Lime Blast » CSS3 http://limeblast.co.uk The virtual home of Web developer Daniel Hollands, the place to be if you're looking for articles and tutorials (and rants) on all aspects of the World Wide Web. Wed, 14 Oct 2015 13:13:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.9 Scrap it and start again /2012/02/scrap-it-and-start-again/ /2012/02/scrap-it-and-start-again/#comments Mon, 20 Feb 2012 11:22:40 +0000 /?p=125

Related posts:

  1. Running a server is hard workI was hoping, when I first had the idea for this post, that it would be a run-through of all the steps I has taken in setting up my dedicated server. It was going to include links to the resources......
  2. Rotten to the CoreI don’t know if there is a term for what I am – Applephobic maybe – but I hate Apple. I’m about as PC as PC can get (and I’m not talking about being Politically Correct). In my opinion, the......
  3. I love you Jose Diaz-GonzalezThis is a very quick post to thank Jose Diaz-Gonzalez for the Upload behaviour he wrote for CakePHP. I needed a way of uploading multiple images in the admin area of the Chameleon Photography site. During my Cake 1.3 days,......
]]>
After spending almost all of my spare time during the last four weeks working on designing and building the Lime Blast site, I had gotten to a point on Saturday morning where all I had to do was fix the homepage, and the site was ready to go live.

But what’s the fun in that? So rather than do the sensible thing, and just upload the site, I instead chose to start fresh and build the site all over again from scratch.

Why? Well, there are a couple of reasons.

The first is that I had spent a good portion of the last week updating the limeBase theme on which the Lime Blast site was based. These updates included the latest versions of HTML5 Boilerplate, improved CSS structuring, improved media query responsiveness, and quite a lot of tweaks to the WordPress specific functionality.

The second is that the majority of time spend building the initial site was experimentation to see what was possible. I’m still new to WordPress, and while I’m much better at building for it than I was four months ago, I know I’ve still got a lot to learn. I’m also starting to understand HTML5 and CSS3 much better than I did before, but the downside of this was the labrynth of HTML and CSS that I had left behind. Pretty much the same thing happened with the Ghost Design site.

The way I see it, this site is my most important showcase – if I can’t show the world how good I am on my own site, then how good am I going to be working on someone else’s site?

]]>
/2012/02/scrap-it-and-start-again/feed/ 0