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My personal Obsidian vault structure. A bottom-up approach to note-taking and organizing things I am interested in. This is not dogma, just my personal approach. Hopefully it can serve as inspiration, but do what works for you!

To learn more about how I use Obsidian, visit my website stephango.com.

Get started

  1. Download this vault
  2. Unzip the .zip file to a folder of your choosing
  3. Open Obsidian and create a new vault pointing to that folder

Vault structure

Plugins

Some of my templates depend on plugins I use:

Folders

I use very few folders. My personal notes are primarily in the root, these are my journal entries, evergreen notes, and personal ideas. That way I know that everything in the root is something I came up with. I do not use the file explorer much for navigation, instead I navigate mostly using the quick switcher or clicking links.

If you want to use this vault as a starting point the Categories and Templates folders contain everything that you need.

The folders I use:

  • Attachments for images, audio, videos, PDFs, etc.
  • Clippings for articles and web pages captured with my web clipper written by other people.
  • Daily for my daily notes, all named YYYY-MM-DD.md.
  • References for anything that refers to something that exists outside of my vault, e.g. books, movies, places, people, podcasts, etc.
  • Templates for templates. In my real personal vault the "Templates" folder is nested under "Meta" which also contains my personal style guide and other random notes about the vault.

The folders I don't use, but have created here for the sake of clarity. The notes in these folders would be in the root of my personal vault:

  • Categories contains top-level overviews of notes per category (e.g. books, movies, podcasts, etc).
  • Notes contains example notes.

Style guide

Templates and metadata

I use templates very heavily, because they allow me to lazily insert most of the metadata I need about any kind of note.

The .obsidian/types.json file shows which properties are assigned to which types.

  • Most of my properties attempt to be reusable across categories
  • Many properties have short names e.g. start instead of startdate
  • I use the list type more than the text type for many properties, because I find it useful to be able to enter multiple links

Categories and tagging

My notes are primarily organized using the category property, e.g. category: "[[Movies]]". These also function as links that help me easily navigate to the overview note for that category. Some rules I personally follow:

  • Always pluralize categories and tags
  • Use YYYY-MM-DD everywhere
  • Use a single vault for everything
  • Avoid folders for organization
  • Avoid non-standard Markdown

Rating system

Anything with a rating uses an integer from 1 to 7

  • 7 — Perfect, must try, life-changing, go out of your way to seek this out
  • 6 — Excellent, worth repeating
  • 5 — Good, don't go out of your way, but enjoyable
  • 4 — Passable, works in a pinch
  • 3 — Bad, don't do this if you can
  • 2 — Atrocious, actively avoid, repulsive
  • 1 — Evil, life-changing in a bad way

Why this scale? I like the 7 scale better than 4 or 5 stars because I need more granularity at the top, for the good experiences, and 10 is too many.

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