Summary
What this review covers
This review looks at the 5-tab layout, 6-set pack, table-of-contents page, letter-size fit, and use in compact garden record binders.
Pros
The upside
- Five tabs create a calm section structure for a compact garden binder.
- The 6-set pack supports several binders or seasonal refills.
- The front table-of-contents page gives each tab a full section name.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- Five sections need broad names for a large record plan.
- The index page needs printing or careful handwriting before the binder fills.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
This divider pack fits gardeners who want compact binders for seasonal pages, seed groups, plant-care notes, bed maps, and small project records.
What to know:
Write the five section names before filling the binder. A clear front index keeps the tab set useful through the season.
Where to check it
Check Avery 11187 5-Tab Table of Contents Dividers
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Avery 11187 5-Tab Table of Contents Dividers product page.
Breakdown
Full review
Five sections for a compact garden binder
Avery 11187 5-tab dividers give a small garden binder a simple section plan. Five tabs can cover seed lists, bed maps, plant-care pages, harvest notes, and archive pages while keeping the binder compact.
The front table-of-contents page gives each tab a full name. That page helps when a gardener wants short tab numbers with clear section titles.
Useful as a refill pack
The 6-set pack supports several binders or several seasons. One set can live in a seed binder. Another can organize a plant-care binder. Another can sit in a garden project binder for a patio, greenhouse shelf, or raised bed reset.
The multicolor tabs make sections easy to spot during record work. Pair them with page protectors, loose forms, printed maps, and pencil-case supplies.
Good for seasonal records
Five sections work nicely for spring, summer, fall, indoor growing, and archive pages. They also fit a focused binder with seeds, beds, care, weather, and harvest.
Keep section names broad so new pages have a natural place. Add a separate binder when one section starts to carry a large stack.
Good match
This divider pack fits gardeners who want compact binders for seasonal pages, seed groups, plant-care notes, bed maps, and small project records.
What to know
Write the five section names before filling the binder. A clear front index keeps the tab set useful through the season.