No matter how big or small a company is, they almost all have the desire for a "bigger logo" on their website in common.
Sooner or later, the question "Can the logo be made bigger?" is raised during the wireframing process.
No matter how big or small a company is, they almost all have the desire for a "bigger logo" on their website in common.
Sooner or later, the question "Can the logo be made bigger?" is raised during the wireframing process.
One thing is clear: not every shoe fits everyone.
Most people consider a CMS to be the better choice.
It has become common practice in the web design industry to recommend CMSs (content management systems) as a matter of principle. Even if this is not always necessary and is basically "overpowered" for many customers. Today, many clients ask for a CMS from the outset because they have heard elsewhere that it is the holy grail. On the one hand, I love working with WordPress, my CMS of choice, but on the other hand, it's not always the best solution. I'd be happy to explain why I think so.
The CSS file "Normalize.css" is an extremely practical and very well thought-out cascading stylesheet:
it provides better cross-browser consistent styles for the default styles of HTML elements. A modern, HTML5-optimized alternative to the conventional CSS reset.