Paper Doll Shares 3 Quirky & Cool New Office Supplies

Posted on: March 18th, 2024 by Julie Bestry | 16 Comments

Being organized and productive is about systems and skills. Too often, we’re tempted to believe that the ideal box or tub or app is the key to getting us where we want to be in our journey toward success. That’s actually a big fib that our perfectionist brains tell us, pushing us to procrastinate and not get started until everything is ideal.

That doesn’t mean that products can’t be useful and motivate us to embrace our systems or practice our skills. Sometimes, what we need to up our game is something that’s unusual or comes out of left field.

Last week, I encountered this colorful doggie. 

Understandably, what caught my attention was the cotton candy, tie-dye pink-and-purpleness of this little fella. It was only later that I looked carefully at the harness and saw that this is a cardiac alert dog, a service dog at work. (One of the badges on the harness notes that he is “Not a Magical Unicorn.”)

A worker-bee (or, in this case, worker dog) is useful, but there’s no reason it can’t also be quirky or different. To that end, today’s post looks at a few of the intriguing products I’ve seen recently that perform their tasks as designed but are also just a little bit unusual, enough to pump up our interest.

I’m not suggesting you have to purchase them. Rather, I’d like to encourage you to think about what features (color, form, style) appeal to you so that when you’re faced with tools and options in your life, you’ll stop to think whether you’re dazzled by the aesthetics, full stop, or whether it’s something you will actually use.

STICKY NOTE TO-DO LIST STENCIL

As with most of the quirky products I’ve found recently, this originally came to my attention via TikTok. A company called FTBT 3D Prints (short for Fix This Build That LLC) created the Sticky Note To-Do List Stencil for those who want to turn their blank, unlined sticky notes into checklists.

I appreciate the inclination. I start every day with a sticky note following my 1-2-3 approach to productivity. I have one big task (usually something I’ve been avoiding), two medium tasks, and three small tasks — all aside from things I would do everyday anyway, like checking and replying to email.

These help me focus on getting the most important and urgent work done. It doesn’t mean I won’t accomplish other tasks, just that I absolutely will complete the tasks I’ve set as essential.

The Alternatives

You may be wondering, why can’t someone just draw their own lines and/or check boxes/circles? Well, they absolutely can; indeed, that’s what I do every day on my sticky notes! Yay, me!

But there are some people who are more inspired by aesthetics than others, who want (to the point of needing) things to look good in order to feel right. I dislike the idea of feeling like everything has to be “perfect” in order to get started. However, if you are frozen in amber, inertia blocking any action, because things aren’t pretty, I am not going to spend eons trying to break through that obstacle with you. Another approach is needed. Sometimes, just getting started and making progress is necessary before you can fix the things that usually block you.

You might be thinking, OK, then why not buy the sticky notes that already have lines on them? You could definitely do that, too. There are a wide variety of generic sticky notes with lines, and a sub-set of those have check boxes (though, for some reason, many are rectangular rather than the traditional square), like these Gazelle sticky notes for $14.99 for a package of 400 notes.

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However, there are two potential obstacles. First, while I’m a big believer that many generic versions of organizing tools are fine, there are certain brand names that just work better than others, and Post-it! Notes have a much higher quality adhesive than generic sticky notes. Because of that, I’d really advise against purchasing random lined sticky notes in bulk.

Right, you may be thinking, but when people want this solution, can’t they just buy Post-it®-branded lined to-do lists notes? Well, 3M does make a wide variety of plain lined Post-it! Notes. Well, they can.

But shockingly, they haven’t created a widely available line of Post-it® Notes with check boxes or radio buttons. (Ahem, 3M, this is your cue, folks! Get on this!) 

There’s a far-less-easily found line of Noted by Post-it® products — you can sometimes locate individual products in Target or Staples — which include odd-sized products, like this Noted by Post-it®, Blue To-Do List Notes measuring 2.9″ x 5.7″. One package of 100 notes runs about $5. (Unfortunately, 3M almost never provides clear images on their site of their more niche products.)

Given this, I am cautiously optimistic about recommending consideration of the Sticky Note To-Do List Stencil

The Stencil

Each square stencil, suitable for any standard 3″ x 3″ sticky note, is manufactured from polyactic acid (PLA) filament, an eco-friendly plastic alternative made out of renewable resources.

The stencils come in ten colors: Ink Black, Radiant Red, Citrus Orange, Sunny Yellow, Emerald Green, Sky Blue, Royal Blue, Plush Purple, Pretty Pink, and Daylight White. You can also pick the “Mystery Color,” and the company will choose for you.

Any one stencil direct from the store is regularly $8 each, but they are currently on sale for $5, both from FTBT’s site and on TikTok.

You can also purchase bundles of 5 stencils in two different color schemes, Light (Sky Blue, Royal Blue, Plush Purple, Pretty Pink, and Daylight White) or Dark (Ink Black, Radiant Red, Citrus Orange, Sunny Yellow, and Emerald Green) for $29, or a Deluxe Bundle of all ten for $49. (Unless you’re homeschooling or have oodles of tiny humans, perhaps start with just one stencil, eh?)

Every stencil stencil has 10 lines, and you have the option of using the circular checkbox/radio button in anticipation of marking off completed tasks.

Additionally, while none of the company’s platforms have shown what the reverse of the stencil looks like, it appears that it must be somewhat hollow, as they recommend, “…when you’re not making a new list just flip over the stencil and use it to hold your stack of sticky notes so you’ll always have it at the ready.”

If you like the idea of using a stencil but aren’t sold on a circular check box (likely because boxes really do need to have straight edges), a few Etsy shops, including PrintPalaceXYZ and Vindion, have similar versions with square check boxes, in a similar price range.

MEMO WALLET

A few weeks ago, in Celebrate the Global Day of Unplugging, we talked extensively about the problems of always being connected. We reviewed the dangers of modern connectivity; in particular, we looked at the distractions, dangers to physical health, and the increased stress associated with constantly being plugged in. 

The problem is that across these first few decades of the 21st-century, we’ve lost the ability to capture thoughts on-the-go unless we have tiny computers in our pockets. People used to carry notebooks, Harriet the Spy-style to capture flashes of genius. Then, in the late 20th-century but before smartphones, there were Blackberries, PalmPilots, and other personal digital assistants (PDAs), to which people also quickly got addicted.

Indeed, twenty years ago, in 2004, Merlin Mann (founder of 43 Folders and coiner of the expression “Inbox Zero”) promoted the concept of the Hipster PDA, an alligator-clipped stack of index cards.

Initially a joke, Mann’s Introducing The Hipster PDA looked at a way to turn our collective backs on the expensive, theft-prone, and quickly addictive technology. 

Hipster PDA — CC BY-SA 2.0

The fact that it blended seamlessly with the themes and processes of David Allen’s Getting Things Done was also appealing. People invented templates (and, I’m guessing, stencils), and debated the best types of index cards (lined? graphed? dotted? traditional white or colored?) and enclosures (alligator clips or rubber bands?).

Two decades later, Nyckle Sijtsma of New Things Lab, a Dutch design studio, came up with a spin on the Hipster PDA, a way to detach from technology when out and about and still have the ability to brainstorm, create, write, and remember important things.

Simply put, MEMO Wallet is a distraction-free combination of a wallet and a miniature whiteboard. New Things Lab began MEMO Wallet with a Kickstarter and a goal of 4800 Euro; the effort was so popular that it hit €66,487 of backing in one month!

Made from high-quality, precision-grade aluminum 6063 alloy, the MEMO Wallet employs RFID-blocking technology to prevent against card-skimming and has space for securely holding up to six cards, three per side. It measures 4.25″ x 2.91″ x .43″ (108mm x 74mm x 11mm).

The MEMO Wallet has wear-resistant rubber elements to tightly grip cards and prevent unintentional slippage. When you’re ready, just slide your thumb upward against the vertical oval to access your cards

MEMO Wallet unfolds to reveal a 6-inch (diagonal) pocket whiteboard with a built-in, fine-point dry-erase pen with eraser. The aluminum whiteboard was created with a special heat-curing whiteboard paint to ensure that you can write smoothly on the surface without it squeaking. The pen clicks into place, nesting in the black outer edges of the whiteboard area, so you don’t need an elastic loop. (One MEMO Pen comes with the wallet; additional pens are sold separately in four-packs lasting 18-24 months, depending on usage.)

See the MEMO Wallet in action in just eleven seconds:

MEMO Wallet comes in four colors: Charcoal Black, Slate Grey, Gilded Rose, and a limited edition Revision Red.

Use the whiteboard for anything you’d put in a notebook — To-Do lists, notes, drawings, flow-charts — with confidence that when you fold everything back up, your scribbling will be protected. 

Obviously, a whiteboard lacks the (greater) permanence of using a notebook. It’s not going to sync over Wi-Fi or Bluetooth with your devices (since the goal is not to carry any) or with anything back at the office, so it requires intentionality.

Ostensibly, when you return to your home or workspace, you would rewrite anything that was still actionable or snap a photo of what’s on your whiteboard to upload it to Evernote or OneNote to enable optical character recognition for search at a later date.

The appeal is that you can disconnect from technology while reconnecting with your creativity. Without the incessant beeps and buzzes of texts, email, and app notifications, you can use the whiteboard to achieve mental clarity and focus for organizing your creative thoughts.

The MEMO Wallet won the 2024 iF Design Award.

One wallet is $69; two are $118; three wallets cost $169. If you purchase two or three MEMO Wallets, shipping is free. You can purchase it directly from New Things Lab.

NIIMBOT B21 THERMAL LABEL PRINTER

As a professional organizer, I love talking about the importance of labeling. What you name something helps you remember where to put it, where to find it later, and generally how to think about it in relationship to other things, both categorically and sequentially.

My favorite label maker is the Brother PT-65, which isn’t even made any more. I’ve had it 22 years, since just before I began my professional organizing business.

It takes six AA batteries, and although I use it almost every day that I’m with clients, I probably only have to replace the batteries every few years. It’s a workhorse.

Over the years, I’ve tested other label makers from Brother, Dymo, Martha Stewart, and a variety of other manufacturers. Most have their merits and drawbacks, and while I have a few back-ups I’ve received as gifts over the years, I’m sticking with my PT-65 for as long as it will stick with me.

That doesn’t mean I don’t appreciate variations. In September, in Paper Doll Explores New & Nifty Office and School Supplies, I wrote about the PrintRGo thermal pocket printer, which sadly doesn’t appear to be the market right now.

A number of readers contacted me after that post, telling me that they bought the printer and were delighted by it, so I’m happy to see that many other similar miniature thermal label printers have remained on the market, including the Printago, which I’d also mentioned.


The latest thermal printer that caught my eye (and yes, I first saw it on TikTok, but don’t tell my congressman) is the Niimbot B21. it’s designed to look like mid-20th-century typewriter. The teeny printer comes in green, red, black, and creamy white. (While the other colors are probably more mid-century accurate, the red one is so cool!)

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The Niimbot B21 smart label printer is ink-free, printing on BPA-free thermal paper, and supports multiple width labels (40mm x 20mm, 50mm x 30mm, 50mm x 40mm, and 50mm x 50mm). The Niimbot B21 can auto-identify which label paper has been inserted.

The labels are waterproof, tear-, oil- and abrasion-resistant, and allegedly have strong adhesion but are easy to peel and remove. Each Niimbot B21 comes with one package of 50x30mm labels (230 labels per roll). 

It supports a wide variety of design customization, including: 19 fonts, more than 1500 icons, 100+ graphic frames for around the text, and 16 languages, and it can print 203 dpi images. Use it to print a variety of labels for your household or workplace, including labels with product specifications, addresses, prices, ingredients, etc.

You create the labels in the app. They can include text, icons/emoji, pictures, QR codes, and bar codes. You can also have labels with simple multi-row tables. Once the label looks as you like, print it from the app to the B21 printer.

The Niimbot prints labels at 2.4 inches (60 mm) per second, and can work four hours continuously after 1 1/2 hours of charging.  The Niimbot B21 is designed to be quick to set up:

  1. Download the free Niimbot App at the Apple App Store or Google Play Store. The app’s function include scanning, image recognition, and batch printing, serial number are offered
  2. Turn on your device’s Bluetooth (if it’s not already on).
  3. Click on “Unconnected” in the Niimbot App to pair and connect to your device.

The Niimbot B21 thermal label printer is $59.39 on Amazon (for all colors) or $69.99 direct from the Niimbot store. See it in action.


While none of these items are must-haves, they might make your time at your desk (or away from it) a little more fun. What do you think? Would you buy any of these?

16 Responses

  1. Julie, my labeler looks exactly like the one you pictured. I’ve had it a long time, use it almost everyday, and only replace the batteries from time to time. It is the best organizing tool!
    I may take a second look at the memo wallet. I think my techie sons may like that.
    If I need lines on my Post-Its – I’ll buy them with lines but I’m reasonably OK without lines.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      Our PT-65s really go the distance! We should form an appreciation club! 😉

      Re: stick notes: I also don’t need the lines, and yes, you can buy them with lines, but as I noted, it’s difficult and expensive to find them with checkboxes, and some people reallllly like those. I suspect the same people who like using stencils to create formatting in their Bullet Journals would like something like these.

  2. I still like my old label maker and as long as it works I’ll stick with it but I think my daughter-in-law would be interested in the thermal label printer.
    Thanks for sharing.

  3. Two ‘short’ posts in a row? What is the “Julie world” coming to? I always enjoy your posts, whatever length they are. However, I do appreciate the shorter ones. You always give us so much to think about, and I like focusing on fewer things at a time.

    You gave us so many fun things to look at. That multi-colored dog, the sticky-note to-do templates, the memo wallet, and the Nimbot printer. These are all new to me. I can’t quite imagine using the to-do template, but I can see the appeal for some. And the memo wallet is such a clever solution for combining old school with a pinch of tech.

    I know what you mean about Post-It notes being the gold standard of stickiness. And it’s true. As a sticky note collector, the Post-It brand is the best. But I recently purchased some off-brand 3″x3″ LINED sticky notes on Amazon. The colors are great, the price was right, and the stickiness factor was very good.

    Thank you for always finding such delightful products, ideas, and resources. YOU, my friend, are the gold standard of organizers.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      My problem is with the long-term stickiness of generic/off-brand notes, so I’d be curious which brand you bought, and how long you’ve been testing them. I often use them with clients for on-the-wall (but figuratively off-the-wall) projects, and I’ve yet to find a non-3M version that will stay stuck after multiple respositionings. I’d love to see one that really works.

      And oh, my, thank you for the great compliment! I truly appreciate it!

  4. I love sticky notes that have a purpose. When I was working as an office manager, I created customized sticky notes that listed a priority list so when the staff would get the assignment, they could easily determine when it needed to be done. I added to the sticky note a top priority (which needs to be done at the end of the day), which is not needed for 2-3 days, and a low priority (by the end of the week). It worked well and helped my staff not feel overwhelmed with the requested updates/content.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      How fabulous! I’d love to hear more about your customized sticky notes. Did you create these by hand each time, or did you design them and have them custom printed?

      Thanks for sharing and for reading!

  5. Seana Turner says:

    So the NIMBOT is adorable. I would use it. It just looks fun to use. I’ve received a couple of label makers over the years as well. Some look cute, but the labels don’t stick well or don’t print well. More fashion statements than true professional tools. I use a handheld Brother PTouch (don’t know the number) that is old, but fits so nicely in my bag. I also have a larger one that is like the CUBE, that prints via Bluetooth. I love them all, really. It’s just fun to play around and make labels.

    I would use the stencil. That is right up my alley. I prefer checkboxes to the circles, though. I think it is easier to make notations inside the boxes. But that is the kind of thing that totally appeals to me. I still buy the yearly inserts with these pre-printed, but I think these would make a great, customized professional “give away” item for organizers, don’t you?

    When it comes to the memo taker, probably not so much for me, but I can see the appeal. It is nice to be able to take a note without getting sucked into the digital universe. I mostly take notes in my paper planner, so that’s been my approach. No wi-fi needed, which is awesome!

    • Julie Bestry says:

      The minute I saw that Niimbot, I knew I would have to find a reason to write about it. I love the fact that it’s not just a thermal printer, but a cute one, too. I imagine the Niimbot is a better fit for someone wanting to play at home, or maybe in the office to add a fun touch, but can’t imagine it could live up to the pressure we professionals put on a label maker!

      You’re right, these stencils would be a good giveaway. You might want to check out the Etsy versions for those square checkboxes.

      And I’m your twinsie with regard to keeping a paper planner, but I think the MEMO Wallet is likely to be the best fit for a guy who is trying to cut down on tech. I don’t know many women who have only six cards in their wallets: debit, credit, license, insurance cards, stuff for their kids, etc. It’s streamlined; I see it as a good option for a late 20something trying to escape from the always-on situation.

      Thank you so much for reading and sharing your thoughts!

  6. I still use my old label maker too ad I love it, simple and can always change the labels from white to clear.
    I like the idea of the post its with lines, when it comes to cook books and adding notes; I don’t like writing on the actual book.
    Thanks for all these great ideas.

    • Julie Bestry says:

      Oooh, if you like sticky notes for your cookbooks, I have a fun post coming up in the next few months! As for lines on my Post-its, what I like about these stencils is that they offer the check boxes, too. If someone wants something that looks perfectly lined up, then lines plus check boxes (or radio buttons) all perfectly in line is nifty. Thank you for reading and sharing your thoughts!

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