I plan on using the tools from this book to make travel sketchnotes for both business and personal trips and as well as mapping out better ways to communicate at work.

I found many helpful tips on how to organize and display information in ways I'd never thought of before. I also loved the examples throughout the book, to see how others use sketchnotes. I am especially excited to try out this method on PowerPoint slides (yep, work nerd alert).

While I can't imagine I'd use this method for general note taking, I could see it as a fun way to do journaling (which I don't currently do). The plan is to try a few travel sketchnotes first, to practice and hone my skills to see if it's something I'd enjoy doing on a regular basis.

Overall, this is a good resource for visually mapping out ideas that lead to more dynamic, interesting storytelling.

This book was much better than the first book on this topic. The author gives more ideas about how Sketchnotes can be used for travel, recipes, books, movies, project planning etc. I found it to be more useful and it has some practical advice along with advanced tips. I am definitely going to give some of these a try soon.

A very worthwhile successor to Sketchnote Handbook. This one recaps Handbook and then works through a broad variety of applications for sketchnoting. I appreciate the author's willingness to showcase so many other artists' work, which opens the doors of imagination broadly for us who are finding our own way to Sketchnote in particular, but be more creative in general.
informative inspiring lighthearted slow-paced

The companion to Sketchnote, this book is a hands-on dive into the basics of sketchnoting. This covers everything from the 5 basic elements of drawing and page layouts to simplified people and icons. While this book can be used on its own, it's better with the full text at the same time (read text, then corresponding workbook chapters).

Great book on Sketchnotes - lots of ideas on how to utilize the technique.

Kind of a grab-bag, lame follow-up to the Sketchnote Handbook. Oh well!