On Brunswick Street, a stretch better known these days for cafes and vintage clothing than specialist retail, a family-owned stationery shop has held the same ground since 1989. The stock runs deep rather than wide: hardcover and stitched journals, fountain pens and dip pens alongside fineliners, handmade paper including sheets crafted from Himalayan lokta bark, and a wax-sealing counter with stamps, sticks and kits for anyone still finishing a letter properly. A personalisation service debosses initials by hand in the shop's own Melbourne studio, the kind of service that assumes customers want an object made specifically for them rather than picked off a shelf. Photo albums and archival storage sit alongside the notebooks, a nod to a customer base that still prints pictures and wants somewhere considered to keep them. The shop runs its own workshop program and collaborates with artists and archives on limited paper stock, treating stationery as a craft with its own suppliers and techniques rather than a commodity category to be raced to the bottom on price. Thirty-five years on, it still operates from the one Fitzroy address, evidence that a shop built around slow, tactile objects can hold its ground against digital everything.