Worthwhile Paper

MOON STUDY: Your simple moon phase reflection journal

$28.00 USD

You are invited to observe and record how your living experience unfolds in motion with the moon. 

Moon Study is a simple moon phase reflection journal. With minimal structure and instruction, this lightly guided journal is meant to serve as an open container for freely noticing, reflecting & discovering.

What’s inside: Instructions and minimal guidance, a mini (and shiny!) moon phase guide with common associations, plenty of moon phase journal pages (enough for an entire lunar year) a section including a page for each main moon phase for you to track patterns.

Product Details
Shipping & Returns
  • Size: 5.5 x 7 inches
  • Paper: 100% recycled 70lb soft white paper inside + iridescent cover stock
  • Printed insides with dot grid for reflections
  • Screen printed covers using hand-mixed ink colors
  • Bound and assembled locally in Ypsilanti, MI

U.S. Shipping Only. Shipping is free on orders over $75. This is shipped from Worthwhile Paper and not from Girlboss. Returns are accepted for unopened / unused products.

Why We Love it

Sure you’ve journaled, but have you ever journaled according to the cycles of the moon? Didn’t think so. This guided journal celebrates the intrinsic link between creativity and nature, and prompts you to observe how the moon phases might affect your process. You won’t look up at the night sky the same way again. P.S., Worthwhile Paper plants a tree for each order.

Meet The Founder

KRISTEN DROZDOWSKI

Kristen Drozdowski was in her final year of college and interning at art galleries and designing silk-screened posters for exhibitions. “After graduating, I had a plethora of part-time jobs: in-house designer at a local stationery shop, calligraphy and hand-lettering for weddings, I loved it all but everything felt like a side project,” she says. Drozdowski wanted to see what would happen if she really dedicated herself to one project. “When I realized I wanted to start my own stationery and gift line, it was actually less of a leap and more of a series of careful steps. I started gently pruning away the kinds of work I was doing that didn’t align with my strongest aspirations, and focused more on nourishing what I wanted to do most, which led me to design my first small collection of greeting cards and screen prints”

Drozdowski finds joy in being able to provide things that others use to celebrate and brighten the days of their loved ones. “Making goods that nourish positive connections gives the creativity behind them an added purpose, which still fuels my ideas today.”