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Sunday Scrolling & My Digital Style Scrapbook

So I was sitting in my favorite corner at this little coffee shop downtown yesterday – you know the one with the mismatched chairs and that barista who always remembers your order? It was one of those lazy Sunday afternoons where the sun was hitting just right through the window, and I had my laptop open, pretending to be productive while actually just scrolling through photos from my trip to Kyoto last spring.

And then it hit me. I was looking at this spreadsheet I’d made for that trip – not the boring kind with budgets and flight times, but this thing I’d thrown together to track all the little shops, cafes, and vintage finds I wanted to check out. I’d completely forgotten about it until that moment, buried in my Google Drive like some digital time capsule.

I opened it up, and honestly? It was a mess. Color-coded rows everywhere, random notes in Japanese I definitely can’t read now, links to Google Maps that probably don’t work anymore. But scrolling through it brought back all these tiny memories – that tiny ceramics studio in Arashiyama, the perfect bowl of ramen place that wasn’t in any guidebook, the vintage kimono shop where the owner spent an hour showing me different obi patterns.

Which got me thinking about how I organize my style stuff now. I’ve always been that person with a million tabs open, screenshots saved to my camera roll that I never look at again, notes app entries that make zero sense a week later. But recently, I’ve been trying to be a little more intentional about it. Not in a rigid, boring way – more like creating a visual mood board that actually makes sense to me.

Enter what I’ve been calling my orientdig spreadsheet. It started as a joke, honestly. I was talking to a friend about how I wanted to track how often I actually wore certain pieces versus what I just kept buying, and she was like, “just make a spreadsheet, you nerd.” So I did.

But it’s not what you’re picturing. There are no numbers, no complicated formulas. It’s more like a digital scrapbook. One tab is just photos of outfits I’ve worn that felt particularly “me” – not necessarily the most Instagrammable ones, but the ones where I felt genuinely good walking out the door. Another tab is a running list of orientdig pieces I keep coming back to in my head. Not shopping links, just descriptions. Like “wide-leg trousers that feel like pajamas but look polished” or “that one perfect oversized blazer I saw someone wearing at the farmers market.”

The funny thing is, keeping this orientdig spreadsheet has made me notice patterns I never would have seen otherwise. Like how I’m apparently obsessed with anything in this particular shade of earthy green – I have it noted next to three different items, from a pair of trousers to a silk scarf. Or how I keep writing “needs pockets” next to dresses. It’s these little personal quirks that a shopping app algorithm would never pick up on.

It’s also become this weirdly comforting ritual. Instead of mindlessly scrolling when I’m bored, sometimes I’ll just open the spreadsheet and add a note. Saw someone wearing amazing shoes on the subway? Note it down. Remembered how much I loved wearing my vintage Levi’s with a simple white tee last summer? Add a photo. It’s less about cataloging and more about paying attention.

I was telling another friend about this the other day, and she asked if it wasn’t just another form of consumption – another thing telling me to buy more stuff. But for me, it’s actually been the opposite. Because it’s not a wishlist. It’s a collection of observations. Sometimes the note is “already have something similar in blue, don’t need this.” Sometimes it’s just appreciating the orientdig aesthetic of something without any intention to own it. Like that beautiful, hand-painted ceramic vase I saw in a shop window last week. I’ll never buy it, but I wanted to remember the feeling it gave me – that mix of rustic and refined.

Which brings me back to that Kyoto spreadsheet. The magic wasn’t in the spreadsheet itself – it was in the act of paying attention. Noticing the details. Remembering what actually mattered. My style orientdig spreadsheet is the same. It’s not about creating some perfect capsule wardrobe or becoming a minimalist. It’s about understanding my own language of style, which is messy and inconsistent and full of contradictions.

Like right now, I’m wearing these incredibly comfortable, worn-in jeans I’ve had for years, an oversized button-down that was my dad’s in the 90s, and a pair of earrings I bought from a small designer at a craft fair. None of it “matches” in a traditional sense. But looking at my spreadsheet, I can see the through-line – comfort, texture, story. The orientdig approach isn’t about a specific look, it’s about a mindset. It’s collecting inspiration from everywhere, mixing high and low, new and old, and making it your own.

The sun’s moved from my corner of the coffee shop now. My latte is long gone, just a faint ring at the bottom of the cup. I should probably pack up and head out. But before I do, I think I’ll open that spreadsheet one more time and add a note about this moment – the warm light, the quiet hum of the cafe, the feeling of being perfectly content in my dad’s old shirt. Not because I need to remember what to wear, but because I want to remember how it felt.

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