Tag Archives | thesis

The State of my 2013 WordPress Toolset — Themes

When I wrote the 2012 ver­sion of this post last year, I did not expect it to become the most com­mented post on this blog ever. It made me real­ize that there is a real hunger for infor­ma­tion about pre­mium WordPress themes and frame­works out there, a need for opin­ions from peo­ple work­ing with some of these prod­ucts every day and who are not afraid to speak their mind. I like to think I do that here.

I also try to make a dis­tinc­tion between what frame­works would work well for pro­fes­sional WordPress design­ers and devel­op­ers ver­sus casual users. The for­mer is what inter­ests me and most reviews out there are tar­geted at the lat­ter. Also, you often get a review from some­one who tin­kered with a frame­work on a test site for a few min­utes or hours. I work with the themes I men­tion here all the time. Testing a theme frame­work for a cou­ple hours will not give you a per­spec­tive on things like:

  • How well do upgrades and updates work? Do updates typ­i­cally break client sites lay­outs? Do you need to tweak your child themes every time you upgrade the par­ent theme?
  • How does the frame­work per­form on a real live site with real traf­fic? Is the site slower or faster with this frame­work com­pared to others?
  • How does the devel­oper han­dle sup­port? How fast, how help­ful are they. This is key when your client work depends on a prod­uct like a theme so heavily.
  • Etc…

This post is also a kind of intro to other posts I’ll write in the com­ing weeks and months where I explain in more detail the rea­sons I’d choose a WordPress theme frame­work over oth­ers and I’ll finally write some real in-​depth theme frame­work reviews based on these cri­te­ria. That is already started.

But for now, here’s the state of my 2013 WordPress themes toolset…

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Coming Up On pix​e​lyzed​.com In 2011

To say that I have been busy in the lat­ter half of 2010 would be an under­state­ment… my lack of post­ing here or on my com­pany blog is a tes­ta­ment to it. But I’ve been learn­ing a lot and plan to share my best finds as usual. So, here are a few things that are com­ing up here soon…

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Is Using WordPress Themes Frameworks Cheating at Web Design?

I read a very inter­est­ing arti­cle over the week­end titled “Are WordPress Themes Cheating in Web Design?” by James Dalman. That arti­cle itself was inspired by an older one titled “Confessions of a Template Whore” by Sabrina Dent which is equally interesting.

The point of this post is not to rehash the same ideas as these two arti­cles. I agree with both authors that, using themes is quite OK in many cases, espe­cially for non-​designers who want to get blogs and even sim­ple sites up and still get at least a pro­fes­sional “look”, even if we all know that design goes a lot deeper than mere dec­o­ra­tion and sur­face skinning.

A good look­ing and func­tional free theme like the one I used when I moved this site to WordPress won’t win any­one any orig­i­nal­ity awards, but it will get the job done for a lot of peo­ple and won’t turn away vis­i­tors because the site looks like crap or is com­pletely unusable.

But beyond pre-​made themes that you just plug into a site and tweak a lit­tle, there is whole other cat­e­gory of themes called “Premium Themes” or theme frame­works. This site’s evolv­ing design is now based on one called Thesis and I’ll be redo­ing my com­pany blog as well as Isabelle’s entire Web site using another called Headway (btw, both are affil­i­ate links because I believe in these prod­ucts very strongly). I talked about Thesis and theme frame­works in this recent post.

Basically, what theme frame­works do is enable you to eas­ily (or rel­a­tively eas­ily) “skin” your blog or site using your own design with lit­tle or no cod­ing… and that is what I wanted to touch on here.

A major Shift

For me, start­ing to use WordPress has been a mind shift in itself, for a few rea­sons. But I always fig­ured I would at least even­tu­ally build my own theme for it… from scratch… and I fig­ured I would build blogs with it and lit­tle else. But that’s until I dis­cov­ered the true power of the plat­form. The mind shift was com­plete once I dis­cov­ered Thesis andHeadway and the world of theme frame­works… and my imag­i­na­tion started racing!

As many of you know, I have been design­ing and build­ing Web sites for a long time now, so I know how to code and do so in an effi­cient man­ner. I’ve never used code exported from Fireworks (the appli­ca­tion I design all of my sites with) because it never was good enough for me. Without call­ing myself a purist, I’ve always prided myself in the qual­ity of my HTML and CSS and I’ve worked hard at keep­ing up with cur­rent tech­niques. So you can imag­ine my reluc­tance to let go of most of my con­trol using WordPress and a theme frame­work to build not only a blog, but entire Web sites!

But I plan to do just that for not only Isabelle’s site, but my biggest Web site project to date if I get it (I’m send­ing my bid in on Friday) as well as any suit­able future projects.

What changed my mind? Quite frankly, I’m tired of the tedium and rep­e­ti­tion. Using WordPress and a good theme frame­work means that a lot of a site’s infra­struc­ture is already done for me, and done solidly too. Like James Dalman said in his article:

  • It takes a lot of energy and time to cre­ate some­thing from nothing,
  • free­lancers are lim­ited by time,
  • and a busi­ness’ pri­mary goal (free­lance or oth­er­wise) is to be profitable

These are just as applic­a­ble to cod­ing a site as they are to design­ing it. If I can get more projects done faster it will mean a bet­ter cash flow for me and sig­nif­i­cant sav­ings for my clients. Plus it will mean I will con­cen­trate more on the parts I enjoy (strat­egy, design, UX) and less on the tedium of cod­ing the same kind of func­tion­al­ity again and again.

This is not for every project but when it is applic­a­ble, it will be a win-​win for every­one IMO.

What do you think?

Update — November 16th, 2012:
Just a short not to say that with time I’ve changed my mind and stopped rec­om­mend­ing Thesis. I would actu­ally rec­om­mend stay­ing away from it for sev­eral rea­sons I may touch upon in a future post. I also have reser­va­tions about Headway now based on sev­eral inci­dents I had with it like minor updates break­ing sites in the 3.x ver­sion and 2.x sites break­ing com­pletely for no rea­son I could find. I per­son­ally have lost my trust in Headway but still think the prod­uct is good for many peo­ple as it’s a very flex­i­ble frame­work and my expe­ri­ence is prob­a­bly not typ­i­cal. But these days I stick with either iThemes Builder mostly or WooThemes Canvas for some projects (includ­ing this site) because I believe they are bet­ter engi­neered and stick to WordPress stan­dards bet­ter and I out­lined some of the rea­sons I think this is very impor­tant here. I have more sites on Builder than Headway now and no updates have ever bro­ken a lay­out and none of my Builder sites have ever lost their for­mat­ting for no rea­son overnight like what hap­pened on my busi­ness site which was on Headway 2.0.13 until recently when I put it on Canvas.

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My Journey to WordPress — New Design Up!

As I already explained pre­vi­ously, on April 5th (2010), I migrated pix​e​lyzed​.com from another blog­ging plat­form to WordPress. Last night I changed from the free theme I’d been using to my own new design which I inte­grated into WordPress using the Thesis theme (more about Thesis below). Continue Reading →

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