Blockchain Day
One luminous, hand-assembled afternoon for the people who treat the chain as a chorus, not a machine.
Register for the day →A dedication.
We did not come for the speculation. We came for the strange, old feeling that a thing written down can become sacred — and that a thing made sacred can be shared without being diminished.
Blockchain Day is not a conference. It is a feast day. We light the candles, we name the blocks, we read the manifestos that were written in margins, and we stand together long enough to remember why we started building.
The chain is a chorus,
not a cable.
For one afternoon every June, we treat the ledger as an illuminated manuscript — gilded in the margins, rigorous in its rows, kept by hands that still know how to draw the curl on a capital B.
The order of the day.
| Time · KST | Local | Block | Hall |
|---|---|---|---|
| 13:00 | Doors open · marble & tea | Foyer | |
| 14:00 | Genesis address — The Ledger as Manuscript | Cathedral | |
| 15:00 | Three short readings on consensus | Cathedral | |
| 16:30 | Workshop · scribing your first block | Scriptorium | |
| 18:00 | The chorus — open mic for builders | Cathedral | |
| 20:00 | Feast · long table, gilded plates | Cloister | |
| 22:30 | Closing — naming of the blocks | Cathedral |
Who keeps the ledger.
-
IO
Iseul O.
Cryptographer · Seoul
-
MR
Mira Reyes
Protocol historian · Lisbon
-
JT
Jules Tanaka
Game theorist · Kyoto
-
AK
Asa Kovac
Validator-poet · Ljubljana
-
BD
Beatrix Du
Type designer · Taipei
-
NS
Nikolai Soto
L2 architect · Buenos Aires
-
HE
Han Eun-ji
Marble illustrator · Busan
-
FV
Fern Vogel
DAO librarian · Berlin
Recent readings.
-
01
Why we keep calling it a Day
The argument for treating the chain as a feast — and what we lose when we treat it as a factory.
-
02
Rubrication, in code
On the medieval art of marginalia and what it teaches us about commit messages.
-
03
A short defense of pretty
Why softness, gilding, and the curl on a capital B are not incompatible with rigor.