2026 Top 10 Bullet Journal Influencers in Australia
- Leo Xia

- Apr 21
- 7 min read

The top bullet journal influencers in Australia to know in 2026 include Rachael of All About Planners, Celina of A Beautiful Fable, Erin Smith, Kellie Winnell, Roxanne of Rox Paper Stickers, Connie of Peppercon Arts, Cypriana of CypScribbles, Icy of Eye Sea Studio, Amy of Pages by Amy, and Becca of For the Joy of Journaling. Together, they reflect the main styles shaping Australia’s journaling space today: practical planning, decorative spreads, stationery-led notebook culture, Hobonichi and Traveler’s Notebook inspiration, and more personal creative journaling. Public discovery in this niche is spread across creator websites, YouTube channels, Etsy pages, and curated roundups rather than one official national ranking, so this article works best as an editorial shortlist for 2026.
Quick Content Reach:
Why trust this list
There is no single official “Australia’s top bullet journal influencers” league table. What does exist is a mix of creator-owned pages and curated local roundups. WashiGang’s roundup is one of the clearest public lists focused specifically on Australian bullet journal creators, while creator pages like All About Planners, A Beautiful Fable, and Erin Smith’s site help confirm geography, niche focus, and content style. That makes this a more credible editorial roundup than a simple follower-count list.
At a glance-Bullet Journal Influencers in Australia
Creator | Region | Content style | |
Rachael / All About Planners | Australia | planner reviews, planning tips, supplies, printables | brand-led planning account |
Celina / A Beautiful Fable | Melbourne | planners, stickers, stationery, journaling | @abeautifulfable |
Erin Smith | Brisbane | bullet journaling, stationery, reading journal content | @erinsmith.art |
Kellie Winnell | Australia | creativity, journaling, books, paper-loving lifestyle | @kellie.winnell |
Roxanne / Rox Paper Stickers | Sydney | bullet journaling, stickers, decorative planning | @roxpaperstickers |
Connie / Peppercon Arts | Melbourne | Hobonichi, Traveler’s Notebook, watercolor, stationery | @pepperconarts |
Cypriana / CypScribbles | Sydney | creative productivity, scribble-style bullet journaling | @cypscribbles |
Icy / Eye Sea Studio | Sydney | bullet journaling, calligraphy, workshops | @eyesea.studio |
Amy / Pages by Amy | Melbourne | classic bullet journal inspiration | @pagesbyamy |
Becca / For the Joy of Journaling | Australia | personal bullet journaling inspiration | @forthejoyofjournaling |
The list blends practical planning creators with more aesthetic and stationery-led accounts because that is how the category actually works in Australia today.
How we chose these creators
We used four filters. First, the creator had to be clearly Australian or publicly tied to the Australian journaling scene. Second, their content had to revolve around bullet journaling, planning, notebooks, or related stationery culture. Third, they needed a visible public footprint through a creator website, YouTube channel, Etsy shop, or local roundup. Fourth, the final list needed to reflect the main styles readers actually search for in 2026, from productivity planning to creative journal pages.
1. Rachael of All About Planners
Region: Australia
Style: planner reviews, tips, favorite supplies, weekly spreads, printables
Rachael is one of the clearest planning voices in Australia. Her site introduces her as an Australian planner addict and says the blog includes more than 1,000 posts on planning, from planner reviews and favorite supplies to weekly spreads. That alone gives her a strong claim to influence in the local planner and notebook space.
What makes her especially valuable in a 2026 roundup is that her work is practical. She is not just curating pretty pages. She helps readers compare systems, paper products, layouts, and supplies in a way that makes planning feel usable. For notebook and planner brands, that kind of audience trust matters.
2. Celina of A Beautiful Fable
Region: Melbourne, Australia
Style: planners, stickers, stationery, journaling, organized lifestyle
Celina sits right at the intersection of journaling and stationery culture. Her YouTube profile says she is based in Melbourne and obsessed with staying organised, planners, stickers, stationery, and more. Her site reinforces that identity by framing A Beautiful Fable around journalling, self-care, and organising a more beautiful life.
She belongs near the top of a list like this because her content feels commercially and editorially relevant at the same time. She speaks to the kind of audience that does not just use a planner; they enjoy the whole paper ritual around it.
3. Erin Smith
Region: Brisbane, Australia
Style: bullet journaling, stationery, reading journal content, creative planning
Erin Smith is one of the easiest Australian creators to verify publicly. Her site says she is based in Brisbane and makes journalling, stationery, and reading content for YouTube and Instagram. WashiGang’s Australian roundup also lists her as “Bullet journal & stationery. Brisbane Australia.”
She stands out because her niche is broader than just decorative spreads. Erin bridges bullet journaling, reading journals, and stationery culture in a way that feels very current. That makes her especially relevant for notebook brands trying to speak to multi-use journal buyers.
4. Kellie Winnell
Region: Australia
Style: creativity, journaling, books, paper-loving lifestyle
Kellie Winnell brings a more personal and creativity-led flavor to the list. Her public FAQ describes her as an Australian blogger who designs stamps, while her Linktree presents her as an Aussie sharing her passion for creativity, books, and her sausage dog, Wyborn. WashiGang also includes her in its Australian bullet journal roundup.
She is a good reminder that journaling influence is not always about strict bullet journal technique. In Australia especially, the notebook world often overlaps with craft, books, self-expression, and memory-keeping, and Kellie fits that broader culture well.
5. Roxanne of Rox Paper Stickers
Region: Sydney, New South Wales
Style: bullet journaling, stickers, decorative planning
Roxanne is especially relevant for brands because her niche sits right where journaling meets add-on products. WashiGang’s roundup lists her as Sydney-based, and her Etsy shop also places RoxPaperStickers in Sydney, New South Wales.
That combination of bullet journaling and sticker-led planning gives her practical value. She is not just a creator people follow for ideas; she is also close to the product ecosystem that surrounds planners and journals.
6. Connie of Peppercon Arts
Region: Melbourne, Australia
Style: Hobonichi, Traveler’s Notebook, watercolor, stationery and journal culture
Connie brings a more premium, material-focused side of notebook culture. WashiGang’s roundup describes her as Melbourne-based and specifically calls out watercolor, Hobonichi, Traveler’s Notebook, stationery, and journal-loving content.
That makes her especially useful for a 2026 roundup because notebook culture is no longer just about the layout itself. Readers increasingly care about paper feel, writing tools, covers, portability, and creative ritual, and Connie’s niche speaks directly to that.
7. Cypriana of CypScribbles
Region: Sydney, Australia
Style: creative productivity, scribble-style bullet journaling
Cypriana, better known as @cypscribbles, was listed by WashiGang as a Sydney-based bullet journal creator whose approach uses creativity to stay productive. That short description says a lot. It places her firmly in the part of the niche where journaling still serves a practical purpose, even when the pages look playful and personal.
Her value is in the tone of her work. It feels less polished-for-performance and more like a real person using a notebook to think and plan. That kind of authenticity still travels well in search and on social.
8. Icy of Eye Sea Studio
Region: Sydney, Australia
Style: bullet journaling, calligraphy, workshops, expressive spreads
Icy adds a strong calligraphy and workshop-led dimension to the list. WashiGang’s interview describes her as a calligraphy and bullet journal artist and teacher from Sydney who creates bright but moody journal spreads. Her YouTube page also describes the channel as focused on bullet journaling and calligraphy.
She is one of the clearest examples of how lettering and journaling continue to overlap. For brands that want creator partnerships around premium notebooks, pens, brush pens, or paper-friendly tools, her audience is highly aligned.
9. Amy of Pages by Amy
Region: Melbourne, Australia
Style: classic bullet journal inspiration
Amy has a lighter public footprint than some of the others here, but she still deserves a place in an Australian roundup because she is directly included in WashiGang’s list as a Melbourne-based bujo creator under @pagesbyamy.
That matters because not every niche leader looks like a media brand. Some creators remain influential inside the community precisely because they stay close to the core bullet journal audience.
10. Becca of For the Joy of Journaling
Region: Australia
Style: personal bullet journaling and journaling inspiration
Becca rounds out the list with a more personal journaling voice. WashiGang describes her as an Australian bullet journal enthusiast, and that simple framing is part of the appeal.
Not every noteworthy creator in this niche is highly commercial or hyper-produced. Some remain useful because they make journaling feel accessible and human. Becca fits that role well and gives the list a more grounded finish.
Final thoughts
Australia’s journaling scene is not huge, but it is distinctive. It blends practical planning, stationery enthusiasm, decorative spreads, and more personal creative journaling in a way that feels less industrial than larger markets. That is why the strongest Australian roundup is not just a follower leaderboard. It is a cross-section of how people actually use notebooks and planners today.
For a notebook, journal, or planner brand, this kind of list is useful because it reveals not just who is visible, but what kind of paper culture each creator represents. And that is usually the more valuable signal.
—Leo Xia, CEO, Lion Paper Products
You design, we deliver.
FAQs:
Q1: Who are the top bullet journal influencers in Australia in 2026?
A strong editorial shortlist for 2026 includes Rachael of All About Planners, Celina of A Beautiful Fable, Erin Smith, Kellie Winnell, Roxanne of Rox Paper Stickers, Connie of Peppercon Arts, Cypriana of CypScribbles, Icy of Eye Sea Studio, Amy of Pages by Amy, and Becca of For the Joy of Journaling.
Q2: Are these all strictly bullet-journal-only creators?
No. Some are classic bullet journal creators, while others work across planning, journaling, stationery, calligraphy, and broader notebook culture. That is consistent with how Australian journaling is surfaced publicly across roundups and creator pages.
Q3: Which Australian creators are best for planner and stationery brands?
Rachael of All About Planners, Celina of A Beautiful Fable, Roxanne of Rox Paper Stickers, Connie of Peppercon Arts, and Icy of Eye Sea Studio are especially relevant for brands in planners, stickers, pens, accessories, and premium notebooks.
Q4: Which Australian creators are best for creative journal inspiration?
Erin Smith, Kellie Winnell, Connie of Peppercon Arts, Cypriana of CypScribbles, and Icy of Eye Sea Studio are particularly useful for readers interested in expressive spreads, journaling culture, and more personal or artistic notebook use.
Reference
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