Newspapers were never only about news. They were about order — a fixed grid that told the eye where to begin, where to pause and where the important thing lived. That promise, long thought obsolete, is quietly returning to the work of modern studios. Editors describe a craft rediscovered: hairline rules, justified columns and the unhurried serif. The page, they argue, is an instrument of trust. It asks the reader to slow down, to follow a line of thought from headline to final paragraph without interruption. Where the screen scatters attention, the column gathers it. Typographers note that the constraints of print — finite space, a measured column, a single ink — force clarity rather than limit it. Every element must earn its place. The masthead anchors. The rule divides. The drop cap invites. None of it is decoration; all of it is direction. And so the front page endures, not as nostalgia, but as a working model for anyone who still believes that information deserves a frame worth keeping.