

At the bottom of the print menu, I have several choices of how I want to print it. A couple of things to note…because I have the Premium version of Evernote, I can highlight sections of the note that I’m interested in as well as write comments.

Typically the page still has a lot of unnecessary text so I clean it up more. When it’s saved in Evernote, I select the note and in the pane to the left I see the entire article. I save the web page as “Simplified Article.” The reason behind this is that I don’t want all the garbage that appears on a web page. There’s quite a bit of literature about it so I plan to Google and save whatever I can find in Evernote.Īfter conducting a simple search, I found a senior thesis about women prisoners during and after the Spanish Civil War that I want to save in Evernote using my Evernote extension in Google Chrome. At the moment, I have a vague storyline about three women who have ties with the Spanish Civil War.
Scrivener tutorial how to#
This week I’m taking a how to structure a short story/novella course. I go about importing a note in a different manner. Gwen Hernandez recently posted an Evernote/Scrivener tutorial on her site and you can see how she uses it to import a note or a hyperlinked Table of Contents. Conclusion: it was well worth the $45 investment. I played around with DevonThink, and I’m not 100 percent convinced I need it.Įvernote was an app I downloaded, but rarely used until this year when I decided to spring for the premium version. As you can see with one of my WIPs, I use it for the outlining process, images, documents, PDFs and so forth.įor several years now I’ve used Scrivener as the hub for my research, but I discovered I needed something else to store all the material I gathered.

My favorite Scrivener feature without any doubt is the research folder of the Binder.
