Creates a simple printable card to gently remind users to wipe dust from notebook page edges in a specified shelf zone on a regular schedule.
--- name: notebook-page-edge-dust-card version: "1.0.0" license: "MIT-0" language: "en" execution: "noExec" hasExecutableCode: false promptOnly: true triggerKeywords: - notebookDustCard - notebookEdgeDust - shelfNotebookCare - notebookWipeReminder - deskShelfReset - notebookCareToken --- # Notebook Page Edge Dust Card ## Purpose Use this prompt-only skill when a user has shelf notebooks, journals, planners, sketchbooks, or project books that collect visible dust along page edges and start to feel neglected. The deliverable is a small printable dust card that names the shelf zone, gives a simple reset date, and creates a gentle reminder to wipe notebook page edges during ordinary tidying. This skill is for a visible household or workspace routine cue only. It does not give conservation, restoration, archival storage, chemical cleaning, mold treatment, pest control, or preservation advice. The output should help a user notice and reset a dusty notebook area without making claims about protecting valuable, fragile, rare, antique, medical, legal, or archival records. ## Safety Boundary Do not recommend cleaning chemicals, sprays, solvents, disinfectants, oils, abrasives, wet cloths, vacuum techniques, compressed air, heat, freezing, sunlight exposure, or preservation treatments. Do not claim that the card prevents damage, removes allergens, preserves paper, restores books, treats mold, or makes notebooks archival-safe. If the user mentions rare books, fragile documents, water damage, mold, insect activity, strong odor, medical records, legal records, or valuable collections, keep the card limited to labeling the zone and suggest avoiding handling until they consult an appropriate professional or institutional guidance. Do not diagnose the material or prescribe treatment. ## Use This Skill When Use this skill when the user wants to: - Create a visible reminder for dusty notebook edges. - Group active, reference, and archive notebooks by shelf zone. - Add a weekly or monthly reset date to a shelf, desk, cart, or cubby. - Make a small card that sits beside notebooks without tracking private journal content. - Keep notebook care simple, gentle, and non-technical. - Reduce visual shelf clutter without creating a preservation plan. Do not use this skill for archival collections, rare books, valuable manuscripts, mold remediation, chemical cleaning, disposal decisions, sensitive document handling, or personal journal content review. ## Best Inputs Ask only for practical, non-sensitive details: - Shelf or desk zone: top shelf, desk cubby, studio cart, bedside stack, classroom shelf, project shelf, or planner tray. - Notebook types using generic labels: active planner, project notebook, sketchbook, reading notes, class notes, meeting book, household log, or blank notebooks. - Approximate number of notebooks in the zone. - Reset rhythm: weekly, biweekly, monthly, after a project, or before a desk reset. - Preferred card size: mini shelf card, drawer card, desk tent, bookend card, or one-page printable. - Owner role: household, desk owner, student, teacher, studio user, office team, or project owner. - Visual cue preferences: date line, check box, shelf zone name, replace-when-worn cue, or last-reset line. Do not ask for private journal entries, personal reflections, passwords, client names, medical details, legal details, student records, account information, or anything written inside the notebooks. ## Workflow 1. **Name the shelf zone.** Identify the visible area where notebook page edges collect dust. 2. **Group notebooks safely.** Use generic categories based on use or location, not private contents. 3. **Choose the card placement.** Put the card at the side of the stack, on a bookend, inside a tray, or near the shelf label. 4. **Set the reset rhythm.** Pick a simple recurring cue such as Friday desk reset, first Sunday, end of month, or project close. 5. **Write the gentle reminder.** Use neutral wording such as "wipe edges gently during normal dusting" without naming chemicals or techniques. 6. **Add a privacy guard.** Keep journal details and sensitive notebook contents off the visible card. 7. **Define replacement cues.** Replace the card when worn, outdated, or no longer matching the shelf zone. 8. **Produce the card.** Return a concise printable artifact with zone, date, owner role, reset cue, and do-not-add private notes line. ## Output Format Return the result in this order: 1. **Scope Note** - Physical notebook shelf routine only - No cleaning chemicals, preservation claims, mold treatment, or archival advice - No private notebook contents on the visible card 2. **Shelf Zone Snapshot** - Zone name - Notebook count or rough range - Notebook categories using generic labels - Owner role - Reset rhythm 3. **Notebook Grouping Map** - Group label - Location within the shelf or stack - Status: active, reference, archive, blank, relocate, or review label - Visible cue to use on the card 4. **Dust Card Text Plan** - Card title - Shelf zone line - Last reset date line - Next reset cue - Gentle wipe reminder - Replace-when-worn cue - Privacy line 5. **Weekly or Monthly Reset Routine** - Check the shelf zone - Keep notebook contents closed and private - Straighten the group - Wipe visible page edges only as part of ordinary gentle dusting - Update the date line - Replace the card when worn or outdated 6. **Do-Not-Include List** - Private journal entries - Sensitive project names - Medical, legal, school, client, or financial details - Cleaning chemicals or preservation promises - Mold, pest, odor, or damage treatment instructions 7. **Printable Notebook Page Edge Dust Card** - A compact card the user can print or rewrite by hand - Short labels that fit on a shelf card - Clear date and reset fields - A visible privacy and safety reminder ## Example Prompts Copy and paste one of these to start: 1. **"My shelf of project notebooks has visible dust along the page edges and it's been months since I touched them. I want a simple reminder card that sits beside the stack — nothing about cleaning chemicals or preservation, just a gentle cue to wipe edges during my Friday desk reset."** 2. **"I have three zones of notebooks in my studio: active planners on the desk, reference sketchbooks on a shelf, and archived project books in a cubby. Help me make small dust cards for each zone with different reset rhythms."** 3. **"My classroom bookshelf has a stack of notebooks that students use and return. I want a visible shelf card that reminds me to check and wipe page edges monthly without touching private student work inside."** ## Install-First Success Path **Input:** The user says "My shelf notebooks are dusty — make me a reminder card to keep them looking cared for." **Steps:** 1. Name the shelf zone: identifies the visible area where notebook page edges collect dust. 2. Group notebooks safely using generic categories based on use or location, not private contents. 3. Choose card placement: at the side of the stack, on a bookend, inside a tray, or near the shelf label. 4. Set the reset rhythm: weekly, biweekly, monthly, after a project, or before a desk reset. 5. Write the gentle reminder using neutral wording without naming chemicals or techniques. 6. Add a privacy guard: keeps journal details and sensitive notebook contents off the visible card. 7. Produce the printable card with zone name, date line, reset cue, gentle wipe reminder, and replace-when-worn cue. **Output:** A small printable dust card with zone name, last-reset date, next-reset cue, gentle wipe reminder, replace-when-worn cue, and a visible privacy line — ready to print and place beside notebooks. ## Style Guidelines - Keep the tone calm, practical, and tactile. - Use short shelf-card language rather than long explanations. - Prefer generic notebook categories over content-based labels. - Make the card easy to refresh with a pen. - Keep the routine gentle and low stakes. - Avoid preservation, chemical cleaning, mold, pest, health, legal, financial, or archival claims. ## Quality Bar A strong result gives the user a small, visible care token for notebooks that gather dust on shelves. It should make a weekly or monthly desk reset easier while keeping private notebook contents private and avoiding any claim that the card cleans, preserves, restores, or protects paper.
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