Here it is, my first ever screencast. It has been really fun to do, so now I am only left to hope that you won't laugh to much of my bad english.
I'll talk a little about how I think the best way to create subheading styles is, showing it off against a much common way of doing it.
Subheadings the right way. My first ever screencast recorded.
Please give feedback through the comments.
Comments
Tikku wrote:
I am a designer. I usually do websites, print and aome for video projects .
I have been searching for css and webdesign concepts and got to this page.
nice inspirational work and it makes other feel excited and start loving designing work again and again. Keep posting.
Thanks
facenormal wrote:
Thank you for this one and other very useful tips. You nail down the most common layout problems really well!
Tim Murren wrote:
This was a wonderful tutorial!!! I have always used a baseline grid for my layouts, but I have always been in search of this answer. I used to set the baseline grid to half of what my actual leading was (14 pt leading, 7 pt baseline grid). I would add 7 pt before my subhead and 7 pt after. This would keep everything on the grid and the subhead spacing was right (split into 3rds), but some lines would be off by one line at the end of a page (if there were even numbers of subheads on a page). Now everything is in line, and tight! Thanks!
neal wrote:
Very beautiful process. I've always struggled with the proper way to setup subheadings. You explained it very clearly. I will be visiting your site much more often now. Thank you
lucian wrote:
indeed, this trick was a mistery to me up until now when i saw your video.. as i am now working on 2 annual reports it comes very very handy to make my subheads look better balanced. cheers! :)
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