Facebook Profile Hack. NOTE: This post has been edited. Having a large image of the male anatomy on the post seemed a bit distasteful. Even for me! The new Facebook Profile Craze. After reading a post on Techcrunch that I thought was a great idea, I quickly updated my girlfriend’s profile, then mine, to something […]
CSS Border Radius for Modern Browsers: Webkit, Mozilla, Opera, Firefox, Safari, and Chrome
I always find myself checking multiple sites when trying to remember how to make “CSS Border Radius” compatible across as many browsers as possible. Mainly because Mozilla is different than the rest. For that reason, I’ve decided to make a simple complete list that I can use in my own work. The Black Boxes are […]
Portphotio Plus Theme
- Five Colors to Choose From
- Featured Photo Slider.
- Featured image support for all posts.
- Custom NextGen Gallery style built in.
- Loaded with Shortcodes.
- Built-in Social Widget and Author Widget.
- Plus More!
Portphotio Theme
- A Thematic Child Theme.
- Includes style for NextGen Gallery
- Clean and professional design and typesetting.
- Easily display 5 large images with descriptions on the homepage.
- GPL Licensed.
Dr. Who LaunchPad Theme
- Slightly modified version of the Launchpad Theme by Ian Stewart.
- Integration with FeedBurner.
- Amusing design and typesetting
- GPL Licensed. Feel free to use this theme in any way you’d like.
CSS 3 Transform Experiment
Transform is a pretty exciting feature that’s been implemented in CSS 3. So why haven’t we used more of it in our designs? When I made the switch to web design the thing I missed most was the ability to angle text. Sure it could be done with images, but at a price called page weight. I’ve searched online and there are a few examples that use the feature to make cubes, or rotate an image in an attempt to recreate some type of flash-like image gallery, but haven’t seen it used in a visually impacting way. I asked myself why?