| MARGIN | Edge of a page (6) |
| MARGINAL | On the edge of a page (8) |
| COLUMN | An architectural support such as a pillar; a regular article, piece or section in a newspaper; an upright mass of air, smoke, water etc; or, a vertical division of a page/table (6) |
| DOGEAR | Alluding to a flap-like "lug" of a canine, word for a folded-down corner of a page as a result of wear or from one's purposeful bookmarking (3-3) |
| FOOTER | A walker; a Scots word for a fiddle or potter about; an informal name for soccer; a kick of the ball in said game; or, type/text at the bottom of a page, in contrast to the header, at the top (6) |
| REGLET | Word, from French for "little rule", for a column of a page originally, later a narrow band separating mouldings; a fillet; or, a strip of wood for making white spaces between type in printing (6) |
| BLEED | Run off the edges of a page |
| LAYOUT | Format, design (of a page) (6) |
| CORNER | Part of a page that gets dog-eared |
| HEADER | Line at the top of a page |
| BANNER | Ad across the top of a page |
| PROOFS | Printing: trial sheets of a page that is checked and corrected (5) |
| HEAD | Top of a page; upper end of a bed; source of a river; or, the leaves of a cabbage or lettuce collectively (4) |
| PROOF | A test, such as a proverbial try of a pudding; strength of alcohol; a trial impression of a page; or, evidence (5) |
| SIGNATURE | Autograph or handwritten name; distinctive mark; a letter or numeral at the foot of a page in bookbinding; or, a dish characteristic of a chef (9) |
| TAILPIECE | Decorative design at the foot of a page or end of a chapter; any one of Thomas Bewick's woodblock engravings; or, an ebony or rosewood strip anchoring a violin's strings (9) |
| DOGSEAR | A fold at the corner of a page in a book (4-3) |
| FOOT | A manner of walking; 12 inches; or, the bottom of a page or hill (4) |
| HEADING | Something leading, topping or uppermost, such as the top of a curtain or the title/rubric at the top of a page; or, bearing/direction (7) |
| LINE | Part of a page of prose |