Brick - Bold Newsletter Landing Page Template

Brick is a bold newsletter landing page template built for LEGO enthusiast communities. It uses an Ink and Paper visual identity with cream backgrounds, ink-black typography, and brick-red calls to action. The masonry layout scrolls like a Friday newspaper, moving readers from set leaks to community highlights and toward a single email signup click.

by Rocket studio

Quick summary

Brick is a single-page newsletter landing page template designed for the LEGO and building brick community. It simulates the tactile feel of a printed instruction booklet through an Ink and Paper design system. The layout guides visitors through a day-in-the-life scroll and funnels them toward one clear action: clicking through to subscribe.

Who this template is for

This template is built for newsletter creators who serve passionate, detail-oriented hobbyist audiences. It works best when your readers already care deeply about the niche and just need a reason to trust and click.

  • Adult Fans of LEGO (AFOLs) who want to reach fellow collectors, BrickLink hunters, and late-night set hunters
  • MOC designers and Reddit community builders who publish trend-forward content before the wider hobby crowd sees it
  • LEGO-building parents and hobby writers who want a polished, editorial home for a weekly email newsletter

What problem this template solves

Most newsletter landing pages feel generic. A plain opt-in form with a tagline does not reflect the personality of a community-driven hobby publication. Readers bounce because nothing on the page earns their trust before asking for their email.

  • There is no sense of what the newsletter actually contains or how it feels to read it
  • Social proof is absent or buried, so visitor confidence stays low
  • The path from interest to signup has too many steps or too much friction

What you get with this template

You get a complete, single-page layout structured around a real subscriber journey. Every section is designed to build anticipation and trust before the call to action appears.

  • A hero section with giant rubber-stamp serif typography, a paper-grain texture, and a pulsing brick-red underline accent
  • Three distinct masonry content sections that simulate different parts of a Friday editorial: set leaks, a featured deep-dive, and community highlights
  • Trust proof components woven into the layout: a hand-drawn-style subscriber counter, a margin annotation testimonial, and a last-issue thumbnail preview

Feature list

This template is built around a focused set of capabilities drawn directly from its editorial brief and visual direction.

Giant Headline Hero Section

The hero opens with oversized, ink-black serif type centered on a warm cream field. A paper-grain texture fills the full viewport. One word carries a faint brick-red pulsing underline. The primary call-to-action button appears directly beneath the headline and routes visitors to a dedicated signup page.

Day-in-the-Life Masonry Scroll

Three masonry sections unfold like sections of a newspaper. Morning Drop presents set leaks and rumors as dense corkboard-style cards. Afternoon Deep Dive features a larger long-read card flanked by secondary cards. Evening Community surfaces reader MOCs, deal alerts, and poll results. Card density and scale shift between sections to vary the scroll rhythm.

Persistent Bottom Bar Call to Action

After the visitor scrolls past the second masonry section, a sticky bottom bar appears. It carries the same primary call to action and stays visible as the reader continues scrolling. This surfaces the signup prompt at the moment of peak engagement without interrupting the reading experience.

Woven Social Proof Components

Three trust signals appear inside the masonry layout rather than in a separate section. A hand-drawn-aesthetic subscriber counter shows community size. A rotating testimonial is styled as a margin annotation. A thumbnail of last Friday's actual issue lets visitors peek before committing.

Click-Through Optimized Flow

This template is built around a single click. No inline form appears on this page. Every call-to-action element routes to a clean, dedicated signup page with one field. The design removes hesitation by earning trust first and asking for information second.

Ink and Paper Typography System

The template uses Fraunces as the serif display typeface and DM Sans for body text. Together they create the feel of a hand-drawn 1970s instruction manual printed on uncoated stock. All text is ink-black on cream by default, with pencil gray handling secondary labels and brick red reserved for interactive elements only.

Page sections overview

SectionPurpose
Hero HeadlineAnchors brand voice with rubber-stamp typography, paper texture, and primary call to action
Morning Drop MasonryDisplays set leaks, reveals, and rumors as dense corkboard-style cards
Afternoon Deep DiveFeatures a prominent long-read card with flanking secondary editorial cards
Evening Community GridShowcases reader MOCs, BrickLink deal alerts, and poll results
Trust Proof CardsBuilds subscriber confidence through counter, testimonial, and issue preview
Persistent Bottom BarKeeps the subscribe call to action visible after the second scroll section
FooterSingle-row linear layout with essential links

Design & branding system

The visual identity follows an Ink and Paper theme that feels like a hand-drawn instruction manual printed on 1970s uncoated stock. Every color choice and typeface decision reinforces that tactile, editorial quality.

  • Color palette: deep manuscript black (#1A1A2E) for body text and borders, warm newsprint cream (#F5F0E8) as the dominant background, pencil-sketch gray (#9E9E9E) for card separators and secondary labels, and classic brick red (#D32F2F) reserved strictly for links, buttons, and interactive highlights
  • Typography pairing: Fraunces serif for all display and headline type, DM Sans for all body and supporting copy
  • No images or illustrations are used in the hero; type alone carries the visual weight, supported by a subtle paper-grain texture across the full viewport

Mobile & speed optimization

The template is designed desktop-first to match the browsing habits of the core hobbyist audience, which skews toward desktop and tablet use. Responsive breakpoints are included so the layout remains readable on smaller screens.

  • Masonry card density adjusts across breakpoints so the corkboard rhythm holds on tablet and mobile viewports
  • Animations use CSS only, including the slideInBlur hero entrance, scroll-triggered card reveals, and the pulsing underline effect
  • The sticky bottom bar behaves consistently across device sizes, remaining visible without obscuring content

How this template helps you convert

Every design and layout decision in this template points toward one outcome: getting a genuinely interested visitor to click through to the signup page.

  1. Trust is built before the ask. The subscriber counter, margin testimonial, and issue preview appear inside the content scroll, not in a separate proof section. Visitors absorb them naturally while reading.
  2. The call to action follows the energy of the page. The first button appears under the headline when attention is highest. The persistent bottom bar reappears when scroll momentum peaks. Neither placement feels intrusive.
  3. The click leads to a frictionless destination. Visitors arrive at a page with one field and one purpose. The low-commitment design reduces drop-off between the landing page click and the completed signup.

Other information about this template

This template is a strong match for any editorial newsletter that needs a personality-forward landing page rather than a generic opt-in screen. A few additional details worth knowing before you build:

  • The footer follows a Pattern 1 Linear Single-Row layout, keeping the bottom of the page clean and uncluttered
  • Animation intensity is set to medium: the hero uses a slideInBlur entrance sequence, cards use scroll-triggered reveals, and the underline pulse is handled entirely in CSS
  • The template is categorized under Blog and Editorial with a specific focus on the LEGO and building brick newsletter niche
  • The design system works well for any hobby-driven weekly newsletter where editorial credibility and community identity matter more than product photography
Brick - Bold Newsletter Landing Page Template
Brick - Bold Newsletter Landing Page Template
Brick - Bold Newsletter Landing Page Template
Brick - Bold Newsletter Landing Page Template

Theme

Ink & Paper

Creative direction

Day-in-the-Life

Color system

Ink & Paper

Style

Masonry/Pinterest

Direction

Click-Through

Page Sections

Giant Headline Hero with Paper Texture

Three-section Masonry Scroll Layout

Persistent Sticky Bottom Bar

Woven Social Proof Components

Click-through Single-action Flow

Ink and Paper Typography Pairing

Related questions

Does this template include the email signup form?

Can I adapt this template for a newsletter outside the LEGO niche?

What typefaces does this template use?

How does the persistent bottom bar behave?

Is this a multi-page template?