Skip to main content

Home/ CSS Evangelist/ Group items tagged elements

Rss Feed Group items tagged

LinkSture Technologies

LeadGen - Multipurpose Marketing Landing Page Pack with Page Builder - 0 views

  •  
    LeadGen is a conversion ratio and speed optimized multi-purpose marketing landing page template with drag & drop page builder and tons of readymade elements and demos with greater level of customization possibilities. LeadGen is the best collection of landing pages with modern touch, very well polished, highly responsive, elegant and engaging marketing pages to attract your readers and convince them to contact you or convert to your prospect using the form and call to action buttons. LeadGen can be used as one page website also by having OnePage smooth scrolling menu linked to various sections added on the page. There are 30+ carefully crafted readymade demos are available for different type of businesses as well as 300+ unique elements to chose from and generate your own landing page quickly without any hassles. A powerful and intuitive drag and drop page builder worth $29 is integrated to use readymade blocks, customize fonts, colors, links, styling, content, images as well as deep customization using source code also.
anonymous

Understanding Aspects of Using Texture in Web Design - 0 views

  •  
    In web design, visuals are as important as other aspects and designers need to master how to use various elements in websites. There are various ways for designing background in web pages and one of these widely seen techniques is using texture.
anonymous

The Success of Your E-commerce Web Design Depends on the Product Page - 0 views

  •  
    Product page is the most important part of e-commerce web design and you should insert all the necessary elements in it to make your online business profitable. Give the product name, price, buy button and use high resolution images to help the customers take a buying decision. You should also give a brief product summary to the customer to boost your business.
Vernon Fowler

Font sizing with rem - Snook.ca - 0 views

  • The problem with em-based font sizing is that the font size compounds. A list within a list isn't 14px, it's 20px. Go another level deeper and it's 27px!
  • The rem unit is relative to the root—or the html—element. That means that we can define a single font size on the html element and define all rem units to be a percentage of that. html { font-size: 62.5%; } body { font-size: 1.4rem; } /* =14px */ h1 { font-size: 2.4rem; } /* =24px */
  • We can specify the fall-back using px, if you don't mind users of older versions of Internet Explorer still being unable to resize the text (well, there's still page zoom in IE7 and IE8). To do so, we specify the font-size using px units first and then define it again using rem units. html { font-size: 62.5%; } body { font-size: 14px; font-size: 1.4rem; } /* =14px */ h1 { font-size: 24px; font-size: 2.4rem; } /* =24px */
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • I'm defining a base font-size of 62.5% to have the convenience of sizing rems in a way that is similar to using px.
  • consistent and predictable sizing in all browsers, and resizable text in the current versions of all major browsers
  • The compounding nature of em-based font-sizing can be frustrating so what else can we do?
anonymous

Is Your Corporate Brochure Design Worth Viewing! - 0 views

  •  
    Your corporate brochure design should include elements that make it worth viewing. The print size, the purpose, simplified content, a beguiling cover, and a call-to-action are significant aspects to consider.
tech vedic

How to fix Web pages that print too small? - 0 views

  •  
    Most of the times you need to take the print out of the web pages. But, when the printed web pages come out too small then it is really irritating. This is generally due to "Shrink to Fit" option. According to this option, Internet Explorer squeezes all the elements of a web page by default onto a sheet of paper. Thus, go through this tutorial and fix it.
yc c

Blog | Graphicpeel - iOS Icons Made in Pure CSS - 5 views

  •  
    The following demo was made using a variety of CSS techniques. Rounded corners, shadows, gradients, rgba, pseudo-elements, and transforms are just some of them. A lot of these were generated by helpful tools, such as westciv's tools and Border Radius. By combining these techniques, you can create rich graphics with just a few lines of code. Here are a few examples. In the contacts icon, I used 5 different shapes for the silhouette icon. The head is a rectangle with rounded corners, followed by another rectangle for the neck and a distorted semi-circle for the body. In order to get the curve of the shoulders to the neck, I placed two circles on top of the shapes. The weather icon has several rays of light shooting from behind the sun. Each one of these rays is actually a long rectangle with a gradient that fades to transparent on either end. I used -webkit-transform:rotate to rotate each rectangle to a different angle. The same effect was used for the iTunes icon. To get the cloud icon on the iDisk icon, I used two circles layered on top of each other, above a rounded rectangle. The larger circle has a gradient that cuts off just before the rectangle.
Frederik Van Zande

Emblematiq :: Niceforms :: Overview - 0 views

  •  
    Web forms. Everybody knows web forms. Each day we have to fill in some information in a web form, be it a simple login to your webmail application, an online purchase, or signing up for a website. They are the basic, and pretty much the only way of gathering information on the web. You basically know a web form when you see one as they always look the same and they've kept this look over the years. Try as hard as you might but web forms can only change their appearance so much. Some may argue that this is a good usability feature, and I tend to agree, but there comes a time when you just need to style web forms so that they look different. How do you do that? Niceforms comes to the rescue! Niceforms is a script that will replace the most commonly used form elements with custom designed ones. You can either use the default theme that is provided or you can even develop your own look with minimal effort.
Frederik Van Zande

Hackszine.com: Easiest cross-browser CSS min-height - 0 views

  •  
    Enforcing a minimum height for block elements in HTML is one of those few CSS tricks that you can't live without. There are still enough folks using IE6, unfortunately, and it doesn't support the min-height or min-width CSS parameters. This has caused the invention of a number of different hacks and browser-conditional style sheets to get the desired effect.
Frederik Van Zande

2008 Email Design Guidelines - Campaign Monitor Blog - 0 views

  •  
    As web designers, we've grown pretty good at understanding how to create a modern, semantic, accessible website using XHTML and CSS. We understand what makes a good website, and how to make it happen. When it comes time to design emails though, do all the same rules apply? Are there things we should be doing specifically for email that don't make sense on a website? In this article we'll discuss the technical, design and information elements that make up a successful HTML email.
Frederik Van Zande

Introduction to CSS3 - Part 4: User Interface | Design Shack - 0 views

  •  
    This tutorial will be taking a look at some of the new ways you can manipulate user interface features in CSS3. But what do we mean by "user interface"? CSS3 brings some great new properties relating to resizing elements, cursors, outlining, box layout and more. We're focusing on three of the most significant user interface enhancements in this tutorial. The examples shown below can be seen at our CSS3 examples page. Many, however, can only be appreciated in the latest builds of various browsers:
Gary Edwards

The CSS Box Model | Chris Coyier CSS Tricks - 0 views

  •  
    Chris Coyier discusses the basics of the CSS Box Model: "every element in web design is a rectangular box. This was my ah-ha moment that helped me really start to understand CSS-based web design and accomplish the layouts I wanted to accomplish. We've talked about the positioning of these boxes a bit, and about their behavior." "What we haven't talked about much is the box itself. How is the size of the box calculated exactly? "
yc c

Uniform - Sexy forms with jQuery - 15 views

  • Have you ever wished you could style checkboxes, drop down menus, radio buttons, and file upload inputs? Ever wished you could control the look and feel of your form elements between all browsers? If so, Uniform is your new best friend. Uniform masks your standard form controls with custom themed controls. It works in sync with your real form elements to ensure accessibility and compatibility.
yc c

Use jQuery - Blog - Brosho 'Design in the Browser' jQuery Plugin - 4 views

  •  
    style your markup right in your browser with a build-in element selector and CSS editor. 
Alexis Sgavel

How to Create CSS3 Ribbons Without Images » JavaScript & CSS » SitePoint Blogs - 0 views

  •  
    I n my last post, Pure CSS3 Speech Bubbles Without Images, we saw how the :before and :after pseudo-elements could be used to create different effects. In this post we'll use similar techniques to create a variety of ribbons.
yc c

Animate.css - a bunch of plug-and-play CSS animations - 0 views

  •  
    To use them in your project, simply add the class to the element, or call the animation yourself in your CSS file. The classes and the animations have the same name.
Vernon Fowler

Replacing the -9999px hack (new image replacement) - Jeffrey Zeldman Presents The Daily... - 0 views

  • My friend Scott Kellum, design director at Treesaver, has now sent me this refactored code for hiding text, which I hereby christen the Kellum Method: .hide-text { text-indent: 100%; white-space: nowrap; overflow: hidden; } Really long strings of text will never flow into the container because they always flow away from the container. Performance is dramatically improved because a 9999px box is not drawn. Noticeably so in animations on the iPad 1.
  • Scott Kellum said on 1 March 2012 at 3:41 pm: I went ahead and created a side by side site to test the performance: http://lab.pgdn.us/hidden-text-performance/ @Ethan, This is the best 43min I have ever spent learning about optimizing the performance of my CSS: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xuMWhto62Eo
  • Would be interesting to understand both the SEO and accessibility impacts of this approach.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • Scott Kellum said on 2 March 2012 at 4:06 pm: After much deliberation over here: https://github.com/h5bp/html5-boilerplate/issues/1005#issuecomment-4293007 Jonathan Neal suggested a method using font: 0/0 serif; and things seem to be settling on this — .ir { font: 0/0 serif; text-shadow: none; color: transparent; }
  • While I think this is certainly and interesting approach, I have some concerns with the accessibility. In some, if not all, cases when overflow: hidden; hides the content of the element this is applied to from screen readers. In most cases where I use image replacement, I still need the text to be accessible (e.g. call to action buttons set in Gotham). See Aaron Gustafson’s A List Apart article, http://www.alistapart.com/articles/now-you-see-me/. Has anyone tested this with a wide battery of screen readers or other accessibility devices?
  • Another note on accessibility: Besides the screen reader problems – people who don’t get images will not see the text too.
  • As a few people said already, this does not solve the accessibility problem that comes with text-indent. Worse, it may send the wrong message: “this is new and cool, use this from now!”. As a leader in the industry, I think you should warn people that even if this is “better” in term of performance, it is still a bad solution. Imo, Image Replacement techniques should be evaluated against the problems they solve/address. Fwiw, I wrote something about these challenges a few years back: http://tjkdesign.com/articles/tip.asp </shameless plug>
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 53 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page