
Contact
A Short Journey is a focused publication about interactive storytelling, motion design, and browser-native scene craft. The editorial scope is specific and the production standards are deliberate. If what you want to discuss falls within that territory, there are several appropriate ways to get in touch.
Editorial enquiries
For questions about published content, corrections, or requests for deeper coverage of a specific topic, email is the most direct route.
Email: hello@ashortjourney.com
Response times vary depending on editorial workload, but most enquiries receive a reply within a few working days. Complex topics that require research or discussion may take longer.
Collaboration
If you are working on a project that involves browser-native storytelling, motion design, or interactive scene composition, and you think a conversation would be mutually useful, reach out by email with a brief description of what you are working on and what kind of collaboration you have in mind.
The site does not accept guest posts, sponsored content, or paid placements. All published material is produced to the same editorial standard and reflects the publication’s own voice and judgment.
Topic suggestions
If there is a subject you would like to see covered in the Notes or Journal sections, send a brief note explaining what the topic is, why it matters, and what existing coverage - if any - you have found insufficient.
Good topic suggestions tend to be specific. “Write about animation” is too broad. “How does the Intersection Observer API interact with CSS transitions when both are targeting the same element?” is the kind of question that produces useful writing.
What this site does not do
A Short Journey is not a consultancy, not a freelance service, and not an agency. It does not offer design reviews, code audits, or one-to-one mentoring. The site exists as a publication, and its output is its published content.
There is no mailing list, no Discord server, no community forum, and no Slack channel. The content is the conversation. If you find it useful, the best response is to apply the thinking to your own work and share what you learn.
Finding content on the site
If you are looking for something specific and cannot find it through the main navigation, the search function covers all pages, notes, and journal entries across the site. The Notes index and Journal archive are also browsable.