Category: Featured

  • New for Twenty Twenty Three

    New for Twenty Twenty Three

    The 2023 default WordPress template comes with 10 default styles. You will need to be comfy with full site editing, which means the style editor is moved from the left hand side customizer to the right hand side Style Editor. On our platform you will find that we are still using 2021, but you are…

  • Jump Start

    Jump Start

    To jump start your website, just start writing. Your website is hidden from search engines at startup, so you are safe to experiment away. No one will see your edits until you make it live. Even if you are intent on making a single page website, you may need to work out how to: The…

  • Emotive fonts

    Emotive fonts

    Choosing the right font for the job is pretty easy, scroll down the font list in your customizer until you find the one you like, no? Even professional designers in a hurry might do this, e.g. if doing a quick favour or job for next to no money or they know the client is doesn’t…

  • Twenty Twenty One

    Twenty Twenty One

    Is our new default theme, i.e. when you fire up a new site. By all means upgrade to Twenty Twenty Two, if that feels right for you or you fear being left out of the full site editing experience, but we’re old fashioned and prefer the old world editing experience and the traditional customizer –…

  • What’s new in 2021?

    What’s new in 2021?

    Twenty Twenty One (TTO from now on) is the default WordPress theme and looks plain and old fashioned, but tailored around the new Block Editor. First off there’s a selection of default colours that are designed with Dark Mode support in mind. So will suit blog posters whose audience is nocturnal.

  • Help Switching

    Help Switching

    Inertia prevents many people from switching. Switching their bank, energy supplier, or their insurance provider. The idea that there is a better deal out there might sound appealing on one level, until you actually have to feel the pain of doing it. So many don’t. Regulators and economists seem to overlook this.