As you may have noticed about a week ago I gave the blog a spring clean and changed to a new theme I’ve been working on for a little while. I’ve felt for a while that the old site was rushed out a little back in October when I wasn’t 100% sure what was going to be the main focus on here and only a few months down the line I wanted a refresh for various reasons.
Using the great WordPress theme test drive plugin I worked away in the background with the site live putting together my new theme.
Welcome to the internet home of web designer, developer, pilot person and Cumbria dweller Dave Sparks.
Are your websites ever going to be bigger than 960px?
Me and @aarmitage had a little discussion about screen resolution in the office the other day and it’s kind of left me thinking – are we ever going to consistently design websites for screens larger then 1024×768 pixels?
Conventional wisdom as we progressed from 800×600 to 1024×768 was that as bigger screens became affordable and PC usage more common place home users would eventually gravitate to a 1920px width screen and so on so forth. However whilst all your designer mates might have large 1920px screens most home PCs are still 1024×768 and as such web designs are generally fitted to a 960px width to sit comfortably on this size screen. Add into the mix the growth of mobile internet and the announcement of the iPad and we’ve come full circle and are right back designing for smaller screens than ever.
So whilst you may design for designers on larger monitors and we will still have to consider where our background goes beyond the 1024px width will we ever find that a commonplace width for client sites or have we reached our widest “normal” width with our 960px wide site?
Will the transition of internet access from the desktop simply mean that we design more fluid sites and mobile alternatives instead, whilst still sticking to conventional widths?
The Randomiser Interview #6 – Sneh Roy

Hello there everybody, so we enter the 6th edition of wonderful random questions asked to anyone I can badger into answering. This time it is Sneh Roy the creative force behind Little Box of Ideas.
The Blonde Board
The Blonde Board is a personal project that has long been in need of a revamp.
Started after a bit of fun at university the web site aims to collect together examples of all the daft things people say.
Having intially worked with a custom CMS (Content Management System) the redesign moved the site onto the wordpress platform with a custom theme.
The Design
The main focus of the theme was to keep things simple and easily readable as the site is heavily text based.
To add a bit of visual interest drop caps were added to the main body of text on each entry making use of a font devlivered by the TypeKit service.
CSS3 and Typekit
The theme makes use of new CSS3 properties and animation. Currently only viewable in webkit based web browsers (Safari and Chrome) the animation of a
stickman dunce character is made when hovering over menu items on the main navigation.
The use of non web safe fonts delivered from TypeKit enable the drop caps to be styled without using image replacment techniques and are also used on the
main site navigation.
Details
- Word press site with custom theme
- Full design and coding of theme
- Use of new CSS3 and TypeKit font replacement
- Site live at http://www.theblondeboard.com
Unleashing the Power of Website Analytics

Following on from an article on here a while ago I’ve written a post for Six Revisions focusing on getting more our of you analytics package so head on over to Six Revision for a read of Unleashing the Power of Website Analytics, you never know you might learn something.

