article Paper-style design is becoming increasingly popular as a creative medium for designers and developers.
While the ‘paper world’ was once dominated by glossy glossy paper, now designers are taking the opportunity to create beautiful and professional-looking websites using modern design principles.
The benefits of using paper-based designs are many, from a quicker turnaround time for website builders, to a cleaner look for your website’s content, to more easily searchable content.
To help you get started, we’ve created a quick guide to creating a paper-inspired website using HTML 5.1, using the latest and greatest web standards, with the best of modern tools.
We’ll also show you how to add some modern touch to your designs with CSS3 transitions and animations.
1.
Create an HTML5 page that displays the ‘text’ of the website The first thing you need to do is create an HTML page that will display the ‘content’ of your website.
The HTML5 document is basically a simple HTML tag that tells the browser what kind of content to render.
This can be a simple list of links or a full webpage that includes all of the content that’s on your website – such as an article or a video.
Here’s how to create your HTML page in HTML5:
This is an article on this site.
Title:
Content:
Title
“Content: This is an introductory article about how to build a web application.”
Content: Content
This is a Hello World.
This will result in a page that looks like this: Title: Article 1 Content: This article on example-domain is a good starting point for an introductory post.
It shows a basic introduction to HTML5.
The content on this page contains information about the article and its content, including the title, title.html and body.html tags.
You can then add the following CSS: .article-text { padding: 1em; margin: 0; border: 1px solid #000; border-radius: 2px; border : 1px black; } .article { padding-top: 1.5em; }
Title: Title: This will be the first article on the site.
Content <!– this content will be added to the content area at the top of the page when it is completed This section contains the content for the article, as well as the link that will take you to the article.
Here, we add the text for the title to the body and the content text to the header.
.article.content { padding : 1em 0; padding-left: 1; } This will make the page look like this, showing a basic introductory article.
You will notice that the padding around the title is increased in the HTML5 version of the HTML.
To use the CSS3 transition we just created, simply place the tag at the beginning of the
This is to indicate that the content will fade away when the content content is finished.
.header { padding:-1em; background: url(/articles/default.jpg) no-repeat; background-size: cover; width: 100%; padding: 0 0 0; margin-bottom: 1rem; }
To use CSS3 animations, you need the animations plugin in HTML.
The animations plugin lets you use CSS transitions on your HTML documents to dynamically animate elements.
body { font-size :