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文章列表

Compulsive curiosity, or, how I built an infinite idea machine Gift details on the subscriber portal Portal link in the archive nav The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails First, add no friction: How micropayments lost and subscriptions won Filter subscribers and automations by source Automations, rebuilt What email will look like in the future Filter subscribers by bounce date and reason Email could have been X.400 times better Three features are moving behind the paywall Firewall changes and improvements Put your name and voice into your company newsletter Simplified email address settings Subscription wall Inboxes were overwhelming before we'd even named them The US government tried really hard to screw up email Public postmortem: database connection exhaustion Ask a nerd: what is the best way to unsubscribe from newsletters? Bookshop.org embeds Email was into agents before they were cool Passwordless login Rename metadata keys in bulk A spring cleaning for our legal docs Ask a nerd: what happens when you click the spam button? Passkey support for two-factor authentication How Buttondown's API versioning works Safer defaults for the email creation API How to send email to space How we enabled Content Security Policy for everyone Recovery codes for two-factor authentication Filter sent emails by engagement rate How we migrated to TypeIDs without breaking clients How we check every link in your email Use newsletter metadata in your emails Should we bring back email exploders? Sort and filter by open and click rates Custom click tracking domains More newsletter settings in the API Revamped replies Custom email templates for everyone Simplified cancellation Ask a Nerd: Does email length affect deliverability? The changelog, reborn Swedish localization Forwarding an email is not always straightforward Public descriptions for tags How Rodrigo brings a humanistic view to consumer technology OpenAPI spec for archives Your newsletter's archives are more valuable than your list Subscribers can come from anywhere. Even another newsletter platform's form. How Brandon Lucas Green shares his music and supports artists Survey responses on the web Better tag self-management Granular API keys Smarter automation filters Snippets Ask A Nerd: How does newsletter cadence affect deliverability? New design settings pages Starred views More ways to customize your archives Inbox filtering Mastodon follower analytics Ask a Nerd: What are good open, click, and response rates for an email newsletter? How we migrated our database to PlanetScale Two new archive themes Custom buttons now work in Markdown mode Ask a Nerd: Does attaching files to your newsletter hurt deliverability? Seline and Tinylytics support Unban subscribers Public postmortem: archive downtime Bang paths, source routing, and how email trips were planned Announcement bars for your archives 2025 disposables.app Russian localization Ask a Nerd: Can you improve email deliverability with a personal domain? More locale options How we interview customers at Buttondown Bluesky analytics Minimum viable complexity Reply to conversations How Jeffery Hicks goes behind-the-scenes in his newsletter Changes to our stack in 2025 2026: Emails What the hell is a UTM? Randomize survey answer order TK reminders in the editor Why we insourced analytics Scroll sync in the editor How Kelly Jensen uses Buttondown to discuss key library issues How Jamie Thingelstad uses Buttondown to explore tech topics 2026: Archives Improved filters Keeping feature creep at bay Content Security Policy in archives Open source Sniperl.ink Auto-activating RSS reader subscriptions What the hell is ActivityPub? How Igor Ranc built Berlin's largest expat tech newsletter
Why Elliot Jay Stocks loves using Buttondown
Asharee Peters · 2024-04-02 · via

Elliot's been blogging for as long as "blogging" has been a thing, and if you've spent any time online you're probably in debt to his work and efforts pushing typography on the web forward — first as creative director of Adobe Fonts, and more recently as the mastermind behind Google Fonts Knowledge.

He recently relaunched his newsletter using Buttondown and Kirby — and I couldn't help myself but reach out and chat about his journey blogging on the web, and what he's learned over the past decade and a half.

Elliot in San Francisco.

What's your background and how did you get into writing online?

I was originally a web designer, and started blogging about web design techniques around 2006 or so. This was back when we used image replacement and sprites when we wanted to use a non-system font, and grungy textured background were all the rage. In 2007 I started writing about the same things for magazines like .Net and Computer Arts, and then wrote a web design book in 2009. In 2010 I launched the typography magazine 8 Faces and looked after a lot of the writing duties in that, and then handled quite a bit for Lagom — the lifestyle magazine I co-founded with my wife in 2014. All this time, while doing all these print-based projects and working day-today as a designer, I’ve continue to publish online, albeit with less frequency as the years have gone on. But that all changed when I started the newsletter, which generally goes out about every three weeks or so. 

As I’ve got older, I’ve given things a bit more consideration, and been more mindful about adding to the noise.

What do you write about?

In a nutshell: typography. My newsletter, Typographic & Sporadic, is — as it says on the tin — typographic in its nature and sporadic in its delivery. I like to highlight new type releases, new foundry finds (even if they’re just new to me), upcoming type-centric events, and generally anything that’s come across my radar in that world. I also use the newsletter as a way of telling people about the latest things I’ve been up to, like new episodes of my podcast, Hello, type friends! or new typography workshops I’m teaching. 

Having been through so much change within the industry, how (if at all?) has your approach to writing and publishing changed over time?

I used to be very concerned with being among the first to add commentary on a particular subject, and there were many occasions where I rushed out half-baked ideas just to be seen as being someone “involved in the conversation”. As I’ve got older, I’ve given things a bit more consideration, and been more mindful about adding to the noise.

Knowing what you know now, is there anything you would have done differently when you started blogging back in '06?

I wish I’d found my niche a little earlier, or perhaps kept up the regular blogging when it started to lull. But actually, I really wish I’d discovered newsletters earlier, and started my own much sooner. I was very skeptical about the format for a while, and in hindsight that got in the way of me making the most of what I honestly believe is the best way to engage with your followers.

Subscriber management is simple and straightforward. Plus I really love that it’s indie software, and how when I have a problem, it’s usually you who replies!

How did you find out about Buttondown?

I think it was through David Demaree, who I worked with at Adobe Fonts and then again at Google Fonts. 

What are some ways Buttondown has helped you run your publication?

Well, I guess the first thing is that it’s just so easy to use. It gives me access to the underlying CSS — which I’d rather have any day over a drag-and-drop “design” editor. Subscriber management is simple and straightforward. Plus I really love that it’s indie software, and how when I have a problem, it’s usually you who replies! When I think about it, I think that’s actually usually the first thing I say when I’m recommending Buttondown to a friend.