journal will depend not only on the paper, but also on your specific ink, nib, and the pressure applied during writing.

writing with fountain pen best travel journals for fountain pen users

Bound Journal Versus Refillable Journal

Most travel journals are bound, but another option to consider is a refillable journal system. These are where you purchase a journal cover that normally comes with a closure, replaceable paper inserts, and rubber bands to affix the inserts. You can then purchase additional paper inserts as you need them.

The refillable paper inserts are typically affixed inside using an elastic or rubber band, a cord, or a ring binder. Most refillable journals are designed to hold a total of 3 compatible paper inserts.

As you would expect with refillable journals, the paper inserts are not going to be as durable as a bound book. These inserts are often bound using saddle stitching and/or staples. But if you are just using these for one trip and then storing them at home, this is probably not that important to you.

Although a refillable journal is typically more expensive than a bound journal, they tend to be less expensive over time versus buying a new bound journal for each trip. They can also be a more sustainable option if you keep using the same cover and just replace the paper inserts. They also allow you to have the same journal cover and writing experience for a long time.

Investing in a refillable journal is probably best for people who already know they enjoy journaling, know the size of journal they prefer, and know the type of journal they like. You don’t want to invest in a system you are not sure you are going to like.

Another benefit of refillable journals is that you easily personalize them and change the type of paper you are using. With many brands, you can also add things like folders, pouches, pen loops, decorative charms, etc.

A couple of popular brands making refillable journals are The Traveler’s Company (Midori) and Wanderings . Most brands use leather covers but you can also find faux leather covers out there as well. You just want the material to be durable enough to last through years of wear and tear from traveling.

If you decide on a refillable journal, things to consider are the quality/durability of the cover, extra features (e.g., pockets, ribbon, etc.), and the availability of correctly-sized paper options for your chosen journal. You’ll also want to check to see how the paper refills are inserted and check to see if it will lie completely flat when you write in it.

Midori Traveler's Notebook top travel journals for traveling best journal for travellers

Journal Binding

If you are planning to buy a bound journal, you will want to consider how the journal is bound. The journal binding can affect the durability of your journal. It can also affect how it opens, such as whether you can open and lie it down completely flat or not.

There are a lot of different book binding methods and the options available may depend on the type of cover (soft versus hard cover) and the thickness of the journal. Common journal binding methods include Smyth sewn binding, case binding, glue binding, spiral binding, and saddle stitch binding.

For many people, the type of journal binding may not be very important as most people just want to make sure that their journal is strong enough to last the duration of their trip.

But if you are wanting something more durable, I recommend journals that have been bound using Smyth sewing. This is considered the best type of binding in terms of quality and durability. But these journals are also a little more expensive than ones that have been bound using other techniques.

Smyth sewn means that groups of folded pages have been stitched together with binder thread, and then multiple groups are joined together. This makes it more durable than those that have just been glued for instance and it is much less likely that pages will come out. It also allows for the book to be opened completely flat.

If you don’t like the Smyth sewn bound journals or are looking for something a bit less expensive, you might look at a good quality spiral-bound or coil-bound notebook. These are usually fairly inexpensive, lie flat, and the pages won’t fall out. However, spiral notebooks tend not to be designed as travel journals (often they are designed for school or work use, an exception being the Write it Down journals ) and often don’t have any type of closures, but you can create your own binding with a piece of elastic.

The type of bound journals I generally avoid are those bound using only glue, staples, or basic stitching. These tend not to be that durable and you may have an issue with the pages coming out, especially for the ones where pages are just glued to the spine. But if you are going on a short trip or just need something to jot notes in, these will work just fine.

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Journal Closure

Another thing to consider is whether you want a journal with a closure or not, and if so, what type of closure you prefer. I would strongly recommend having some kind of way to close your travel journal. This will help protect the pages and binding of your journal from getting bent, torn, or soiled. If you plan to shove your journal into your backpack or purse on your trip, we’d definitely recommend one with a closure.

Probably the most common type of closure for a journal is an elastic band that stretches lengthwise over the journal to keep it closed when not in use. Other types of closures include magnetic wrap, magnetic strap, snap, metal clasp, leather strap, hook, button wrap, and ribbon tie closures. The more creative ones, such as ribbon ties and button wraps, are more typical on handmade journals.

The type of closure may or may not be important to you. I always buy a travel journal with a closure; however, I don’t have a strong preference for a specific type of closure. I have used travel journals with a variety of closures, including magnetic strap, metal clasp, elastic band, and magnetic wrap. All of these worked fine. My favorites are probably the magnetic strap and metal clasp ones.

The only issue that I have found with elastic band closures, which are very common, is that they can with use over time lose their stretch and/or wear little grooves into the edges of the cover. These are minor issues but something to consider if planning to use the same journal for a longer period.

Note that many guided travel journals don’t come with a closure for some reason. So if you are looking for a guided journal and you want a closure, be sure to check the description carefully.

If you have a notebook or journal you like, but it doesn’t have any type of closure you could consider adding one. For example, some companies like Midori Traveler’s Company and Wanderings sell replacement closure straps for their journals that might work for your journal. Or if you have some DIY skills, you could consider adding an elastic band, ribbon, or magnetic closure of your own. For example, this is a DIY video of someone adding an elastic closure to a hardcover Wire-O bound journal.

best travel journals for travelers journal closure types

When choosing a travel journal, another feature you might consider is the type of cover. The main two options are a softcover or hardcover journal.

A softcover journal is generally lighter, more flexible. and slimmer, whereas hardcover journals are generally sturdier, heavier, and thicker. Hardcover journals generally allow for more pages for those looking for journals with a lot of pages.

Most popular journal brands such as Moleskine, Paperblanks, and Leuchtturm offer both softcover and hardcover journals. For example, Moleskine offers a selection of both softcover and hardcover journals. Most of their hard covers are made of polypropylene, while the soft covers are made of polyurethane.

Covers can be made of a variety of materials including binder’s board (chipboard), plastic, cardboard, kraft paper, leather, and cork.

Leather journals (or vegan alternatives) are a popular choice for refillable journals as they tend to be both durable and age well.

top travel journals for traveling best journal for travellers

Unguided Versus Guided Journals

A guided journal is a journal that includes prompts, questions, or exercises of some kind to inspire and encourage one’s writing. An unguided journal is just full of blank pages for people to free write as they wish.

Most people use just a regular journal or notebook as a travel journal. But you can also get journals that are designed exclusively to be used as a travel journal and include things like travel-related writing prompts, questions, quotes, and trip planning exercises.

If this is your first journal experience, you might enjoy things like writing prompts and lists that can help guide your writing and help you get into the habit of daily writing. They can also help make sure that you remember to write about all the different aspects of your trip.

Some of the really focused travel journals may come with a lot of specific travel-related features like memento pouches, waterproof covers, maps, packing lists, planning checklists, etc. So they can also be used for planning activities before your trip.

Some examples of guided travel journals include the Everywhere You Go Journal , the Promptly Minimalist Journal , the Duncan & Stone Journal, the Clever Fox Planner & Journal , the Write it Down journals , and the One Line Voyage Travel Planner & Journal .

Most journals designed for kids and teens are also guided and generally include a lot of exercises and activities in them as well.

I personally just use regular unguided journals as my travel journals as these allow me as much space as possible to just write. So if you are someone who writes a lot and likes to write about whatever topic comes to mind, you’ll probably want to avoid these types of journals. But if you are someone who is new to journaling, these can be a great first journal.

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Travel journals are sold at a wide variety of price points, from a few dollars to over $50. You’ll pay more for premium refillable journal systems, handmade journals (particularly those with leather covers), and personalized journals. Guided journals also tend to be more expensive than unguided.

Price will depend primarily on the type and quality of the materials used, the binding method, the size of the journal, where it is manufactured, and any included personalization

You don’t need to pay a lot for a travel journal. Most of the journals we have used over the years have fallen in the $10 to $20 range, although inflation has been driving up prices. The last journal I bought cost me about $16.

But I’ve also used a simple composition notebook that cost a few dollars on one trip. If you have a small budget, don’t worry too much about finding a fancy journal, just find something that is the right size and has the kind of paper you want. The most important thing is that you have something that you can and will write in during your travels.

For instance, if you have a small budget you can get a school notebook or memo pad for a few dollars. Field Notes is a great USA-based brand focused on selling packs of pocket-sized notebooks at good prices. You can easily find basic journals for under $10 at a local store or online such as the Amazon Basics Journal .

Paying more for a journal sometimes results in better quality, but sometimes not as more well-known brands can charge more than less popular brands for similar quality. So we definitely recommend paying attention to the details if you are looking for something a bit nicer.

Sustainability

There are a lot of factors you might consider when it comes to evaluating a brand’s sustainability. These might include the materials used to produce the journal, where its products are manufactured, where its products are shipped, the company’s ethos, the staff working conditions at the company, whether the journal is reusable or recyclable, the journal’s durability, etc.

You’ll have to do your own research on a specific brand, some brands are very transparent whereas others provide very little public information regarding their sustainability practices. Some brands that specifically market themselves as being more sustainable are Dingbats , Karst (a B Corp), Rocketbook (reusable), and Field Notes .

One factor will depend on where you are based. If you are based in the USA for instance, a journal made of American materials and manufactured in the USA, such as those by Field Notes , is likely going to be more sustainable than one that is produced in Europe or Asia. See the next section on country of origin for some tips on finding brands produced in your own country.

Refillable journals would also likely be more sustainable over time than a bound journal as you can keep using the same cover for many years. You just need to replace the paper refills rather than the whole journal. You would just want to make sure the cover is well-made and durable so it will last for a long time.

For those looking for vegan travel journals, many journals are not vegan due to either the glue or dye used or the use of leather as part of the cover or binding. Even many companies that sell faux leather journals are not fully vegan (due to glues, inks, or dyes).

However, there are still several vegan-friendly journal options out there. Dingbats and Scribbles That Matter , for example, are two brands that only produce vegan-friendly journals. So if you are vegan or buying a journal as a gift for a vegan, I’d check out those two brands first.

woman writing in travel journal during safari best travel journals for traveling

Country of Origin

Travel journals are made in countries around the world with many being produced in China since it is cheap to manufacture products there. If you are concerned about quality control, sustainability, working conditions, or carbon footprint, you may want to pay attention to where products are made and from where they are shipped. Some companies even provide details of their whole supply chain.

If you have a hard time finding where a product is made on a journal description or company website, it is typically made in China. Some companies will use phrases like “British design” or “Italian heritage” but this typically just means their products are designed in Europe but are actually produced in China.

For example, while a lot of companies are based in North America or Europe (e.g., Moleskine, Paperblanks, Leuchtturm1917), most manufacture their journals in China and/or Taiwan. This also goes for smaller more “indie” brands like BaronFig, Scribbles That Matter, Archer & Olive, and Beechmore Books, which all produce their journals in China.

It can be difficult to find a journal produced in one’s own country or region, but here are some journal brands listed by where they produce their products (to the best of my knowledge) to help get you started:

  • United States : Field Notes , Write it Down , Appointed , Leather and Earth Co ., Roaring Spring , and Word. journals are made in the USA.
  • United Kingdom : Bespoke Bindery , Pink Pig , The Stamford Notebook Co ., Billy Tannery , and Citrus Book Bindery make their journals in the UK.
  • Canada :  MacLellan Books and Ecojot produce their journals in Canada.
  • Germany : Nuuna and X17   both manufacture their journals in Germany.
  • France/Morocco : Rhodia journals are made in France (although it appears their Webnotebooks are currently being made in Morocco but still use the French Clairefontaine paper)
  • Italy : Epica , Ciak , and Belcraft produce their journals in Italy.
  • Australia : Notely makes their notebooks in Australia.
  • Turkey : Dingbats journals is based in Lebanon but journals are currently made in Turkey
  • Japan : Midori MD journals, and those of their subsidiary The Traveler’s Company.  are made in Japan (leather covers made in Thailand).
  • Nepa l: The Kathmandu Valley Co makes its journals in Nepal.
  • Any Country : Try Etsy to find homemade journals and notebooks produced in your own country or region. You can filter by shop location and then research where it is made.

The above is by no means a comprehensive list of journal brands, and if you have a brand of journals you’d like to recommend that is manufactured in your own country, feel free to leave us a comment.

best travel journals for travelers map journal

Other Travel Journal Features

There are a lot of other features you might see on different travel journals. Some are just general journal features and some are specifically tailored to travel journals.

Some common features that you may see are attached ribbon markers, interior pockets or folders, rounded corners, pen loops, foldouts, writing prompts, stickers, waterproof covers, memento pouches, travel or packing lists, etc.

  • Ribbon bookmarks
  • Interior pockets or folders
  • Rounded corners
  • Numbered Pages
  • Daily writing prompts
  • Waterproof covers
  • Travel info / maps
  • Travel packing lists

One nice design feature can be rounded corners, as these are designed to protect the cover and pages from wear and tear compared to sharp corners. Rounded corners are common in travel journals; most journals produced by popular brands Moleskine and Leuchtturm1917 have rounded corners.

Some of the really focused travel journals come with a lot of specific travel-related features like maps, memento pouches, waterproof covers, travel specific writing prompts, packing lists, etc.

For me, the only feature of the above that I always look for is an attached bookmark ribbon to keep my place in the journal during a trip. Other features can be nice but are not must-haves for me.

best traveling journals for travelers couple of travellers writing in journals

14 Best Travel Journals 

Below is our list of 14 different travel journals and notebooks. They come in a variety of sizes, colors, styles, price points, and countries of origin. All can be purchased online.

We are fairly certain that most people will be able to find the perfect travel journal for them on this list!

These 14 travel journals are listed in no particular order.

1. Moleskine Classic Journal

Moleskine is one of the best-known journal brands, particularly for travel journals. Most Moleskine journals feature rounded corners, a ribbon bookmark, an expandable inner pocket, and an elastic band closure. The journals are Smyth-sewn and bound to be able to lie flat.

The journals are available in both hardcover and softcover versions, with a choice of blank, lined, squared, or dotted paper, and in a number of colors. They come in a wide range of sizes from XS (2.5 inches X 4.25 inches) to XXL (8.5 inches X 11 inches). Most Moleskine journals come with ivory-colored 70 gsm acid-free paper.

how to make travel journal paper

Don’t worry, no moles were harmed in making these journals! Most of Moleskin’s hard covers are made of polypropylene, while the soft covers are made of polyurethane. They also offer more expensive leather-covered and silk-covered versions of the Classic Journal.

The regular Moleskine Classic Journals have 192 pages, but the expanded versions have 400 pages. So be sure to double check if you are concerned about weight or number of pages.

In addition to their original Classic collection, Moleskine also offers a wide range of other journal options, including journal collections designed for those who want to sketch, draw, and/or watercolor. They have also released a number of limited editions and collaborative notebooks.

Moleskine journals are designed in Italy and most are manufactured in either China or Taiwan.

A lot of people think it is a heritage brand with a long history, but it was actually introduced in 1997 by the Italian company Modo & Modo. The name was inspired by the type of journals that English travel writer Bruce Chatwin used which he called “carnets moleskine” in his book The Songlines .

Chatwin specifically used small notebooks bound with black shiny oilcloth covers which were wrapped in an elastic band. He also notes that he used squared paper. According to Moleskine founder Francesco Franceschi, many famous writers and artists used these “moleskine” type little notebooks, including Ernest Hemingway, Vincent Van Gogh, and Pablo Picasso. These notebooks were produced in France and purchased in paper stores in Paris.

While the modern versions are certainly not the same thing, the version that was inspired by these 19th and 20th century journals of Chatwin and others is the Moleskine Classic notebook line. The closest to Chatwin’s journal would probably be the black softcover pocket-sized Moleskine journal with squared pages.

Due to their popularity, Moleskine journals receive both a lot of praise and criticism. Probably one of the biggest criticisms is that they use a fairly low paperweight (70 gsm) compared to their main rival Leuchtturm1917 (80 gsm to 100 gsm on their classic journal). This means a bit less quality, but it does mean a more lightweight journal and they are able to sell them at a lower price than Leuchtturm1917.

My personal opinion is that they are good journals and perfectly fine for most people to use as a travel journal. They are decent quality, lightweight, readily available (both online and in stores), and come in a variety of colors, sizes, and styles.

One of the great things about Moleskine is they are widely available in many bookstores and stationery stores, at least in Europe and North America. This means you may be able to easily go check them out in person and although color choices and sizes are usually limited in stores, the most popular ones are usually kept in stock.

If you are considering a Moleskine travel journal, but are not sure which to try, I would recommend starting with one of their regular Classic Notebook ones . You can then choose between a softcover or hardcover and the type of paper you prefer. If unsure of which size to get, Moleskine has said that it brand’s “Pocket” (3.5″ X 5.5″ | 9 cm X 14 cm) and “Large” (5″ X 8.25″ | 13 cm X 21 cm) sizes are two of its most popular sizes.

I’ve personally used both a large Classic soft cover (Large size, lined paper, 192 pages) and a medium Classic hardcover (Medium, lined paper, 208 pages) journal in two recent trips, which both happened to be to Italy. Both worked well as journals, but my clear favorite was the medium lined hardcover journal—I liked both the hardcover and the slightly smaller size.

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2. Leuchtturm1917 Classic Journal

Leuchtturm1917 is another popular journal brand; it is based in Germany. The brand first released its journals in 2005, although the company’s history loosely dates back to 1917 when it began printing coin and stamp books under the brand KaBe.

Leuchtturm1917 journals are Smyth sewn and feature rounded corners, an expandable inner pocket, and an elastic band closure. A few features that the brand is known for are its numbered pages (most journals come with page numbers, some feature dates), 2 attached book markers, table of contents page, stickers for labeling and archiving, and having some perforated sheets at the back of each notebook that are easy to remove if needed.

how to make travel journal paper

The buff-colored paper in the Classic journals ranges between 80 gsm and 100 gsm, depending on the size of the journal. The heavier paper is used in the larger sized journals. Available paper choices are blank, lined, squared, or dotted.

The Leuchtturm1917 Classic journals come in several sizes from Pocket (A6, 9 cm X 15 cm | 3.5″ X 6″) to Master (A4+, 22.5 cm X 31.5 cm | 8.8 inches X 12 inches). Its most popular sized notebook is its Medium A5 (5.75″ X 8″).

Both hardcover and softcover journals are available, but the availability depends on the journal size. Some sizes are only available with one type of cover. Their main hardcover journal covers are made of acrylic paper and their soft covers are made from polyurethane.

Note that the page count in Leuchtturm1917 journals depends on both the journal size and whether they have a hard cover or soft cover. For example, the Classic A5 journal in the soft cover format has 123 pages and the hard cover format has 251 pages.

They come in a rainbow of colors with a wider array of color choices than many other brands. I believe the Classic journals are available in 24 colors in total, but not in every size or color type. You’ll need to shop online to find the full color range.

In addition to their classic notebooks, they also have a range of bullet journals, change journals, sketch journals, and limited editions. Their “Official Bullet Journals” have been popular in recent years with the bullet journal (BuJo) community.

Leuchtturm1917 journals are designed in Germany, and made in Taiwan and China.

The brand launched its journals in 2005 to compete with brands like Moleskine. So many of the features between the two brands are similar. Differences include the extra bookmark, heavier paperweight, page numbering, archival stickers, and more color options. The heavier paperweight is often a feature preferred by fountain pen users. But Moleskine notebooks are generally a little more lightweight than Leuchtturm1917 (and sometimes less expensive); they are also easier to find in certain parts of the world.

If you are considering a Leuchtturm1917 and not sure which to try, I’d probably recommend starting with the Classic A5 journal. It is available with either a hard cover or soft cover, with 4 paper choices, and lots of color options.

One thing I don’t love about the Leuchtturm1917 notebooks is that the number of pages and size options vary by cover types. So a softcover and hardcover journal of the same size will probably have a different number of pages. So just be sure you check the page count if you are considering various options.

I think Leuchtturm1917 journals are nice journals and are likely to work well for most people wanting a travel journal. If you are trying to decide between a Moleskine and one of these, the paper is a bit nicer than that in the Moleskine Classic journals and they offer a few more features, but the differences are not likely to make a huge difference to most people.

3. Paperblanks Journals

Paperblanks is another popular brand of journals and notebooks. The company was founded in Vancouver, Canada in 1992. In 2022, it became part of the Hachette UK publishing group.

Paperblanks journals are all Smyth-sewn and use acid-free ivory paper. The paper weight used varies from 85 gsm to 120 gsm, depending on the journal size and type. The majority of journals contain a bookmark ribbon (some contain two) and an inside memento pouch. Most of the journals contain either lined or unlined (blank) paper, but they do have a few options for dot grid or gridded (squared) paper.

Paperblanks is unique in that there is no “classic journal” in their collection, and they don’t really make any plain-looking journals. They are much more focused on the journal’s cover designs and many are an homage to old manuscripts, artists, or writers. They also offer a variety of journal styles, sizes, and closure types.

how to make travel journal paper

So I think with Paperblanks, the first thing to decide is what size you like, and then whether you prefer a softcover or hardcover journal. That will then narrow down your choices so you can see the available designs.

The sizes of Paperblanks journal range from Micro (7 cm X 9 cm | 2.75″ x 3.625″) to Grande (21 cm x 30 cm | 8.25″ x 11.75″), so most people should be able to find a size that suits them. If you are looking for a “standard travel journal” size, I’d recommend their Midi sized journals .

The page count varies depending on the size and design, but most Paperblanks journals contain between 144 pages and 208 pages.

Paperblanks journals are designed in Canada and made in China.

Personally, I love their hardcover Slim sized journals and Laurence prefers either the Mini or the Midi. The Slim size format, which I really like, has led to me buying a lot of these journals over the years as this size of journal is not common. I also enjoy their old manuscript designs over the more plain designs of most journals.

If you are having trouble finding Paperblanks journals available in person or online in your area, we’d also recommend checking out similar journal designs by Peter Pauper Press . These journals are easier to find in North America whereas Paperblanks are easier to find in Europe.

4. Rhodia Webnotebooks

Rhodia is a French brand that has been selling paper products since 1934. The company was acquired in 1997 by Clairefontaine which has been making paper at its own mill since 1858 and stationery products since 1890.

While not as well known as some of the other brands on this list, Rhodia is a brand that is often recommended to fountain pen users and those wanting a journal with high-quality smooth paper. Their most well-known product is the Rhodia Webnotebooks, also affectionately known by users as “Webbies”.

The Rhodia Webnotebooks are Smyth-sewn and feature 90 gsm ivory acid-free Clairefontaine paper, rounded corners, an inner pocket, a ribbon marker, and an elastic band closure. Each has 192 pages (96 sheets), and is available with a choice of blank, lined, or dot grid paper.

how to make travel journal paper

The classic Rhodia Webbies are hardcover notebooks with a faux leather black and orange cover. However, they now offer hardcover Webnotebooks with a variety of cover color choices as part of their Rhodiarama range.

The Webbies come in two main sizes: Pocket size (A6) which is 9.5 cm X 14 cm (3.5 inches X 5 inches) and the larger size (A5) which is 14.5 cm X 21 cm (5.5 inches X 8.25 inches).

In addition to the Rhodia Webnotebooks, Rhodia makes a variety of other types of journals, writing pads, and notebooks. These include softcover journals, wire-bound notebooks, pocket memo pads, calligraphy pads, etc. The brand Clairefontaine is well known in France for its quality school notebooks.

Rhodia journals are designed and made in France using Clairefontaine paper. Many of the Rhodia products are made in the Alsace region. However, some of their journals, including the last Webnotebook I bought, are now made in Morocco but still use the French paper.

Rhodia journals can be more difficult to find in stores outside of Europe, so I would recommend looking online.

These are nice quality notebooks with smooth paper, and the Webbies are often recommended to those wanting to write with a fountain pen. Those who enjoy smaller journals will likely want to try one of the pocket A6 size Webbies and those wanting a more typical travel journal size will likely want to try one of the A5 size Webnotebooks .

5. Amazon Basics Classic Journal

If you like the classic simple design of a Moleskine journal but not the price, consider a Amazon Basics Classic Journal. It has many of the same features as the Moleskine journal but comes at a significantly lower price, usually priced under $10.

The Amazon Basic journal has a hard cover with off-white, acid-free paper and rounded corners. It is bound to lie flat and it has 80 gsm paper and 240 pages (120 sheets).

Simple design but does include a black elastic band closure, an attached bookmark ribbon, and an expandable paper pocket in back. Available with lined/ruled, blank (classic), and grid paper options.

how to make travel journal paper

It comes in one main size of 5 inches X 8.25 inches (close to an A5 size) and comes in several different colors. Amazon journals are made in China.

So compared to my Moleskine classic hardcover with ruled paper, the Amazon Basics journal has many of the same features such as rounded corners, elastic closure, back pocket, and ribbon bookmark. It has the same number of pages as the Moleskine Classic Large hardcover journal. The Amazon one has darker lines and says it has 80 gsm paper (versus 70 gsm in Moleskine). So there are many reasons to recommend the Amazon one.

Now the price difference does mean that the quality isn’t quite the same. The Moleskine cover does feel nicer and “softer”, seems to be better constructed, and the Moleskine includes a “In Case of Loss” page in the front. So if you value the feel and construction, the Moleskine is definitely nicer and feels and looks more premium. You also get a lot more choices in the size, color, and cover in a Moleskine.

However, if you like the style, size, and color options of the Amazon Basic journals, then there is little question that it is a good value buy in comparison to the Moleskine. I am currently using an Amazon journal for daily notes and keep it in my backpack or purse, and it has been a good journal so far.

The Amazon Basics Classic Journal is a great budget buy if you are looking for a simple hardcover journal. It can be purchased online directly from Amazon.

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6. Field Notes Journals

Field Notes is an American brand that specializes in pocket-sized notebooks and memo pads. If you are looking for a pocket-friendly journal or looking for a journal made in the USA, this is a brand to consider.

Field Notes started in 2007 and was inspired by the simple 20th century agricultural field notebooks used by farmers across rural America. Field Notes staple product is a pocket-sized memo book with a kraft brown cover.

The Original Kraft memo book measures 3-1/2″ wide by 5-1/2″ tall (89 mm X 140 mm), uses 90 gsm acid-free bright white paper, is bound by a rugged saddle stitching and three staples, has rounded corners, and has a kraft brown cover. They are available with blank, lined, or squared paper. Each memo book contains 48 pages and are typically sold in packs of 3.

These pocket-sized memo books are probably better suited to those who prefer to jot down notes rather than to write out long daily journal entries. Although these little memo pads can still be great for short trips even for those who tend to write a lot. For those looking for a more traditionally sized travel journal, you can check out some of the other options from Field Notes.

how to make travel journal paper

Field Notes are known for their limited edition covers and designs that change regularly. They also now offer a much wider variety of memo book and notebooks with a variety of covers, sizes, and styles. These include larger sized formats, wire flip notebooks, waterproof editions, perforated notebooks, and notebooks designed for left-handed writers.

If you are looking for a more durable or larger journal that is more like a typical travel journal, I’d check out their Field Notes Pitch Black Note Books which have sturdier black covers. These are offered in the regular pocket size in 3-packs with each containing 48 pages. They are also offered in a larger size at 4.75 inches X 7.5 inches (121 mm X 191 mm) and sold in packs of 2, each containing 64 pages.

Adventure travelers may also be interested in their durable and waterproof Expedition Edition notebooks. These feature a waterproof and durable hi-vis cover and synthetic waterproof paper.

All Field Notes brand products are printed and manufactured in the USA. The company provides some of the most detailed information I’ve seen for a company about its materials, printing, and manufacturing process.

If you are looking for simple, lightweight, smaller notebooks, these are a great option to consider. They are also very budget-friendly as you can get a 3-pack for under $15. If you are a fan of Field Notes regular kraft memo notebooks, you can get a journal cover case to help protect them when traveling.

I’d also recommend Field Notes if you are looking for a brand that prints and manufactures all its journals in the USA. These are mainly sold online and can be hard to find outside of North America.

7. Midori Traveler’s Company Traveler’s Notebooks

Midori started making paper and stationery products in Japan back in 1950. In 2006, they released their Traveler’s Notebook, a refillable travel journal, and it became very popular. In 2015, they changed the brand name of these travel notebooks from Midori to Traveler’s Company.

The Traveler’s Notebook is essentially a reusable leather cover with replaceable rubber band connectors, elastic and metal clasp, and paper notebooks. Each journal also comes with a cotton storage bag. The Traveler’s Notebook is designed to last for a very long time and all the elements are repairable or replaceable.

how to make travel journal paper

Each Traveler’s Notebook comes with one paper journal insert. The inserts are saddle stitched and each contains 64 pages. Paper inserts are available in a variety of paper types including blank, lined, squared/grid, watercolor, kraft, sketch, calendar, and thin paper. It depends on the insert but the paperweight of the paper inserts is normally 80 gsm.

The paper inserts can be replaced and changed out, and you can use a variety of different inserts at once if you wish. Depending on the insert, you can fit up to 5, but most people report using 2-3 inserts at once.

The Midori Traveler’s Notebook comes in two sizes: Regular and Passport. The Regular size is 120mm X 220mm (4.7 inches X 8.7 inches) and they also have a smaller Passport size which is 98mm X 134mm (3.9 inches X 5.3 inches). The leather covers come in a several different colors.

The company also sells a number of accessories you can add to personalize your Traveler’s Notebook. These include pen loops, kraft envelopes, zipper pockets, cases, stickers, charms, etc.

The products are designed and made in Japan. The MD paper is made in Japan. The leather covers are made in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

I personally got a Traveler’s Notebook for the first time only last year to try it out since I had heard so much about it. I have the regular sized one in the dark brown (tea color) . It came with a dust cover, band, and a blank paper insert. I have since purchased several lined paper inserts, a craft folder, a zippered case, and a band refill set.

Overall, I really love my Traveler’s Notebook. I like the feel of the leather cover, the paper is good quality, and I like being able to personalize what I put into the journal. The downsides have been that the Regular size is a bit larger than the journal I typically choose (and the Passport smaller) and I wish they had more size options. It has also been hard to find and buy some of the accessories (they are often sold out).

There have been a lot of copycat products of the Midori Travel Company’s Traveler’s Notebooks. So if you want this specific product, be careful to check product descriptions and photos carefully to ensure it is actually from this Japanese company.

Note that Midori has gone through a lot of company name changes and now has multiple brand names which can be confusing. But The Traveler’s Company, Midori, and MD Paper are part of the same overall company which is now called Designphil.

8. Wanderings Refillable Journals

Now, the success of Midori’s Traveler’s Journal (discussed above) has spawned a number of similar products, often competing at a lower price than the Japanese brand. Wanderings is one such company which is based in the USA and has been around since at least 2016. The company mainly sells its products online via Amazon.

The Wanderings travel journals have a full-grain leather cover that comes with replaceable rubber bands to hold inserts and an elastic and leather closure band. The covers are made of Crazy Horse cow leather and come in a few different color options. Each comes with the company’s compass rose logo on the front.

how to make travel journal paper

Some of the covers also have pockets that can be used to hold money, paper, credit cards, passport, etc.

Each notebook cover is designed to hold up to 3 refillable inserts. The replaceable paper inserts contain 100 gsm paper and are available with lined, blank, dotted, scrapbooking, calendar, or squared (graph) paper. The inserts are easily added and removed and secured using elastic bands.

The total number of pages varies based on journal size, but each journal is designed to hold between 180 to 240 pages (90 to 120 sheets) in total.

The Midori Traveler’s Company inserts and Wanderings refillable paper inserts are interchangeable and can be used in either brand’s journals of the same size.

The journals are available in several sizes: Pocket/Passport (4″ X 5.1″ / 9cm X 12.5cm), A6 (4″ X 5.7″ / 10.5cm X 15cm), Regular (4.5″ X 8.5″ / 11cm X 22cm), A5 (6″ X 8.5″ / 15cm X 22cm), and Grande (7.5″ X 11″ / 19cm X 28cm).

There are also the Wanderings 6-ring binder journals that come in various sizes and are very similar to the folio ones above except the paper inserts are kept in place inside by a set of 6 metal binder rings instead of elastic bands. The binders come with 120gsm paper inserts, internal pockets, and a pen loop.

Most of the Wanderings products are made in China. Although the owner notes that some of the products are also made in India.

if you are looking for a refillable leather journal, the design of the Wanderings travel journals is very similar to the Traveler’s Journals from The Traveler’s Company. Some people prefer one to the other in terms of design and quality. Some advantages of the Wanderings version is that they are less expensive, easier to purchase outside of Japan, and are available in more sizes.

For those looking for a similar refillable journal that is not made of leather, check out the refillable faux leather journals called Atlas Journals made by Tribute Products.

9. Guided Travel Journals with Prompts

If you are new to journaling and/or traveling, you may prefer a travel journal that gives you some writing prompts, asks questions, and gives suggestions for writing topics. These guided travel journals can also make nice gifts for someone who is new to traveling.

Travel themed prompts often ask about what you’ve seen, the weather, your transportation methods, people you met, food you tried, new words you’ve learned, best/worst experiences, etc. Many of these journals also leave room for drawing, sketching, pasting mementos, and adding photos.

how to make travel journal paper

Some journals also contain a planning section that can be used for pre-trip planning such as packing lists, maps, budget sheets, safety tips, etc. These can be used to help you plan out your itinerary, accommodation, budget, transportation, etc. Just note that planners tend to have fewer pages for actual journaling.

There are a lot of travel journals with prompts, and when searching you’ll often see them listed as guided travel journals or travel journals with daily prompts.

Here is a list of popular travel journals with prompts to get you started:

  • Everywhere You Go Journal (112 pages)
  • Waypoint Goods Pocket Travel Journal (58 pages, designed for up to 14 days of travel)
  • Promptly Minimalist Journal (88 pages, designed for up to a month of travel)
  • Duncan & Stone Journal (100 pages, up to 15 trips/destinations)
  • A Guided Journal (77 pages, up to 10 trips/destinations)
  • Letterfolk Passport Sized Trip Journal (48 pages, up to 20 days of travel)
  • Clever Fox Planner & Journal (129 pages, planner/journal, up to 5 trips/destinations)
  • One Line Voyage Travel Planner & Journal (72 pages, planner/journal, up to 4 trips)
  • Honeymoon Planner & Journal for Couples (112 pages)

When choosing a guided travel journal, you’ll want to consider all the factors we listed for a normal journal, including size, paper quality, number of pages, type of closure, etc.

Travel journals with prompts are a great gateway into journaling. They give you plenty of ideas and ways to record your trip and your memories so you’ll have them for years to come. They can also be a good introduction to find out if you are the kind of person who enjoys keeping a travel journal or not.

10. Promptly Guided Journals

Promptly travel journals are hardcover guided journals that are designed to be used before, during, and after your trip. Their journals have a minimalist design and their slogan is that their travel journals are great from “boarding to exploring”.

Their main journals have a hardcover covered in either a lightly textured faux leather (leatherette) or a linen cover. They are debossed on the cover and spine. The journals are designed for a single trip and contain 86 total pages.

These include a world map, 4 general travel planning pages with questions, 8 pages for a trip itinerary for up to 31 days, 5 memorable moments, several pages to denote trip highlights with prompts, 2 pages for transportation, 5 accommodation reviews, 6 food experiences, 2 pages for travel companions, mementos sections, 2 pages cultural observations, 2 pages for trip takeaways, and then 10 lined pages at the end that you can use for free journaling/extra notes/address book etc.

how to make travel journal paper

The Promptly hardcover journals are 6″ X 9″ (15cm X 23cm). They do include a ribbon marker, but do not include a closure or any pockets.

Note that Promptly also have smaller 4-pack paper softcover journal packs available that are designed for shorter 14 day trips. As well as a  children’s journal version 4-pack designed for kids age 5-12 which be a nice addition if you want to get journals for your kids too. So just be sure you know which variation you are buying.

The company is based in Salt Lake City, Utah and the journals are made in China.

These journal are only going to work well for someone wanting to use it for a single trip (up to 31 days), and I would not recommend for someone wanting to use it for multiple trips. Since there are a number of pages where you can paste photos (or other flat mementos like tickets), then it is probably ideal for someone who wants to add photos to the book after the trip.

I personally have bought one of the faux leather ones, and these journals feel and look nice. They make it easy to follow along from trip planning to completion, and are thin and easy to pack. I think this is a great travel journal gift option for someone going on a trip of 2-4 weeks.

Price : Check the latest prices here

11. Dingbats Vegan Journals

Dingbats* was started in 2016, although it is part of a larger family-run paper trading company that has been operating in Lebanon since 1800. Dingbats sells vegan-friendly journals and is notable for its focus on sustainability and eco-friendly products.

Most of the Dingbats journals feature acid-free, coated 100gsm cream paper, a ribbon bookmark, an attached pen loop, an expandable back pocket, an elastic closure, and a vegan leather (polyurethane) cover. They are hardcover and Smyth-sewn, and most versions contain 192 pages (96 sheets).

Dingbats journals are available with your choice of lined, dotted, blank, or squared paper. Some journals contain perforated pages.

The Dingbats journals are available in a variety of colors, and each Dingbats journal features an embossed animal or natural element on the front, such as an elephant, whale, cactus, wolf, Great Barrier Reef, or deer.

how to make travel journal paper

Dingbats journals are designed in Lebanon and produced in Turkey. They are 100% vegan. They also say that most of their products are fully recyclable in most countries.

Most of the Dingbats journals range in size from approximately A6 (9.5cm X 14.5 cm / 3.7″ X 5.7″) to A4 (21.5cm X 30cm / 8.5″ X 11.8″). Most open like a book, but they also have a smaller reported-style flip-style notebook as well. There is also a Pro Collection of Dingbats journals which are larger in size (B5), use higher quality paper (160gsm), and nicer textiles.

The Dingbats journals are really nice and will especially appeal to wildlife lovers and vegans. Dingbats journals can be difficult to find in stores in many countries but they can be purchased online.

In terms of choosing a size for a travel journal, their A6 sized journals are good if you are looking for a pocket-sized travel journal and the medium A5 sized journals are perfect if looking for a more standard-sized travel journal. If you are wanting something bigger, like a school composition notebook size, then you might be interested in their B5 Pro Collection journals .

12. Leather and Earth Co. Handmade Journals

If you are looking for something more handmade and crafty looking, I highly recommend going onto Etsy and seeing what you can find there. There are a number of talented artisans making various kinds of journals and notebooks.

Leather and Earth Co. is one such small business run by a mom of 4 kids named Laura in Nebraska, USA. She has also recruited a couple of other local moms to help her as well. Together they hand-make, sew, and personalize leather journals.

Leather and Earth Co personalized travel journal best journals for travelers

The paper used is a thick 90lb (185 gsm) mixed media paper available in blank, lined, music writing, or recipe formats. There is also an option for a thicker watercolor paper.  All the journals are designed to hold up to 140 pages of regular paper or 60 pages of watercolor paper.

They offer both bound and refillable journals. The hand sewn bound journals are hand stitched together with a linen thread. The refillable journals include 3 elastic straps where you can add and remove up to 3 paper inserts.

All journals can be personalized with text on the front cover. For example, you can have initials, your name, a date, or trip destination embossed on your journal. You can also design a custom title page if you wish.

The journals are available in several sizes: 4″ X 6″ (10 cm X 15 cm), 5″ X 7″ (12.5 cm X 17.5 cm), 6″ X 9″ (15 cm X 23 cm), or 9″ X 12″ (23 cm X 30.5 cm).

These journals, including the leather and paper used in them, are made in the USA. Note that these journals currently only ship to addresses in the United States.

If you are looking for more handmade journals from around the world, check out the options on Etsy , where you can search for those made in your own region. For example, Bespoke Bindery is a great option if you live in the UK. Most handmade journals can be personalized just for you.

13. Travel Journals for Children & Teens

If you are traveling with children, then getting them their own travel journal can help them record their own memories. Travel journals and activity books can also keep kids entertained when there is downtime on your trip.

Each of these travel journals are designed for children of a certain age range and reading level. Depending on the age level, they may have colorful illustrations, travel-related activities and games, writing prompts, areas for drawing or coloring, stickers, quotes, fun facts, maps, memento pockets, etc.

how to make travel journal paper

There are a number of travel journals for children out there and you can find a lot of them online on Amazon. Here are some good options to consider:

  • Lonely Planet Kids Journal (ages 6-8)
  • Peter Pauper Kids’ Journal (ages 6-11)
  • Awesome Activity Journal (ages 6-10)
  • Promptly Kids’ Activity Books & Journals (ages 5-12, typically sold in packs of 4)
  • Happy Fox USA Road Trip Activities & Journal (ages 7-10)
  • Lonely Planet Older Kids Journal (ages 9-12)
  • Teen Journal (age 10-14)
  • Clever Fox Planner & Journal (teen to adult)
  • Refillable Vegan Leather Journal with Map (teen to adult)
  • A Guided Journal (teen to adult)

Each travel journal is generally designed for children of a certain age range. So you’ll want to take your child’s age, reading level, writing ability, and general interests into consideration when choosing a journal.

Some journals are also tailored to a particular region (e.g. USA or Europe) or a specific type of travel (e.g., road trip), so it is good to read the full description and user reviews.

14. Page-A-Day Journal

This next journal is made by Peter Pauper Press which is an American company based in New York, which has been selling books and other paper goods since 1928. Today, the company sells a number of journals, books, puzzles, etc.

The Page-A-Day Journal is intended to give you enough space to write and take note of memorable places and events on your travels, but is still brief enough that writing in it doesn’t take up too much time. As the journal name suggests, it is intended that you write one page per day.

how to make travel journal paper

This journal is Smyth-sewn and features smooth acid-free 120 gsm paper, rounded corners, an attached ribbon bookmark, a back memento pocket, and an elastic band closure. The brown faux leather cover is embossed with “Page-A-Day Travel Journal” and has a globe design. The endpapers have a cloud design.

Each page provides space for you to put the date, location, and weather as well as a number of blank lines to write down whatever you want. The paper is lined (gray dotted lines).

The journal is 5″ X 7″ (82 cm X 114 cm) and contains 176 pages in total. So the journal will last you about 170 days of travel if you write one page per day. But you can also use multiple pages per day if you wish as you can just put the same date. For most people, this journal will last for multiple trips.

The Page-A-Day journal is designed in the USA and printed in China.

If you are on the fence between a guided journal and an unguided journal, this may be a perfect solution. This journal gives you a small bit of structure and a page per day to write whatever you want.

** You can also see many of the travel journals we recommend above in a single page on Amazon here with current prices for a handy reference. Just note that not every journal on the list is available via Amazon. **

journals for traveling best travel journals for travelers

So that is our list of the best travel journals for travelers! Which is your favorite?

Planning to purchase a travel journal in the near future, but not now? Pin this article to Pinterest to read later:

A review of the best travel journals and how to choose the best travel journal for you. We’ll share what to consider when buying a travel journal, including things like size, page count, paper quality, closure types, and sustainability. Then we review a wide selection of different journals for travelers so that you can find the travel journal that suits your criteria, style and budget. #traveljournal #journal #traveldiary #travelgift #traveling #travel #journaling #traveltips #notebook #writing

What do you think about travel journals? Have you kept a travel journal or diary while traveling? Is your favorite travel journal brand on the list? Tell us below!

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There are 32 comments on this post.

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Logan Gross Post author

May 28, 2024 at 7:42 am

This is such a great & thorough article! You guys put so much effort into these it’s honestly inspiring to see. I had to do some research on travel journals and this wa SUPER helpful.

I sincerely appreciate all the work you’ve put into this!

Jessica & Laurence Norah Post author

May 30, 2024 at 10:17 am

Thanks for your kind comments, and glad to hear our travel journal reviews and research were helpful to you in your own search. If you have any questions about journals, just ask!

Best, Jessica

Olivia Post author

September 26, 2023 at 3:43 pm

Hi there! Could you tell me what the little blue and gold journal is in your photos? It is beautiful and would love to buy one like that for myself! Thanx

September 26, 2023 at 5:00 pm

I think the journal you are referring to is the Paperblanks Azure Journal, it is specifically a lined journal in the Slim size with a metal clasp closure. I love this journal and used it for years but have been unable to find any in the Slim size for a couple of years on their website or on Amazon. But you can get the Azure journal design in the Mini and Midi sizes, and you can see those here .

If you prefer something the same size as the one I had, the most similar one that is a newer design is the Paperblanks Blue Rhine journal as part of their River Cascade collection. You can see the Slim version here and it is available in a few sizes. I took it on a recent trip around Europe and really liked it.

Hope that helps! Jessica

ADAM HINES Post author

September 12, 2023 at 5:49 pm

Hi Jessica, My gf and I are preparing to leave for a trip to Mexico in a couple of weeks. Your review has helped me figure out what I want in a travel journal, but I am struggling a bit on the prices. Want one line (me), one grid (her), black, simple design, some kind of closure, bookmark, archival quality pages, “normal size”.

We need two journals and I think the Leuchtturm and Moleskin both fit the criteria and those look nice. But the prices are a bit high for us and I am wondering what you think would maybe be a good cheaper option for those? Have you tested the Amazon Basics or Paperage ones as those look to fit what I am looking for as well and are both under $10 right now. Thank you!

September 13, 2023 at 6:46 pm

First, so glad you know what you want in a travel journal and that our article was helpful in that. I think knowing that info can help make sure you choose a journal you are actually going to take and use on your trip. And certainly you don’t need to pay much for a journal (anything with paper will work!), I would definitely recommend sticking to your budget. Basically I would say just find something that meets your needs and that you will use and will want to keep.

Now, I can’t comment on the Paperage brand journals as I haven’t personally tried them (I suspect they are very similar to the Amazon Basics ones since they are comparable in price), but I can comment on the Amazon Basics journal versus a Moleskine or Leuchtturm1917 journal. Specifically I would say that the Amazon Basics journal is closer to a Moleskine than a Leuchtturm1917 journal as its more simple and doesn’t have any of the extra features that you see in a Leuctturm1917 journal.

The Amazon Basic journal (this is specifically the one I am reviewing and one I have in hand) seems to currently come in mainly one size (5 inches X 8.25 inches, close to an A5 size). I have it in black so you can definitely get that color. It has a hardcover with off-white, acid-free paper and rounded corners. Designed to lay flat. I think most are 240 pages (120 sheets). Says made with 80 gsm paper. Simple design but does include a black elastic band closure, an attached bookmark ribbon (gray in mine), and an expandable paper pocket in back. I have the ruled or lined version but it does also come with grid or blank paper so will work for your gf as well in terms of paper types. Made in China. I think I paid about $9 for mine.

So compared to my Moleksine I have in my hand for comparison (hardcover black classic ruled paper), the Amazon Basics journal is a bit thicker and has more pages (my Moleskine has 208 pages and the Amazon 240). The Amazon one has almost all the same basic features with the closure, rounded corners, back pocket, ribbon bookmark. Some of the differences are that the Moleskine’s cover feels nicer and “softer”, seems a bit better constructed, and there is a front title page with “In Case of Loss” info. The color of the paper and line ruling width is about the same although lines are darker and easier to see in the Amazon Basics. The Amazon Basics says 80 gsm paper while most Moleskine journals use 70 gsm. Both are made in Asia.

So yes, my opinion would be that if you like the color, style, and size of the Amazon Basics (since there is not much choice or variety), then there is little question you are getting a good value with the Amazon Basics versus the Moleskine. In a few areas, the Amazon could be a better choice depending on what you want most. Now if you valued the touch, feel, and construction, then obviously the Moleskine does look a bit nicer (and certainly feels nicer, I can tell its a more premium journal just by picking it up). But in terms of value for price, I think the Amazon Basics journal is a great choice to consider for what you are wanting and seems to tick all the boxes.

Hope that helps, and wishing you and your girlfriend a wonderful trip to Mexico!! Jessica

Anika Post author

June 14, 2023 at 11:54 am

hello, do you know where I can buy field notes in the uk or eu or have suggestions for similar simple little notebooks like this? need some for big upcoming trip. thanks for advice!!!

June 15, 2023 at 2:02 am

Happy to try to help. So the Field Notes if you purchase directly from their website they do offer international shipping options but it can take a long time and be more expensive but that is an option. But you can find them on Amazon in some parts of Europe, so on Amazon UK, for example, they have a couple of the Field Notes notebooks available. You can see those options on Amazon UK here .

If shopping on Amazon or similar, there are a lot of copycat products so if you want something by Field Notes brand, make sure it says “Field Notes” on the cover and in the description.

But if you can’t find the Field Notes product you want and are looking for similar sorts of pocket-sized or memo notebooks, some you might consider are the Moleskine Cahiers , Silvine Originals Pocket notebooks (UK made, ones with thread better than ones with staples), and Portage pocket notebooks . VENTED also has pocket sized notebooks, but they have cotton or recycled leather covers so may not be the best fit if wanting a kraft paper sort of cover.

There are other brands as well and you’ll see more if you search Field Notes notebooks in Amazon. If shopping in person you’ll have less selection but if you drop into a Waterstones (if in the UK) or similar large bookstore or stationary store, you can usually find one or two options of that type of pocket notebook or memo pad.

Hope that helps and wishing you a wonderful trip!

June 16, 2023 at 10:22 am

much gratitude and thanks Jessica, such a detailed answer. I can’t wait to check these pocket journal options out and get travelling again!

June 16, 2023 at 10:32 am

You’re very welcome Anika, and I hope you find a travel journal that works best for you.

Wishing you many future happy travels! Jessica

Lorna Post author

June 2, 2023 at 5:16 am

I am a longtime Moleskine user here but am thinking about possibly trying another journal and found your great and thorough article. Thoughts on one to choose that is similar but maybe a bit of an upgrade? Hard cover and either ruled/lined or squared paper.

Also, I always thought that Moleskine journals were made in Italy. Is that not true??

June 2, 2023 at 9:52 am

So I would say Leuchtturm1917 (see description above in article) is probably the most similar journal brand and they have hardcover notebooks and most of the sizes are similar. They have a few more features than Moleskine, offer more colors, and I think they have slightly nicer paper and covers. And they offer journals with both the ruled/line or squared/checked paper. So you could try one of them out and compare them with the ones you already have and see which brand you prefer. Prices are similar but depends where you buy it and in what country.

The Rhodia Webnotebooks (see description above) is another one to consider. But I didn’t love the quality of the last one I ordered (they started making them in Morocco) and it arrived with a dent and wasn’t as good as past ones.

So Moleskine journals are designed by a company started in 1997 and is based in Milan, Italy. The journals are designed in Italy but they are not made in Italy. According to their website they are manufactured in the “Far East” which is oddly vague. But they tend to mainly be manufactured in China or Taiwan (same as Leuchtturm1917 and many other journal brands). Although the last Moleskine I bought (while in Italy actually) says it was designed in Italy and manufactured in Turkey. I think during COVID-19 a lot of companies moved manufacturing to countries like Turkey to keep up with demand as China basically shut down for so long. But the journals are popular in Italy as we have seen several Moleskine stores while traveling in Italy.

Ciak is an Italian brand and is made in Italy so another one you could consider if wanted one made in Italy but these are a bit different in style than a Moleskine and offer fewer options in terms of sizes, paper types, and cover types.

Anyone hope that helps!

Deb Post author

June 1, 2023 at 5:23 pm

Wooooow! I just got pumped up reading about the benefits of keeping a travel journal but wasn’t really sure which journals were worth the time and money. This post was crazy helpful, thank you!!

June 2, 2023 at 5:03 am

So yes, travel journaling can certainly be helpful. We find by far the biggest benefit is being able to look back on what we did, where we went, and our thoughts/feelings along the way from past trips. It is also a nice excuse to relax with a coffee or drink and take a break when traveling 😉

Glad that you found our travel journal reviews helpful in finding a travel journal that works best for you! If you have any questions, just ask!

Hari Sitaula Post author

May 16, 2023 at 11:12 pm

Very helpful, been looking for a good travel diary! We appreciate you sharing this.

May 18, 2023 at 9:37 am

Glad you found our travel journal reviews helpful and I hope you find a perfect travel diary for you and your travels!

Martha Wells Post author

April 16, 2023 at 5:15 am

Oh, thanks so very much for this very thoughtful and detailed reply to my very specific questions. I have ordered this kids’ travel journal for my grandson (it sounds perfect!) and will be getting a different travel related coloring book for the granddaughter as she is only 4 and prob too young to make much out of the PPP one.

Thanks again for taking the time to write such a detailed reply to my questions about this journal!!!!! Martha

April 16, 2023 at 6:10 am

You’re very welcome Martha, hope your grandkids love the travel journal and coloring book!

April 14, 2023 at 7:13 am

Hello! Do you think the Kids Journal by PPP that you list would be Ok or a 9 (almost 10) year old? Does it close? How many pages of the actual journal writing part does it have? sorry if you don’t know this, just trying to buy a gift for grandkids and having lots of questions, thanks

April 15, 2023 at 4:09 am

I think you are asking about the Kids’ Travel Journal by Peter Pauper Press, this one here ?

So if that is the correct journal, we have bought that one before (as a gift) and had the chance to review it. So I do personally think it would be a good fit for a 9 or 10 year old. I think that is probably an ideal age as they should be able to read it and do the activities on their own.

It has a printed hard cover and it does close. It has a red elastic closure to keep it closed when not in use.

The book has a total of 96 pages. It contains pre-planning pages, packing lists, contact info pages, maps, games, puzzles, post-trip thoughts, fun travel-related facts, etc. In terms of pure journaling pages for writing, there are 15 pages dedicated to a daily journal so ideal for say a 2 week trip. But it also has other pages that ask questions that you can fill in about your trip related to who you met, where you stayed, type of transport, what you ate, etc. as well as some pages for free writing, drawing or pasting things. There is also a memento pouch.

If you are thinking about buying this for more than one grandchild, given the more personal and individual nature of the book and the journal, probably best to give one per child rather than having them share unless they are the type of kids who like to write and do these types of activities together.

A couple of things to note is that it has no ribbon bookmark so including a thin bookmark with the Kids’ Travel Journal might be nice if it is a gift. It is also more geared to American travelers (uses American English and terms) and for those traveling somewhere in either North America or Europe (as many of the facts are about these places), although it could, of course, be used by anyone really.

Anyway, hope that helps answer all your questions about this travel journal and will help you decide if it is a good gift for your grandchildren or not.

ROHIT PATLE Post author

March 23, 2023 at 9:22 am

Traveling is not just about reaching a destination, it’s about the journey and the experiences along the way. It opens your eyes to new cultures, people, and ways of life.

March 24, 2023 at 11:32 am

That is definitely true, and keeping a travel journal can be a great way to remember all those experiences along your travels!

conner Post author

March 9, 2023 at 4:46 am

wow, so many of these journals sounds great. could your recommend a travel diary option made in italy available online in US – looking for a gift for the gf for a month long college trip to Italy. I think she prefers lined paper and something sort of mid-sized (so no pocket or huge ones). option to put her initials in it would be great but not absolute. thanks for any help!

March 9, 2023 at 5:46 am

Happy to try to help!

So the Italian brand that is probably best known & available in the USA is Moleskine. They are really popular as travel journals. However, Moleskine journals are designed in Italy but made elsewhere (I think mostly in China, Taiwan, & Turkey).

If you want a journal made in Italy, the most available brand in the USA would probably be Ciak. I have one of them and it has really great paper quality (most have 110 gsm paper) and they have a variety of different types and colors of covers. So you can check their website for options, not sure if they deliver to the US or not, but you can also buy many of their products online via Amazon here or online stationery shops. Hard, but not impossible, to find in person depending on where you live. They offer plenty of lined journal options in a variety of sizes. I don’t think the company offers the option to add initials or personalize individual journals but you may be able to have someone locally add personalization.

Also, a note about buying the Ciak journals via third parties, they are often listed as leather bound, but I think the company primarily uses faux leather (so expect faux leather). If looking for actual leather bound journals, I’d check out Belcraft or Epica which have a lot of leather options.

Two other Italian brands you might want to check out are Epica and Belcraft , which both produce their journals in Italy. I believe both companies offer the ability to personalize a journal, including adding initials via embossing, engraving, and/or branding.

Hope that helps. I am sure your girlfriend will enjoy whatever journal you get her!

Aimee Fionda Post author

March 8, 2023 at 4:14 am

This is such a knowledgeable, in depth article about travel journals and we thank you so much for mentioning us! We love to think of our hand bound leather travellers journals journeying with their owners across the globe! We are always happy to create a bespoke journal too, as we make everything from scratch!

Thanks again and happy travels! The Stamford Notebook Company

March 9, 2023 at 4:49 am

Thanks for taking the time to comment, and glad you liked our article on travel journals. You’re very welcome for the metnion.

For those reading this, The Stamford Notebook Company is a great place to check out for all those looking for UK made journals or notebooks!

Seana Turner Post author

February 26, 2023 at 4:33 am

In spite of everything being digitized these days, I do love all things paper! I prefer the dotted pages because they give me just enough guide to keep my journals looking orderly without having too many lines making them look like homework.

I do like the ones that have a strap to keep them closed. Not that journals falling open is really an issue, but I just like the feel of pulling that elastic over the book. It makes me feel like I’ve accomplished something.

On a side note, I’m just so happy that we are talking about traveling again. All of the flights I’ve been on recently have been packed, and I find this encouraging. Go travel! I imagine you will have to revisit many places now and give us updated, post COVID information!!

February 26, 2023 at 6:56 am

Yes, so good to be talking about and more importantly traveling again. We are currently in Rwanda and plan to be doing a lot of traveling in 2023! And yes, COVID has sadly changed or closed a lot of places so updates are certainly needed.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts on journals – everyone has such different preferenes. I am a lined girl myself but I know a lot of people prefer dotted pages. I guess they probably do remind a lot of people of their school notebooks 😉 But without lines, I have a hard time writing in a straight line – Laurence is even worse.

For me, since I mostly use my journal while traveling, they have to be able to be shoved in and out of my day bag and backpack so being able to securely close it an important feature for me. When I’ve had notebooks without a closure, they were more likely to get bent and the pages damaged if I didn’t put them in the “right way”.

Wishing you a year full of fun travels!! Jessica

Colleen Post author

February 25, 2023 at 11:37 pm

I have been using Moleskine journals for many years now…I think the Large size ones with lines. I use black ones for travelling and then I have colored ones that I use for my everyday/work notes. This article gave me some other brands that I am definitely going to consider the next time I need a journal like the Rhodia and Dingbats. My daughter is a vegan so I think I may surprise her with a Dingbats one as that elephant is so precious!!!

February 26, 2023 at 1:16 am

Hi Colleen,

Thanks for taking the time to share the brand of travel journal you use.

Yes, Moleskine is a very popular option for a travel journal. I like that you can always seem to find them as it is easy to find them in most bookstore and stationery shops (at least in the US and UK) whereas other brands can be more difficult to buy in person. Yes, you may definitely like the Rhodia Webbies and Leuchtturm1917 Classic notebooks as they are very similar but have slightly heavier paper – you may or may not notice the difference though if you are already happy with Moleskine. I think it makes the most difference to those using fountain pens etc.

Dingbats is a great choice for anyone looking for a vegan-friendly journal and the animal designs are really cute!

ALAN JOHN COOK Post author

February 25, 2023 at 12:13 pm

This article is completely unnecessary. I’m so pleased I didn’t waste my time reading more than the first few paragraphs. As a vastly experienced traveller and professional writer you don’t need all this stuff about bindings and paper quality and decoration. All you need – if you don’t have a laptop computer or similar – is a spiral bound notebook and a few cheap pens. I say spiral bound as they lay flat and can be folded back on themselves which is handy (although not essential). You can buy them almost anywhere and they are cheap. Also easy if you need to rip out a page to use for something like a shopping list or to give someone your contact details. It’s not the look of the journal that counts for anything – it’s what you write in it that’s important.

February 26, 2023 at 1:10 am

Thanks for sharing your opinions on journals. As I noted in the article, any journal or notebook can work fine as long as it is something you can and will write on during your trip. For someone who is on a tight budget or using it as you are (tearing pages out for shopping lists etc.) then a composition book or spiral school notebook or something will work fine. I have used one before and they work, although I found it less than ideal in many ways compared to other options which are designed to be actual journals.

We’ve tested dozens of notebooks and journals and definitely think that there are much more ideal options for those looking for something nicer and better suited for travel. Most people aren’t using their journal to tear out pages but are wanting to keep it to look back at later.

Many people want a journal that is a bit more durable & lasting, and do care about the paper quality, binding, cover, having a closure, etc as they want it to last and to store it to read again later. Many do care about what their journal feels and looks like and some care about how and where it is made. Also some travlers also use them for sketching or scrapbooking in which the page type, quality, and size are more important, along with those like myself who have a fountain pen (it will bleed through the paper on most cheap notebooks).

Our guide is designed to help those who are new to journals or who want to upgrade their current travel journal to find the perfect notebook for them or to give as a gift. Whether it is an inexpensive spiral bound notebook or a fancy leather custom journal. There are lots of options out there and we are just sharing information and our thoughts about this so people can make an informed decision.

We are happy you have found the journal type that works for you!

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2 Wisconsin resorts make Travel + Leisure magazine's 2024 World's Best lists

how to make travel journal paper

Every year Travel + Leisure magazine asks its readers to share their opinions on their favorite travel destinations in a number of categories, and this year, Wisconsin landed on their lists twice.

Sundara Inn & Spa in Wisconsin Dells topped the list for destination spas in the United States. It's quite an achievement since the list of 15 spas was dominated by California and southwest states. According to Travel + Leisure, its position at the top of the rankings was also a surprise since the spa hadn't made the list at all in the past few years.

Spas were rated on their facilities, treatments, service, food and value, and Travel + Leisure readers rated Sundara high, with one surveyed guest calling the resort "a hidden gem in Wisconsin. I truly feel refreshed and uplifted after leaving the property at the end of my stay. It has been awesome to see their growth and building over the years to accommodate the number of people that go there."

Kohler's American Club Resort Hotel also ranked on a Travel + Leisure list : eighth on the magazine's 10 favorite resorts in the Midwest. The American Club has been a boutique hotel since 1981 and is known for its restaurant, spa and world-class golf courses.

how to make travel journal paper

Michigan's Isle Royale deemed best US National Park by Wall Street Journal

A roadless Michigan destination spot has been deemed the Best U.S. National Park by the Wall Street Journal.

In a study of America's best public lands, the WSJ deemed Michigan's Isle Royale National Park No. 1 out of 63 national parks, calling it an "unexpected winner" when you consider competition from the likes of Yellowstone, Zion and Yosemite.

The Wall Street Journal says it grounded its rankings in "cold, hard numbers." Four main criteria were used to help determine the rankings:

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  • Size of the crowds
  • Quality and quantity of hiking routes
  • Availability of campsites
  • Access to other recreational activities like horseback riding, mountain biking, fishing

Of Isle Royale National Park, the paper writes, in part:

" Accessible only by ferry, private boat or seaplane, this is true wilderness: a land of moose and wolves and the drama forever playing out between them. Backpackers can pitch a tent in one of the park’s 36 rustic campgrounds, but visitors will find plenty of day-hiking opportunities, too, and the circa-1956  Rock Harbor Lodge  makes up for a lack of bells and whistles with an endless reserve of old-school charm. "

The park's hiking trails also scored high marks, including the 40-mile Greenstone Ridge Trail, where hikers can enjoy moose sightings and stunning views of Lake Superior.

The Wall Street Journal says its recommendations are "designed to reward parks that draw less crowds yet still offer a wide range of traditional park activities."

And at Isle Royale National Park, the issue of overcrowding isn't what you'll find at the more well-known parks, with about 29,000 visitors last year, according to the National Parks Service . Utah’s Zion National Park, by comparison, attracted 4.6 million visitors last year.

After Isle Royale, Washington's North Cascades National Park and Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks were runners-up. Yellowstone National Park ranked 10th.

Wall Street Journal's list of America's Best National Parks

  • Isle Royale National Park, Michigan
  • North Cascades National Park, Washington
  • Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Parks, California
  • Big Bend National Park, Texas
  • Denali National Park & Preserve, Alaska
  • Lassen Volcanic National Park, California
  • Great Basin National Park, Nevada
  • Death Valley National Park, California/Nevada
  • Guadalupe Mountains National Park, Texas
  • Yellowstone National Park, Idaho/Montana/Wyoming

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Michigan's Isle Royale deemed best US National Park by Wall Street Journal

Isle Royale National Park 6,493 visitors

Hurricane Beryl tracker: See projected path, spaghetti models of storm as it hits Mexico

how to make travel journal paper

As Hurricane Beryl moves inland over the Yucatan Peninsula, those in its path can expect strong winds, storm surges and damaging waves, the National Hurricane Center announced Friday morning.

As of Friday morning at 7 a.m. CT, the center of Hurricane Beryl , which downgraded to Category 2, was moving toward the west-northwest at about 15 miles per hour.

The NHC expects the hurricane to make a west-northwestward motion during the next day or so.

The NHC said the hurricane's center should cross the northern Yucatan Peninsula Friday and then emerge over the southwestern Gulf of Mexico later Friday night. By the end of the weekend, the hurricane should move northwestward toward northeastern Mexico and southern Texas.

The hurricane's maximum winds have decreased to about 100 miles per hour, the NHC said. As Hurricane Beryl moves farther inland and crosses the Yucatan Peninsula, winds are expected to rapidly weaken. Still, slow re-intensification is expected once Beryl moves back over the Gulf of Mexico.

Hurricane Beryl live updates: Storm makes landfall again in Mexico. Is Texas next?

According to the NHC, a storm surge could increase water levels by four to six feet above ground level in areas where there are onshore winds along the east coast of the Yucatan Peninsula within the hurricane warning area. Near the coast, the surge will bring large and destructive waves.

Beryl is also expected to bring large swells to eastern Mexico and the Gulf Coast of the U.S. later Friday. The swells can cause life-threatening surf and rip current conditions.

Hurricane Beryl path tracker

This forecast track shows the most likely path of the center of the storm. It does not illustrate the full width of the storm or its impacts, and the center of the storm is likely to travel outside the cone up to 33% of the time.

Hurricane Beryl spaghetti models

Illustrations include an array of forecast tools and models, and not all are created equal. The hurricane center uses only the top four or five highest-performing models to help make its forecasts.

Atlantic storm tracker

How much rain will hurricane beryl bring friday.

According to the NHC, Beryl is expected to produce four to six inches of rainfall Friday, with localized amounts of 10 inches across the Yucatan Peninsula. There may also be scattered flash flooding.

From Sunday into early next week, meteorologists expect heavy rainfall of four to eight inches with locally higher amounts across portions of northeastern Mexico and south Texas.

Hurricane warnings, watches

Hurricane warnings are in effect for the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico from Puerto Costa Maya to Cancun, including Cozumel, according to the NHC.

Hurricane warnings are issued when sustained winds of 74 miles per hour or higher associated with a tropical cyclone are expected in 36 hours or less, the National Weather Service said. Hurricane warnings can remain in effect when there is dangerously high water or a combination of dangerously high water and continued high waves, even if winds are less than hurricane force.

There are also hurricane watches in effect for the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula south of Puerto from Costa Maya to Chetumal, and north of Cancun to Cabo Catoche.

Hurricane watches are issued when tropical cyclones containing winds of 74 miles per hour or higher pose a possible threat. The winds may also bring storm surges, coastal flooding or river flooding with them, according to the NWS.

"The watch does not mean that hurricane conditions will occur," the NWS wrote on its website. "It only means that these conditions are possible."

Tropical storm warning

A tropical storm warning is in effect for the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico south of Puerto Costa Maya to Chetumal, and the coast of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico north of Cancun to Campeche.

Tropical storm-force winds can be up to 105 miles per hour and a storm surge could increase water levels by one to three feet above ground level along the west coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in the tropical storm warningarea.

Contributing: Cybele Mayes-Osterman , Mary Walrath-Holdridge and James Powel, USA TODAY

Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Follow her on Twitter at @SaleenMartin or email her at [email protected] .

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The Editorial Board

To Serve His Country, President Biden Should Leave the Race

President Biden standing behind a lectern with CNN’s name appearing repeatedly beyond him.

By The Editorial Board

The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values . It is separate from the newsroom.

President Biden has repeatedly and rightfully described the stakes in this November’s presidential election as nothing less than the future of American democracy.

Donald Trump has proved himself to be a significant jeopardy to that democracy — an erratic and self-interested figure unworthy of the public trust. He systematically attempted to undermine the integrity of elections. His supporters have described, publicly, a 2025 agenda that would give him the power to carry out the most extreme of his promises and threats. If he is returned to office, he has vowed to be a different kind of president, unrestrained by the checks on power built into the American political system.

Mr. Biden has said that he is the candidate with the best chance of taking on this threat of tyranny and defeating it. His argument rests largely on the fact that he beat Mr. Trump in 2020. That is no longer a sufficient rationale for why Mr. Biden should be the Democratic nominee this year.

At Thursday’s debate, the president needed to convince the American public that he was equal to the formidable demands of the office he is seeking to hold for another term. Voters, however, cannot be expected to ignore what was instead plain to see: Mr. Biden is not the man he was four years ago.

The president appeared on Thursday night as the shadow of a great public servant. He struggled to explain what he would accomplish in a second term. He struggled to respond to Mr. Trump’s provocations. He struggled to hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies, his failures and his chilling plans. More than once, he struggled to make it to the end of a sentence.

Mr. Biden has been an admirable president. Under his leadership, the nation has prospered and begun to address a range of long-term challenges, and the wounds ripped open by Mr. Trump have begun to heal. But the greatest public service Mr. Biden can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election.

As it stands, the president is engaged in a reckless gamble. There are Democratic leaders better equipped to present clear, compelling and energetic alternatives to a second Trump presidency. There is no reason for the party to risk the stability and security of the country by forcing voters to choose between Mr. Trump’s deficiencies and those of Mr. Biden. It’s too big a bet to simply hope Americans will overlook or discount Mr. Biden’s age and infirmity that they see with their own eyes.

If the race comes down to a choice between Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden, the sitting president would be this board’s unequivocal pick. That is how much of a danger Mr. Trump poses. But given that very danger, the stakes for the country and the uneven abilities of Mr. Biden, the United States needs a stronger opponent to the presumptive Republican nominee. To make a call for a new Democratic nominee this late in a campaign is a decision not taken lightly, but it reflects the scale and seriousness of Mr. Trump’s challenge to the values and institutions of this country and the inadequacy of Mr. Biden to confront him.

Ending his candidacy would be against all of Mr. Biden’s personal and political instincts. He has picked himself up from tragedies and setbacks in the past and clearly believes he can do so again. Supporters of the president are already explaining away Thursday’s debate as one data point compared with three years of accomplishments. But the president’s performance cannot be written off as a bad night or blamed on a supposed cold, because it affirmed concerns that have been mounting for months or even years. Even when Mr. Biden tried to lay out his policy proposals, he stumbled. It cannot be outweighed by other public appearances because he has limited and carefully controlled his public appearances.

It should be remembered that Mr. Biden challenged Mr. Trump to this verbal duel. He set the rules, and he insisted on a date months earlier than any previous general election debate. He understood that he needed to address longstanding public concerns about his mental acuity and that he needed to do so as soon as possible.

The truth Mr. Biden needs to confront now is that he failed his own test.

In polls and interviews, voters say they are seeking fresh voices to take on Mr. Trump. And the consolation for Mr. Biden and his supporters is that there is still time to rally behind a different candidate. While Americans are conditioned to the long slog of multiyear presidential elections, in many democracies, campaigns are staged in the space of a few months.

It is a tragedy that Republicans themselves are not engaged in deeper soul-searching after Thursday’s debate. Mr. Trump’s own performance ought to be regarded as disqualifying. He lied brazenly and repeatedly about his own actions, his record as president and his opponent. He described plans that would harm the American economy, undermine civil liberties and fray America’s relationships with other nations. He refused to promise that he would accept defeat, returning instead to the kind of rhetoric that incited the Jan. 6 attack on Congress.

The Republican Party, however, has been co-opted by Mr. Trump’s ambitions . The burden rests on the Democratic Party to put the interests of the nation above the ambitions of a single man.

Democrats who have deferred to Mr. Biden must now find the courage to speak plain truths to the party’s leader. The confidants and aides who have encouraged the president’s candidacy and who sheltered him from unscripted appearances in public should recognize the damage to Mr. Biden’s standing and the unlikelihood that he can repair it.

Mr. Biden answered an urgent question on Thursday night. It was not the answer that he and his supporters were hoping for. But if the risk of a second Trump term is as great as he says it is — and we agree with him that the danger is enormous — then his dedication to this country leaves him and his party only one choice.

The clearest path for Democrats to defeat a candidate defined by his lies is to deal truthfully with the American public: acknowledge that Mr. Biden can’t continue his race, and create a process to select someone more capable to stand in his place to defeat Mr. Trump in November.

It is the best chance to protect the soul of the nation — the cause that drew Mr. Biden to run for the presidency in 2019 — from the malign warping of Mr. Trump. And it is the best service that Mr. Biden can provide to a country that he has nobly served for so long.

The Times is committed to publishing a diversity of letters to the editor. We’d like to hear what you think about this or any of our articles. Here are some tips . And here’s our email: [email protected] .

Follow the New York Times Opinion section on Facebook , Instagram , TikTok , WhatsApp , X and Threads .

The editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate from the newsroom.

IMAGES

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  2. DIY Travel Journal Ideas

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  3. Travel Themed Journals by Paper Source Set of 3

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VIDEO

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  6. Vlog Day 9: Make travel journal with Deco Fun

COMMENTS

  1. 15 Ways to Make a Travel Journal

    Try to shoot a combination of landmark shots and informal portraits to give your journal variety. [6] If you're journaling online, such as on a blog, upload a few relevant photos to go with each post and help bring your entry to life. You don't have to print out photos on the road for a physical journal.

  2. How To Make A Travellers Notebook or Journal

    In this tutorial, I show you how to make this gorgeous Travel Journal. With my easy step by step instructions, you will have a wonderful Keepsake in no time....

  3. How to Travel Journal: Tips for Getting Started

    I created my first travel journal on my inaugural solo trip- a month-long trip from Italy to Croatia, then Bosnia and Herzegovina and back again. It was the PERFECT trip to experiment with my style and practice of travel journaling, since as a solo traveler I had the time to make my own schedule, and my trip included a little bit of everything- including famous art, iconic architecture, awe ...

  4. How To Start a Travel Journal: 12 Tips for Beginners

    What Are Essential Tips for Starting a Travel Journal? Starting a travel journal might seem daunting, but with a few expert tips, you'll be capturing your adventures like a pro in no time. Here's how to start: 1. Choose the Right Journal. Finding the right journal is like picking a new travel buddy — it needs to match your adventure style.

  5. How to Make a Travel Journal? Tips & Supplies

    1. TRAVEL SKETCHBOOK. You don't have to be a master artist to have fun with a travel sketchbook. Just take a notebook with blank pages and start drawing (or painting!) what you see. You can use pen, pencil, markers, crayons, watercolours or other paint, whatever you like! There are some great travel journals specifically made for making ...

  6. Travel journaling: 10 tips to create a gorgeous travel journal to

    Digital travel journals vs paper travel journals. I'm sure you're aware that there are countless travel journal apps available. Personally, I prefer a good old fashioned paper journal. I find the words flow easily when written with a pen and it's a more rewarding and creative process. I'm also more likely to read it back in years to ...

  7. How To Write A Travel Journal: Ideas, Tips, Prompts & Resources (2023

    A Paper Travel Journal: These are, most often, simple notebooks that you tailor to your travels. Blank page after blank page, ready for ink to cover the lines. The main benefits of a paper notebook style journal are: Some people like the physical act of writing, as opposed to typing on their phones or tablets.

  8. How to Start and Keep a Travel Journal: A Guide to Travel Diaries

    1. Choose a journal:Select a journal that fits your style and preferences. Consider factors like page count, paper thickness, and lay-flat design for easy writing. 2. Pens and markers:Bring a variety of writing tools, including pens, markers, and highlighters, to add color and creativity to your journal. 3.

  9. How to Make a Travel Journal: The Ultimate Guide

    Add visuals if possible. Limiting your travel journals to words alone can sometimes limit the impact of the memories. Instead, try collecting as many visual aids as possible while on your adventure. Tickets, event photographs, or even restaurant bills play a key role in creating a great travel journal. Combining visuals, sketches, and even ...

  10. How to Make a Travel Journal (+ 5 Writing Prompts)

    Buy a postcard every day and write down the date, the weather and what you experienced in the pictured location. After your trip, tie them all together for a unique "journal.". Other paper and pen ideas include a series of lists, or writing your notes on a map or calendar. For a more eclectic, artistic look, write on or around mementos ...

  11. 5 Epic Free Printable Travel Journal Templates

    Option1: DIY travel journal. The first option I'll share is a true DIY travel journal. You start with an empty paper or notebook and craft your own. If you are looking for the free printable, scroll down to the free printable travel journal template section.

  12. 62 Best Travel Journal Ideas (And Inspiring Prompts)

    13. Slows you down. A travel journal forces you to slow down and make the most of your holiday. When you leave your daily routine behind, it can be difficult to switch to vacation mode. Writing slowly (as opposed to typing) gives you that much-needed time to recharge and observe your thoughts. 14.

  13. How to make a DIY Travel Journal

    Learn how to make a personalized Travel Journal with Rob's easy, step-by-step instructions. Keep your memories, sketches, foreign language phrases, funny sto...

  14. 35 DIY Journal Ideas: How To Make A Journal From Scratch

    35. DIY Easy Journal. To make this you need papers, cardstock, thumbtack, staple pins, and mushy tape. Fold the papers into half and stack them together, make two holes at both edges of the papers with a thumbtack. Cut the cardstock to size the paper and punch holes in it as well.

  15. How to Start a Travel Journal

    Just the Facts Travel Journaling. This is the easiest way to start a travel journal. It involves nothing but a notebook, a pen and jotting down the things you saw, foods you ate, and where you stayed. You can create a daily log that just highlights where you've been. You can use a separate notebook for this or you can incorporate it into ...

  16. Travel journal examples and how to get the most out of a travel journal

    Here's a helpful list of 17 travel journals to give you a sense of travel journal examples and possibilities. Mostly, consider if you want to do travel drawing or even painting in your travel journal. If so, you'll want thicker paper that won't warp with the water or bleed through with ink. You likely will want blank pages, as opposed to ...

  17. How To Make A Travel Journal · Artsy Fartsy Life

    Set your travel journal up almost like a scrapbook. Print out the photos you want to include and gather your stuff together, maps, travel magazines, scrapbook paper, tickets, business cards, etc. and organize them by city or country or by day or site visited. Now choose a background and add it to your page, if you want, and place the things to ...

  18. How to Make a Travel Journal (Diary)

    Find a map you like online. Print this out and cover your journal with it. If you visit multiple countries on your cruise, shrink the map to fit and add in the maps of all the countries you go to. You could also print out a black and white map and highlight your route with a colorful marker. Travel Apps.

  19. 100 Travel Journal Ideas & Prompts For Any Adventure

    Here are 100 travel journal ideas and prompts for any adventure. We've taught you how to create a travel journal, but the list for creating and writing in these little books of paper goes on and on. Whether you want to draw, collage, write, use bullets, or simply write from prompts. There are so many ways to keep a travel journal.

  20. 103 Ideas to Make Your Travel Journal Come Alive

    A travel journal is a perfect solution! It will help you reflect on all the amazing experiences you have while traveling and can also be used as a creative outlet. With this guide, we'll provide you with 103 travel journal writing prompts for documenting your travels in an engaging and meaningful way. From creating maps to writing down local ...

  21. How to Start a Travel Journal: 8 Rules for the Road

    Going through customs can sometimes be a stressful experience, but usually if you are prepared and familiar with all the different rules and regulations, you should be able to visit most places with relatively little issue. #7. Don't Make Journaling a Chore. Everybody has different styles of how they like to travel.

  22. 14 Best Travel Journals

    One Line Voyage Travel Planner & Journal (72 pages, planner/journal, up to 4 trips) Honeymoon Planner & Journal for Couples (112 pages) When choosing a guided travel journal, you'll want to consider all the factors we listed for a normal journal, including size, paper quality, number of pages, type of closure, etc.

  23. Tips for keeping a travel journal

    Every vacation you take is filled with unforgettable moments. A travel journal can act as a keepsake of your adventures, filled with the wonderful things you discovered about yourself and the world around you. As you turn the pages of your journal, you can remember the conversations you shared, the sights you saw and everything that shifted your perspective.

  24. 2 Wisconsin resorts make Travel + Leisure's 2024 World's Best lists

    Kohler's American Club Resort Hotel also ranked on a Travel + Leisure list: eighth on the magazine's 10 favorite resorts in the Midwest. The American Club has been a boutique hotel since 1981 and ...

  25. Delta flight makes emergency landing after spoiled food found

    Get more news like this delivered to your inbox by signing up for our Travel newsletter here.. A Delta Air Lines flight heading to Amsterdam made an emergency landing in New York City after ...

  26. Michigan's Isle Royale deemed Best U.S. National Park by Wall Street

    A roadless Michigan destination spot has been deemed the Best U.S. National Park by the Wall Street Journal. In a study of America's best public lands, the WSJ deemed Michigan's Isle Royale ...

  27. Analysis of Traffic Volume and Travel‐Time Relationship Using

    This paper is structured as follows: Chapter 3 summarizes the definition and characteristics of the continuous one-hour values of volume-travel-time. Chapter 4 compares the transition graphs of the continuous one-hour values according to the aggregation methods and analyzes the differences in maximum one-hour volumes and spatial changes on ...

  28. Why you should seek out feeling small when you travel

    Get more news like this delivered to your inbox bysigning up for our Travel newsletter here. I hadn't hiked enough to know whether I liked it or not. In theory, it seemed like something I would ...

  29. Hurricane Beryl path tracker, spaghetti models: Follow the storm

    The National Hurricane Center expects Hurricane Beryl to make a west-northwestward motion during the next day or so. ... and the center of the storm is likely to travel outside the cone up to 33% ...

  30. To Serve His Country, President Biden Should Leave the Race

    He struggled to hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies, his failures and his chilling plans. More than once, he struggled to make it to the end of a sentence. Mr. Biden has been an admirable ...