Web Design CSS Bookma... Bookmarks
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this site is an example of the work of a fellow web designer/friend. enjoy!
more from seanblanda.com
awesome tutorials for everything imaginable with css and html and various languages
more from www.lynda.com
sweet serif and sans serif fonts available for free for a more rugged design
more from www.urbanfonts.com
If anyone wants the most cheesy backgrounds for either this project or the next, check this site out. It has some pretty crazy 80's-vanity-license plate-style airbrushed artwork. I really want to make a website that features this kind of cheesy artwork. Word.
more from backgroundsandlayouts.net
Paul OB gives probably the best advice I've heard yet - keep it simple. In this article he goes through the problems of complicated code, which as we all know can disable stylesheets and drive you crazy. After reading this, I went back through my css and made sure everything was streamlined.
more from www.search-this.com
Designer Jean Louis gives a pretty cool tip about sizing text without pixels. It's one of those tricks that makes text fit according to your site. Using percentages next to the body div on css will enable you to do this. I'm going to try it when I design my next site while playing around with text.
more from www.louisdesign.com
The site simplebits.com provides a tip on how to make background links, objects, artwork, etc. easily clickable. If I had the time, I would use this effect on my portfolio page, designing each article and zen site feature to afford some sort of action.
more from www.simplebits.com
Snook says that if your are trying to keep track of headers in your css, try to declare specifications all in one line. I might try to do this in the future when I get better at designing; describing an h3's colors, font size and background in one single line.
more from snook.ca
This article will help you convert your website designed in photoshop to a real css layout. For many people like myself who can't draw for their lives, I like to use photoshop and similar programs to plot out how I want things to look first. It is usually hard to translate my ideas onto paper, and even harder to translate the paper to a webpage. For those of you with troubles like these, rest them aside.
more from csshowto.com
Cool tricks mostly for paragraph set ups. Ever wanted to have a floating paragraph in your website? Use this page to learn how! "Spicing up lenses"
more from www.squidoo.com
I think this is a pretty good website background site. It has some nice wallpapers. If you click on the thumbnail wallpaper, you are taken to a screen with that wallpaper as the wallpaper of the site. There are different colored texts all over the page. How do you get the background on your computer? All you do is right click and save the image to your computer!
more from www.backgroundcity.com
This is a quick guide useful to refer to when you forget what words to use for what command. I often find myself forgetting what certain alignments do and which words mean what when clicked. This is a cheat sheet for those who are forgetful, or when stressful times lead to forgetting the basics.
more from www.htmlcodetutorial.com
This is a little bit of information on why we should even consider using CSS. At times wrtiting the CSS was very frustrating. If the CSS Zen Garden wasn't proof enough why we should use the "tool", this article will give you more insight to the benefits of CSS>
more from www.htmlgoodies.com
Free! Well, this takes part of the thinking out the design progess. This site offers free css templates that you can preview and then download if you'd like. Something to try next time you are in a crunch.
more from www.freecsstemplates.org