Stumbling Friday - CSS Techniques
Once again I came by a very nice and good to know Stumble on my 5th Stumble in a row.
Lucky for me that I didn’t have to blog about my 4th stumble, a picture of a car with 1 horsepower. Actually a car without a motor and pulled by a horse
.
K, back to today’s stumble.
Today’s stumble took me to Smashing Magazines website post “Powerful CSS Techniques for effective coding”.
For those who regularly develop websites and are in need for some new CSS techniques, you should definitely check it out!
In this post he presents 50 new techniques, ideas and ready-to-use solutions for effective coding.
In fact I’m redesigning one of my sites at the moment and after viewing this page, I’m thinking of using one of the techniques posted there.
Technique number 22, CSS Dock menu seems very nice, but it’s Apple style, that’s always nice ![]()
Now to the rewarding part of my previous stumbling Friday post. This was a really cool stumble I came across with. Because of the low number of comments, I’m going to stumble every commentator’s site or blog just to thank them for leaving a comment!
Hope you’ll receive a lot of traffic from my stumble!
For this post, I’m going to try something new to get more comments. Instead of picking a winner out of every 5 commentator’s, I’m going to stumble the first 20 commentator’s!
I also have something in mind for my commentator of the month, but that’s something you’ll have to read in one of my next posts. So if you want to know what, please subscribe to my RSS Feed, so you’ll get your updates automatically.
3 Responses to "Stumbling Friday - CSS Techniques"
Posted by Daniel on Mar 01 at 09:39 AM
I’m just getting to grips with basic CSS techniques, but I’ll be sure to take a look at the post to what I should be doing.
Posted by Beverly on Mar 01 at 11:46 PM
This is a good idea. I love reading your articles.







Posted by kexbrown on Mar 01 at 02:47 AM
I am in the process of creating a new web site for a client and I wanted to add some fun to his site. I had been thinking about CSS menus. Now, you convinced me I need to give this a try. I really like the idea of the different shading of the menus.
What I want is the users to want to interact a little on his site. He won’t have a lot of content, but he has a powerful message in his seminars and the consulting he does. So, I need a way to get the visitors to stay and I think there may be opportunities to use some of these ideas.
Thanks again for “Stumbling” across them and then sharing them with your audience. I know I appreciate it.