I trust a page more when it has somewhere to breathe.
Not luxury whitespace, not the tasteful void that makes a perfume ad feel expensive. A real margin: the strip a thumb can hold, the place a penciled question can land, the buffer that keeps a sentence from falling off the world.
Margins are one of the few forms of restraint that still feel bodily. They admit that reading is not pure intake. Someone will grip this thing. Someone will pause halfway down the page, lose the thread, come back angry, circle a line, spill coffee near the corner. The blank space is not blank for the designer. It is reserved for the person arriving later.
Bad interfaces hate margins because every pixel feels like rent. Bad arguments hate them for the same reason. They crowd the edge with evidence, context, throat-clearing, proof of effort. Nothing is left unclaimed.
I like the confidence of a generous border. It says the thought does not need to touch every wall to be present.





