Wall planner system stationery

Wall planner system stationery, minimal, brutalist, light

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Brutalist stationery pairing a to-do list card and calendar grid on ruled and squared paper, shot against weathered concrete.

Summary

A brutalist wall-planner system of unlined "To Do" card and gridded "January" calendar sheet, presented as off-white paper objects against a weathered concrete backdrop.

Visual description

Two portrait-oriented cards rest on a textured, aged concrete surface. The left card features "To Do" in a bold display sans-serif and is ruled with horizontal lines for writing. The right card reads "January" in the same typeface and is divided into a regular grid of small squares for a month-at-a-glance layout. Both cards are off-white with minimal ink, held flat by tan painter's tape in the corners. The concrete background is weathered gray with visible stains and wear, shot in natural light that emphasizes the texture and the stark contrast between the pristine paper and the raw surface.

Key takeaway

The restraint of typography and grid structure as the primary design language, with the concrete substrate adding character without competing. The use of ruled and gridded paper itself as an aesthetic choice. The pairing of a task-focused card (to-do) with a calendar system that is both practical and visually coherent.

Reuse notes

Strong reference for sustainable, low-tech productivity tools and stationery design. The brutalist pairing of paper and concrete conveys authenticity and durability. Works well for mindful design, workspace organization systems, or analog-first brands; the aesthetic appeals to minimal, intentional lifestyles.

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