Browse help topics
Getting Started
Need help choosing?
Need help after purchase?
Download & Import
Using your notebook/planner
- How to change or reuse template pages on planner landing pages
- Why stickers look blurry when enlarged
- What to check if a product does not work on your device
- How to use NozomuNoto index pages
- How to use NozomuNoto template pages
- How to change a digital planner cover
- How to install and use digital stickers
Product Tutorials
- How to use Yume Techo Landscape tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Techo Portrait tutorial pages
- How to use Shibui Techo Weeks tutorial pages
- How to use Shibui Techo Months tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Noto V1 Landscape tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Noto V1 Portrait tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Noto V2 Landscape tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Noto V2 Portrait tutorial pages
- How to use Yume Noto V3 Portrait tutorial pages
- How to use NozomuNoto Ultimate Digital Stickers
- How to use NozomuNoto Digital Covers
- Which NozomuNoto instruction or tutorial file should I open first?
Device & App
iOS / iPadOS
GoodNotes
Notability
Noteshelf
Noteful
StarNote
Flexcil
Kilonotes
Android
StarNote
Samsung Notes
Penly
Flexcil
Noteshelf
Xodo
E-reader Devices
Boox devices
reMarkable
Bigme
Supernote
Kindle Scribe
Other e-reader devices
How to use Yume Noto V1 Landscape tutorial pages
Learn how to use Yume Noto V1 Landscape tutorial pages, including the guide page, notebook index, section setup, and reusable templates.
On this page
- Start here
- Built-in tutorial pages and visual guide
- Guide Page
- Index Page
- Template Page
- What Yume Noto V1 Landscape is best for
- How to use this notebook first
- Good ways to use this notebook
- Helpful expectations before you fill it
- Simple starter setup
- When the Yume Noto V1 Landscape setup gets tricky
- 1. You name too many sections first
- 2. A note does not fit any section
- 3. Copied templates are hard to return to
- 4. Dates start taking over the notebook
- Where to go next
Use this guide when you open Yume Noto V1 Landscape and want to understand the notebook guide, index, and template pages before building your own note system.
Start here
- Read the guide page once before naming many sections.
- Use Index to name the sections you actually need.
- Duplicate template pages before writing on them.
- Keep the notebook simple enough that you want to come back to it.
- Use landscape space for wide notes, tables, side-by-side references, and project dashboards.
Built-in tutorial pages and visual guide
Use the images below as visual checkpoints. The extra notes explain what to do with the page after you understand what it shows.
Guide Page

The guide page is the safe first stop. Use it to understand how the notebook is organized before naming sections for school, work, home, creative projects, or reading notes.
Index Page

Use Index as your notebook map. Write short section names so you can remember where school notes, work notes, home notes, ideas, references, or archives belong.
Template Page

Templates are for repeated page needs. Duplicate a clean template before writing, then move the copy into the section where it belongs. Use the wide landscape space for tables, comparison notes, project dashboards, side-by-side references, and visual planning.
What Yume Noto V1 Landscape is best for
Yume Noto V1 Landscape is a simple indexed digital notebook. Use it when you want wide writing space for notes, references, tables, project planning, study pages, reading notes, meeting notes, sketches, dashboards, and collections.
It is not a dated planner. There are no monthly, weekly, or daily calendar pages to keep up with. The main system is Index, Sections, and Template Pages: name the sections you need, copy templates for repeated layouts, and keep notes findable with short labels.
How to use this notebook first
- Name only the sections you need now. Start with three to five sections so the notebook stays easy to use.
- Use Index as the map. Add short section names and return to Index when you need to find notes again.
- Use one Inbox section. Put messy notes there first when you do not know where something belongs yet.
- Use templates by job. Choose lined pages for writing, grid pages for planning, blank pages for sketches, and structured templates for repeated lists or projects.
- Archive old notes instead of deleting too soon. Move finished notes to an archive section when you might need them later.
Good ways to use this notebook
- School: subject notes, assignment notes, lecture summaries, reading notes, formulas, and revision pages.
- Work: meeting notes, client notes, project notes, process notes, content ideas, and follow-up lists.
- Home: recipes, routines, budget notes, cleaning lists, family information, and household projects.
- Creative: craft plans, product ideas, moodboards, sketches, quotes, and research pages.
- Personal: journal pages, memory notes, therapy notes, health notes, book notes, and prayer or Bible study notes.
Landscape is helpful for wide notes, split-screen reference, dashboards, tables, and desk planning.
Helpful expectations before you fill it
- Give the notebook one main job first. Decide whether it is mainly for school, work, home, projects, journaling, or mixed notes.
- Leave unused sections blank. Empty sections are normal. Use the notebook slowly and let the structure grow from real notes.
- Use Inbox before sorting. Catch messy notes first, then move the ones worth keeping after you can see what they are becoming.
- Keep dates in a planner or calendar. Use the notebook for the information behind those dates: notes, research, ideas, lists, and references.
Simple starter setup
For the first notebook setup, create sections such as Inbox, Work, Study, Home, Ideas, and Archive. Put messy notes in Inbox first, then move only the notes worth keeping into the right section later. This keeps the notebook useful without forcing you to organize everything immediately.
When the Yume Noto V1 Landscape setup gets tricky
1. You name too many sections first
What happens: the notebook looks organized at first, but then every note needs a decision before you can write.
What to do: start with three to five sections, such as Inbox, Work, Study, Home, Ideas, and Archive. Add more only after you know what kind of notes repeat.
2. A note does not fit any section
What happens: you stop writing because you are not sure where the note belongs.
What to do: put it in Inbox first. Sorting can happen later. A useful notebook catches information before it organizes it perfectly.
3. Copied templates are hard to return to
What happens: a copied template becomes an active page, but the template link still opens the original master.
What to do: bookmark the copied page, write it into Index, or keep a small active-pages list near the front of the notebook.
4. Dates start taking over the notebook
What happens: the notebook becomes a planner, and dates, appointments, and deadlines crowd out the notes.
What to do: keep dates inside a digital planner or calendar. Use Yume Noto for the details behind those dates: meeting notes, class notes, project notes, research, and ideas.
Where to go next
Yume Noto V1 Landscape explains the product pages. For page ideas, use Tips & Ideas. For app buttons, imports, page copying, bookmarks, covers, stickers, or device problems, use the Help Center guide for your app.
Still need help?
Send your order number, product name, device, app, and a screenshot or short screen recording if the issue is visual.