The Dossier
Every detail on one long scroll -- nothing buried, nothing cut.
- Single scrollable file with sticky anchor navigation
- Full day-by-day breakdown with morning, afternoon, and evening segments
- Complete dining table with cuisine, price tier, and neighborhood notes
- Book-These-Now box with urgency tiers and direct reservation links
The Day Book
A landing page and one dedicated page per day -- structured like a road captain's briefing.
- Landing page with three day-cards linking to individual day pages
- Each day page is a complete standalone document -- works offline
- Morning, afternoon, and evening timeline on every day page
- Previous/next day navigation and back-to-overview on every page
The Magazine
Big photography, clean layout, minimal tables -- the trip you can feel before you commit.
- Full-bleed hero photography at 70% viewport height
- Editorial pull-quote intro and photo-forward day layouts
- Dining presented as a visual photo-card grid, not a table
- Transport and practical notes as clean stat blocks and callouts
The Quick Sheet
One tight page per destination -- everything useful, nothing decorative.
- Designed to print as 1-2 physical pages on letter paper
- Dense table layout: transport, day summary, dining reference, reservations
- Full print stylesheet -- clean black-on-white, no decorative elements
- Zero photographs; pure information architecture, scannable at a glance
Tell Lane how you use a trip document.
Reading in advance, navigating day-of, printing for the road, or sharing the link with someone you are trying to convince -- there is no wrong answer. Tell Lane which of those sounds like you, and she will match you to the right style.
Lane does not name the styles at intake. She listens to how you travel and maps the answer internally.
Start Planning