Find out who can use your color combination. Whocanuse is a tool that brings attention and understanding to how color contrast can affect different people that have visual impairments.
Print To CSS | Website and blog of Front-end developer and web designer, Dan Davies
My name is Dan Davies, an experienced and highly skilled web designer and front-end developer from Flintshire, North Wales and currently working in Cheshire. Specialising in Web Design, WordPress, HTML, CSS3 and Sass, I build responsive websites that incorporate modern, clean code and am a big advocate of the content first approach. I have worked for some large digital agencies and with some very well known brands.
I’m a front-end developer who is passionate about building inclusive web experiences. Currently I’m teaching what I know about HTML, CSS, & JavaScript on YouTube.
Some CSS Grid Strategies for Matching Design Mockups | CSS-Tricks
The world of web development has always had a gap between the design-to-development handoff. Ambitious designers want the final result of their effort to
Techniques for a Newspaper Layout with CSS Grid and Border Lines Between Elements
I recently had to craft a newspaper-like design that featured multiple row and column spans with divider lines in between them. Take a look at the mockup
I started this year on a new path at Knowbility — to help people and organizations create accessible content and apps. But what was exciting and helped
Create an App from a Google Sheet in Minutes · Glide
Glide turns spreadsheets into beautiful, easy-to-use apps, without code. Pick a spreadsheet or start with a template, customize your app, then share it instantly with anyone. Start today for free!
Become An HTML Email Geek With These Videos From Rémi Parmentier
In these two videos (a webinar recorded for our Smashing Members and a presentation from SmashingConf Freiburg), you can discover all the tips and tricks you need to help you design HTML emails. Follow along as Rémi Parmentier shares what he knows about taming email clients.
Make Your Own Expanding And Contracting Content Panels
In UI/UX, a common pattern that’s needed time and again is that of a simple animated opening and closing panel, or 'drawer'. You don’t need a library to make these. With some basic HTML/CSS and JavaScript, we’re going to learn how to do it ourselves.
I don’t remember exactly when it happened but about a year ago WordPress introduced a prefix at the front of WordPress archive titles. This prefix is designed to give context to archives.
I have a div with this css class: .pos { -webkit-filter: brightness(0.5); -moz-filter: britghtness(0.5); -o-filter: brightness(0.5); -ms-filter: brightness(0.5); filter: bright...