Use Ribbon Titles Sparingly So They Still Feel Special
Ribbon titles are one of those journal decorations that look charming immediately. They give a header a handmade stationery feeling, and they can make a simple page feel more finished without needing many other supplies.
The problem is repetition. A ribbon shape is visually loud because it has a filled body, folded ends, a curved top edge, and often a shadow or outline. When every section gets one, the page stops reading as organized and starts reading as crowded.
Use the ribbon as a headline container, not a general label style.
Give the ribbon a higher rank
The advanced move is not to stop using ribbon titles. It is to assign them a higher rank.
Use a ribbon when the section deserves a real visual announcement: a monthly theme, a main diary title, a memory page headline, or the one area you want the eye to notice first. For smaller sections, switch to quieter dividers, dots, brackets, or a thin underline.
Use the squint test
Think of the ribbon as a headline container, not a general label style. If the page has five small sections, only one of them should probably get the ribbon treatment. The others can stay useful with plain linework. That contrast is what lets the ribbon stay cute instead of becoming visual noise.
The easiest test is the squint test. Look at the page from a little distance before you start writing. If the ribbons are the first, second, and third thing you see, there are too many. If one ribbon anchors the page and the rest of the structure feels quiet, the hierarchy is working.
Protect the writing field
Ribbon titles also take more vertical space than they seem to. The folded sides, curved body, and breathing room around the shape all subtract from the writing field. This matters on diary pages because the decoration should support the entry, not steal the room where the entry will live.
A clean formula is: one ribbon for the main title, thin dividers for section breaks, tiny dots or short rules for small labels, and plenty of plain writing lines below.
If you already drew too many ribbons, do not try to make the page even more decorative to balance them. Simplify around them. Leave the largest ribbon as the main header, then let the remaining sections use lighter lines or empty space. The page will usually calm down faster than you expect.
The goal is for the ribbon to feel like a deliberate accent. When it is rare, it feels cute. When it appears everywhere, it becomes the whole page.












