This is the placeholder body of "The Wrong Blood Thinner" newsletter. To populate this with your real Substack content, paste the article text here, broken into paragraphs. The first letter of this paragraph will automatically render as a gold drop cap, giving the article a magazine-style opening. Replace this placeholder with your actual writing when you're ready to publish.

Each paragraph will use the Cormorant Garamond serif typeface, which is already loaded on the rest of the site. Body text is set in a comfortable reading size with generous line-height, optimized for long-form reading. Inline links are styled in gold and underlined subtly; bold text renders in a brighter cream, and italic text in a softer one.

Section Headings Look Like This

You can break the article into sections with H2 headings. They're rendered in the same Cormorant serif as the title, in white, with extra space above to create rhythm in long pieces.

Smaller subheadings (H3) work too, for breaking up a long section into smaller beats. Lists are also styled — both unordered and ordered:

Pull quotes draw the reader's eye to a key line. Use them sparingly — one or two per article — for the moments where the argument crystallizes.

Inline Images and Figures

Inline images are full-width relative to the reading column, with optional captions. They break the page out of pure text and give visual rhythm to a long read.

Inline figure example
Caption for inline figure goes here. Captions are styled in sans-serif, italic, and centered — a deliberate contrast with the serif body to signal "this is editorial commentary on the image."

You can place images anywhere in the article. The captioning style is consistent.

Editor's Note Callout boxes are useful for tangents, definitions, or sidebars that don't fit the main flow. They're styled with a soft gold tint and can hold a paragraph or two without breaking the reading rhythm.

The Verdict

End with the takeaway. What does this case teach physicians about defending themselves clinically and legally? In published OTR newsletters, this is where the "next-shift takeaway" lives — the practical lesson the reader can carry into Monday morning.

Below this final paragraph, the article will close with a subscribe CTA, related newsletter cards, and the standard footer + disclaimer.