Issue No. 42 · Marginalia
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Est. MMXIV · The Marginalia Review

Marginalia

A quarterly review of design, craft, and the ideas that outlast their authors.

The long read

The slow architecture of things made to last

Why the most enduring objects, buildings, and interfaces share a quiet refusal to rush — and what that asks of the people who make them.

By Sol BergströmThis morning

Illustration — original work for Marginalia, commissioned for Issue No. 42.

There is a particular pleasure in a sentence that refuses to hurry — one that gathers its clauses the way a slow river gathers light, each turn revealing a little more of the bend ahead. We have built an entire culture around the opposite instinct: the clipped line, the bullet, the post engineered to be skimmed and discarded before the next has loaded.

But the long form has not died so much as gone quiet, waiting in the margins for readers willing to give it the only thing it has ever asked for, which is time. To read at length is to agree to be changed slowly, and that agreement is harder to make than it used to be.

“The page does not compete for your attention. It simply waits, and rewards the reader who stays.”

What we are really arguing for is a kind of patience — an editorial patience that trusts the reader to follow a thought to its end. The format that follows from that trust is older than the screen and stubbornly resistant to it: the essay, the dispatch, the letter written without a word count in mind.

Each issue of this review is an argument for that patience, set in serif and printed in spirit. We do not promise to be quick. We promise only to be worth the time you give us, and to keep the margin wide enough for your own quiet annotations.

SB
Sol Bergström
Editor-at-large · writes on craft and attention

Latest

All stories
Essay

On the dignity of unfinished work

A defense of the rough draft, the visible seam, and the honest evidence of a hand at work.

Sol Bergström12 min
Interview

The typographer who works only in graphite

Forty years of letterforms, drawn by hand before a single pixel is allowed near them.

Niko Reyes18 min
Field notes

A week inside a paper mill that time forgot

Where deckle edges are still pulled by hand and a single sheet can take a season to cure.

Wren Ashby9 min
Criticism

Against the tyranny of the seamless

Friction, it turns out, is where meaning lives. We have been sanding it away for decades.

Theo Vance14 min
Profile

The quiet empire of a one-room bindery

How a single craftsperson became the last call for the world's most demanding publishers.

Ada Mercer11 min
Dispatch

Notes from the archive of forgotten interfaces

The tools we abandon say as much about us as the ones we keep. A tour through the discard pile.

Mara Liang8 min
The Features

Two stories worth the long way around

Essay

On the dignity of unfinished work

A defense of the rough draft, the visible seam, and the honest evidence of a hand at work.

Read the feature
Interview

The typographer who works only in graphite

Forty years of letterforms, drawn by hand before a single pixel is allowed near them.

Read the feature

The only publication I read cover to cover, twice. Once for the argument, once for the prose.

A reader in Lisbon · Subscriber since Issue 01
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Marginalia

A quarterly review of design, craft, and the ideas that outlast their authors.

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Marginalia — an original demo built in the Vellum style for staqd. Set in Source Serif.Set in the Vellum style · Issue No. 42