Welcome to the first Lemmy-as-a-blog instance
Hello, Fediverse!
I’m Tiana, 26yo web developer from 🇫🇷 France, computer enthusiast since forever.
Some personal history
Ages ago, I got started with my very first blog hosted on Skyblog, back when I was still a kid who didn’t (but definitely pretended to) know much about computers. 🧑💻 Then, I went hopping between other free providers, until it got serious with WordPress.com, which I eventually migrated to a self-hosted WordPress.org instance (I also got my first Linux VPS later on).
I eventually dropped blogging and never picked it up again though, and for a while I couldn’t figure out why… Until I became somewhat more active social media, and realized : since self-hosting, I missed interacting. People sign up on social media knowing they will experience regular interactions, but not necessarily with the same people, therefore they won’t sign up on every single blog they visit, for possibly commenting just once. Nevertheless, I didn’t want to go back to free hosts with subdomains and ads, so I gave up.
Discovering the Fediverse
I first joined the Fediverse on Mastodon (@KaKi87@mamot.fr), and quickly realized how awesome decentralized social media is : the independence that comes with self-hosting, combined with the interaction potential brought by federation. 😍
But, Mastodon is microblogging, not blogging, and I love blogging. So, I looked up federated blogging solutions, and found one : Plume. I was excited! Until I noticed its lots of bugs, missing features, and spam issues…
There are other notable options like the ActivityPub plugin for WordPress, or the WriteFreely platform, but they’re all incomplete, gluing federation on platforms that weren’t designed for it.
Seeing how attractive the modern Ghost CMS is, people (me included) wished for it to join the Fediverse, which I learned while writing this article that they’re apparently working on it (but Soon™, paid early access, and enthusiastic about federating with Meta’s Threads platform).
Finally, here comes Lemmy.
“Lemmy as a blog”
This is mentioned once in the documentation (and nowhere else) :
Lemmy can also function as a blogging platform. Doing this is as simple as creating a community and enabling the option “Only moderators can post to this community”. Now only you and other people that you invite can create posts, while everyone else can comment. Like any Lemmy community, it is also possible to follow from other Fediverse platforms and over RSS. For advanced usage, it is even possible to use the API and create a different frontend which looks more blog-like.
The first Lemmy as a blog?
That is indeed what I’m doing here and now, but actually, I started looking into this a long time ago (my fist public question about it is 2 years old), and as this and all following inquiries I made on this subject remained unanswered, I believed that I was gonna have to be the first one to do it.
But… No! As the documentation says, Lemmy isn’t blog-like, so making a blog-like frontend for it would be a good idea, but I don’t wanna make the UI components, so I asked around about whether there is a UI-only framework for blogs somewhere, and I was told “no, but someone made a frontend for their Lemmy-as-a-blog instance over there”, and I was like, what? I’ve been looking for this for a while and never found anything… Well, turns out it’s a very new project.
I will not be reusing their frontend though, because that’s not really the kind of design I’m looking for.
The second Lemmy as a blog.
So, I welcome you on the second Lemmy-as-a-blog instance. See you in the comments!


Terribly sorry about nerd sniping you! I’m the owner of martijn.sh, and I’m guessing it was only a matter of time. We’re solving the same problem in a completely different way though, so I’ll definitely be following your progress and might use it for my lemmy instance as well.
The only difficulty I’ve found is when federating our small instances to lemmy. Your community only federates with other servers if at least one user on that instance is subscribed to it. An easy way to fast track federation is using lemmy-federate. If you register your instance and your community, an army of bots will automatically subscribe to your community making it available on many more instances at once. The only reason your server now federates with mine is because I searched for it manually and subscribed that way.
Anyway, best of luck on your blog. If you’ve questions or want to discuss, feel free to send me a message!