This week’s addict is a designer and illustrator who has filled a nice row of Moleskine journals:

What’s inside is even better: beautiful travel collages!




For the past several years, I’ve keep a sketchbook that I use for everyday notes, ideas, lists, sketches, as well as travel collages. I carry it with me everywhere and, recently, it has been filling up with new Japanese words I’m learning! Whenever I travel, I add collages of each city I visit. You know all those maps, brochures, and ticket stubs you collect while traveling? I have always hated throwing all that information away; I have this irrational desire to hang on to it all because I’ll want to look at it again one day! Of course, I never actually look at it again, so I’ve decided to save some of it in my sketchbooks by cutting it up and making collages.
See more at Naomi Leeman: Travel Collages