ninetydegrees: Art: self-portrait (Default)
ninetydegrees (90d)☕ ([personal profile] ninetydegrees) wrote in [community profile] getting_started2010-09-13 12:10 am
Entry tags:

Getting Started: Styles

Important: I don't update this on a regular basis. Some styles are very likely missing from the lists and we probably have more themes and styles to choose from now.

Also this post used to list more cats such as color and number of columns but the great Dreamwidth Style Browser integrated this so it's become redundant.


This is for LiveJournal users who would like to use Dreamwidth styles but are a little lost when it comes to finding one or customizing it. I hope you'll find it useful. Suggestions and corrections are welcome.

SELECTION

Dreamwidth currently has over 1000 themes and 40 different styles live on the site. Unfortunately, there are no categories for you to browse through yet so it may not be easy to find one you like. What you can do is browse through base styles first (category's in the sidebar) to find something you like then pick a theme and a page setup. To see all themes from a style, click on its name like on LJ. You can also type the name of a color in the Search bar. If you see a color theme you like but would like to see if it exists in other styles type its name in the Search bar.

-- Simpler styles (i.e. which make you think there's less styling, clean lines, fewer boxes and borders): Brittle, Corinthian, EasyRead, Five AM, Marginless, Paletteable, Refried Tablet, Stepping Stones, Tabula Rasa, Tranquility III.

-- Fancier styles (i.e. styles which make you think there's a lot of styling, lots of images and textures, unusual tricks and effects): Abstractia, Database, Drifting, Fantaisie, Fluid Measure, Funky Circles, Nouveau Oleanders, Summertime, Skittlish Dreams, Wide Open.

This is all very subjective, of course and some of these have more or less than what meet the eye at first glance. Other styles generally fall in the middle part of the spectrum: not 100% simple but not 100% fancy either.

-- Styles with decorative images: Bannering, Boxes and Borders, ColorSide (some themes), Drifting (some themes), Fantaisie, Funky Circles, Heads Up, Hibiscus, Modish (some themes), Modular (some themes), Nouveau Oleanders, Skittlish Dreams, Summertime, Sunday Morning, Wide Open.

-- Styles with transparent boxes: Abstractia, Paper Me, Summertime.

-- Styles with round corners: Ciel, Database, Fluid Measure, For the Bold, Modular, Summertime.

-- Style where the Navigation module is always displayed: Blanket.

-- Styles where the Navigation module can be put in the header area: Bannering, Bases, Basic Boxes, Boxes and Borders, Crossroads, Database, Dusty Foot, Fantaisie, Five AM, Hibiscus, Modular, Negatives, Nouveau Oleanders, Practicality, Skittlish Dreams, Strata, Summertime, Sunday Morning, Transmogrified, Wide Open.


CUSTOMIZATION

Terminology

Layouts -> styles
Friends page -> Reading page
Sidebar, Component, Boxes, etc. -> Modules

Page Setup

The layout shown on the preview is just one example of what the style can look like. By changing the page setup and module placement it's easy to turn a style you like because of the colors or because of some detail into a style you love because things are exactly where you want them to be. Don't dismiss a style just because the preview shows you two-columns right. You can generally change that.

There are seven different page setups. They're not all available for every style although one column and two columns are standard options for most of them.
-- One column: classic (all modules at the bottom) and split (modules at the top and/or at the bottom).
-- Two columns: left sidebar, right sidebar.
-- Three columns: two left sidebars, two right sidebars, one sidebar on each side.

Categories & Options

All options are sorted into nine main categories: Display, Presentation, Colors, Images, Fonts, Modules, Text, Links List, Custom CSS.

All styles basically have the same options. Some might have extra ones but they all have the same base ones. If you feel something is missing, check [site community profile] dw_suggestions. If it hasn't been suggested yet, make a suggestion here.


Display

Display is for Mood Themes and Navigation Strip colors.

Note that the options to select when and where you want to display the Navigation Strip have been moved to Account Settings whereas colors are still in Customize.


Presentation

Presentation is for general presentation options for journal, pages, sidebar and entries. Everything which has to do with presentation is here except for modules which have their own category.

Nothing really new here besides options which used to be available in a few selected layouts on LiveJournal or via advanced customization such as sidebar width, icon on the left or right, date format, etc. Here they're usable in all styles.


Colors, Images, Fonts

Again, nothing new besides many more options, again usable in all styles. You can set your journal base font there.


Modules

Modules is for choosing which boxes to display, where to place them and how to display their content (for example you can select the way you want to display your tags or your calendar).

To hide a module, simply uncheck the box. Change the numbers to change the ordering (make sure two modules don't have the same one).

Depending on the style you've chosen you will have more or less placement options available to you. In most styles, you'll see Main Module Section and Second Module Section. The Main Module Section is the first bottom section in One Column, the top section in One Column Split, the sidebar in Two Columns.

Dreamwidth has three new modules: Cut Tag Controls (to open or close of the cuts on the page), Style Credit and, for paid users, Active Entries (i.e. entries where new comments have been posted). All the modules are available in all styles. Note that you can set the privacy settings for Content Search at http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/settings/?cat=privacy to control who can search your journal and what they can search.


Text

Text is for the text of Module headings, the Custom Text module, Navigation links and Entry links.

The rest, you know from LJ.


EMs?

You'll see that EMs are the preferred unit. You may be used to pixels. EMs are better because they're related to font size meaning the style will adapt to the size chosen by the viewer: larger sidebar for bigger font size, narrower one for smaller font size, bigger entry title, smaller entry title, etc. It makes sure everybody can comfortably view your journal and that no content overlaps.

However, it may make some things look huge to you. That's because Dreamwidth, unlike many other sites, has chosen not to override users' preferences. If you've never set your browser's font size then you'll suddenly see everything with it, instead of whatever the site has chosen for you (usually something very small like 10 or 12 pixels). Just check your browser preferences to set your base font to something you like.

CSS?

If you have CSS knowledge, you'll see that most styles use the same structure and that all elements have classes or IDs.

To help you with it, there's a guide on the Dreamwidth Wikipedia: http://wiki.dwscoalition.org/notes/S2_CSS

I've also made a guide which should be relevant to most styles: http://layoutmakers.dreamwidth.org/4463.html

If you've made a new style or theme and would like it to become official, have a look at [site community profile] dreamscapes.


More display options?

Several display options, which are not style-dependent, can be found at http://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/settings/?cat=display. To name a few: the ability to have a sticky post at the top of your journal, the ability to view any entry or any journal in your own style, the site style or the light style, 12H or 24H time display, hover pop-ups settings,...


Need Help?

[community profile] style_system is the place to ask questions.
thejeopardymaze: (Default)

(frozen comment)

[personal profile] thejeopardymaze 2010-09-13 01:33 am (UTC)(link)
I understand, and I've been on edge lately (not like I'm saying it was justified).
Edited 2010-09-13 01:33 (UTC)
foxfirefey: A wee rat holds a paw to its mouth. Oh, the shock! (thoughtful)

(frozen comment)

[personal profile] foxfirefey 2010-09-13 01:44 am (UTC)(link)
I think the main problem is that a lot of people lately have felt forced to come here, even if they don't like it, which is always an awkward foot to start out on, you know? I know it's been stressing a lot of people out.