SF-BluePrint-WP Theme
Welcome to SlipFire’s BluePrint CSS Theme for WordPress. This is not the first WP theme with BluePrint, but we think it’s the best.
We first became aware of BluePrint CSS in late 2007 and immediately knew it would change the way we work. With it’s easy to use grid system, BluePrint CSS has dramatically cut down on our website design time.
First we started using the BluePrint CSS Theme designed by Fire and Knowledge. After a while we realized we hacked their original theme pretty good and decided to upgrade it to BluePrint 0.7 and release our own version to the WordPress community.
Features:
| BluePrint CSS: | WordPress: | Additional: |
| • An easily customizable grid | • Easy to install | • XHTML compliant |
| • Sensible typography | • Easy to modify | • Bobby Approved for accessibility |
| • Relative font-sizes everywhere | • WordPress 2.3.2 compatible | |
| • A typographic baseline | • Widget ready | |
| • Perfected CSS reset | ||
| • No bloat of any kind | ||
| • Cross-browser compatible | ||
| • W3C CSS Valid |
Installation:
- Download the latest version here:SlipFire BluePrint Theme for WordPress 0.7d (375)
- Unzip the files, and place the entire folder into your “wp-content/themes” director
- Select the theme in your admin panel
- That’s it!!
Make all changes to your CSS in “Custom.CSS”. Never touch the original BluePrint CSS files.
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[…] Live Demo of Theme […]
It would be really good to see some better examples of the typography in this demo site - can I suggest grabbing the HTML from this sample page for Tripoli and putting it in a post?
I found it odd that you used tables to split three columns. We cannot use div class to split the container into 3 columns. Why use table formatting?
Tables were used because they are easier to implement within a WordPress post. Your theme design can easily be divided into columns with divs.
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