8 Definitive Web Font Stacks [Design Tips & Tricks] - 0 views
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Over the last few months, I've spent more time than I intended on exploring the whole idea of fonts and typography for the Web. (My friend, typography expert Simon Pascal Klein, writes, "The former is a stylized set of glyphs of characters," while "the other [is] the whole art of creating type and setting it into the written word." For more clarification and illumination, consult Jon Tan and Mark Simonson.) In the process, I've been considering the idea of font stacks-using the well-known font-family CSS property-to list as many different fonts as possible in order to optimize the web site experience for a maximum number of users.
Jennifer Semtner.com :: Web Designer / Developer » Blog Archive » Extending C... - 0 views
In the Woods - 15 CSS Tricks That Must be Learned - 0 views
5 Principles And Ideas Of Setting Type On The Web | How-To | Smashing Magazine - 0 views
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here are many ways to approach Web typography in order to create effective and expressive results. Let's take a closer look at some principles, rules and ideas for approaching Web typography decisions - you can use them as a starting point for learning how to achieve effective type setting on the Web.
Dave Woods - HTML, CSS, Web Design » Creating Rounded Corner CSS Boxes Using ... - 0 views
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Creating Rounded Corner CSS Boxes Using One Image
Graphics Lab - 0 views
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In this laboratory I perform various experiments in the realms of digital magick. Here I work with images, and 3D virtual spaces, as well as more traditional geometrical models to try and understand the graphical aspects of Computional Sorcery
As Button Generator - 0 views
Style Switchers Are Back: Ideas, Examples and a Contest | Design Showcase, Events | Sma... - 0 views
A List Apart: Articles: Frameworks for Designers - 0 views
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How should a CSS framework be built? There are several possible ways to go about building a framework, but the most common and arguably the most useful is to abstract your common CSS into individual stylesheets that each cover a particular part of the whole. For example, you may have a stylesheet that sets up the typography and another that handles the mass reset. The beauty of the approach is the ability to selectively include only the styles that you need. You may end up with six or seven different stylesheets in your framework, but if a particular project doesn’t need one or two of them, they don’t have to be included. The framework we created in our office has five stylesheets: reset.css—handles the mass reset. type.css—handles the typography. grid.css—handles the layout grid. widgets.css—handles widgets like tabs, drop-down menus, and “read more” buttons. base.css—includes all the other stylesheets, so that we only need to call base.css from our (X)HTML documents to use the entire framework.
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A word of caution This method works quite well, but there is a valid concern to be raised: it adds to the number of HTTP connections needed to render each page. On large, high-traffic sites, adding five more HTTP connections to every page view may result in angry system administrators. Two possible solutions to this are: Include everything in a single file, rather than breaking it into modules. The problem here is that you lose the ability to include only certain parts of the framework, and you also make maintenance more difficult. Have a server-side process that dynamically flattens the individual files into a single response. I’ve not seen this done, but it could be very efficient if done well. Using my example framework above, this dynamic process could occur when base.css is requested, but not when type.css, grids.css, etc. are. This way, the individual components are still available, but the entire framework is available in a flattened version, as well.
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