

Marimekko "One Line a Day" - the most beautiful diary I really use
I'm not a diary person. Never have been. Until I saw this journal with the iconic poppy print from Marimekko - and was suddenly motivated. Spoiler: I don't regret it.
Keeping a diary sounds like a guilty conscience on days when you don't manage it. And the blank page that accuses you every evening. «One Line a Day» from Chronicle Books thinks differently: one line, for five years, over and over again on the page. The promise behind it is great - at some point you turn back and see at a glance what moved you exactly one, two or three years ago today.
I was sceptical. And then it worked.
Marimekko: flowers as an attitude
When you hear the brand name «Marimekko», you probably immediately think of poppies. Large, round flowers in red, black and white. The pattern is called Unikko - Finnish for poppy - and was designed by Maija Isola in 1964. The founder of Marimekko had announced at the time that she would never print floral patterns. Isola drew the Unikko out of defiance. The pattern became a bestseller and is now one of the most recognisable textile designs in the world. There is something typically Nordic in this gesture: stubbornness that pays off.

What makes the «One Line a Day» series so special is that there are regular new cover editions that look like coffee-table books. You don't just buy a diary. You choose an object that you like to leave on the table. The Marimekko edition with the Unikko print is one of them. Once you start collecting, you probably won't stop.
The cover is also available with the classic red poppies. I opted for blue - a little more restrained, but still an eye-catcher on the bookshelf.
The concept: radically low-threshold
One line per day. For five years. The layout is designed so that you can always see what you wrote on the same date in previous years as you write.

Haptics and finish
The book feels good in the hand, the binding is firm and the Unikko print is of high quality. Nothing flakes off or smudges over time. The paper is thin enough that the book doesn't look too bulky, but sturdy enough for ballpoint pens or fineliners. Thanks to the ribbon marker, I am immediately on the right date.

Everyday life: does it really work?
I'm not really the journaling type. The thought of filling half a page in the evening tends to make me resist rather than relax. But one line? That works somehow.
Surprisingly, I miss it when I'm travelling. Because I don't want to transport the book unnecessarily often, I leave it at home. Instead, I record my lines on my mobile and look them up later. Not ideal. The notes on my mobile feel more fleeting, more ephemeral. The book gives the same sentence more weight.

I am not a model student
Every day, without exception? No. There are weeks when the journal lies untouched on the bedside table for three days. But that's not a failure for me, it's almost a feature in itself. When I then sit down and add the missing days, I create a little review of the week. What was actually important? What has been forgotten again? This has a different quality to the daily routine - less mindfulness, more perspective.

In a nutshell
Small, consistent, beautiful
If you want to keep a diary but don't know where to start, you've come to the right place. One line a day is a format that actually (almost always) works. And when the diary cover is by Marimekko, it's even easier to pick up the pen for the first time. I'm sticking to the ritual.
Two restrictions: Handwriting is mandatory. And if you can't be brief, you'll suffer.
Pro
- Iconic Unikko design from Marimekko
- radically simple concept: one line per day
- five years at a glance on the same date
- Cover editions as beautiful as coffee-table books
- Ideal for anyone who wants to get into journaling
Contra
- No space for detailed entries

Like a cheerleader, I love celebrating good design and bringing you closer to everything furniture- and interior design- related. I regularly curate simple yet sophisticated interior ideas, report on trends and interview creative minds about their work.


