I’m sure you’ve all noticed the new look. What do you think? I figured it was time for a change, and Khoi Vinh’s Basic Maths theme seemed pretty spiffy. If anyone sees anything broken, or you just wanna say how sweet it is, comment below!
And now, an update
So I’ve been hard at work lately on a website for the equine therapy program my mom works for, Mitey Riders. A really amazing program. Right now, the website is still the old version, so no judging! But soon, Very Soon™, the new one will appear. It was designed by the marvelous Erica A de Flamand, an excellent graphic designer, and developed by me, using the Thematic framework as my starting point. Definitely a really brilliant framework. Like, brilliant beyond my meager PHP skills. I’ll be exploring using it again in the future, and expanding my skills with their “child theme” idea (I ended up modding the actual Thematic theme, which isn’t exactly the idea, but it still rocks!)
As for the day job, I’ve been working closing shifts every day this week so far. Not my favorite thing, but I did just have a three day weekend, and I’ve got two days off coming up Sunday & Monday this coming week, so that’ll be excellent.
Update on technical difficulties
Seems I’ve solved this partially. Turned out WP-Typogrify, a plugin I use, was conflicting for some reason by way of the SmartyPants functionality that it built in to it. That means flash media is working again. Sadly, this means we’ll be without nifty awesome single & double quotes for a time until I can work out the problem, exactly. It used to work so well!
Deborah Byrnes
I wanted to promote my latest client’s website, Deborah Byrnes, coded by me. Full disclosure, Deborah is my aunt, but she’s been doing retail consulting for a long time, and she’s one of the best. Check out the site, feel free to leave comments here about it.
Updated!
So I just updated the blog to WP 2.7 “Coltrane” (love that they name their releases after jazz musicians) & I’ve gotta say, it’s totally sweet. The redesign of the Dashboard & other backend stuff is leaps & bounds better than any previous incarnation of WP. Not only that, I’m also using Dean J. Robinson’s wonderful Fluency admin theme plugin, & everything is looking just fancy & even has keyboard shortcuts. Sweet.
Downtime
So, apologies to anybody who reads my blog; it seems my account was flooding my server with MySQL queries, and as such, was suspended. I’ve resolved this with my host, and disabled the plugin responsible for the activity, and hopefully it will not recur. Seems the WordPress Database Table Optimizer is VERY hard on a MySQL install, so beware if you install it on a shared hosting solution.
An analysis of a study of the paragraph
So I really love typography. I mean, seriously. I read I Love Typography, download free fonts all the time, keep looking for ways to use swfIR or sIFR in my websites, and otherwise utilize beautiful typefaces.
So when I came across this article by Jon Tan, I devoured it. It’s a study of the paragraph as punctuation, and how this punctuation is created via the use (or absence) of space, in– and outdenting, and versals (the name for the large capital letters at the beginning of a paragraph or series of paragraphs.) I’ve decided to examine his study and highlight some elements that I personally find attractive, and try to explain some reasons for this.
Tan opens his article with this statement, which is more eloquent than anything I could come up with (a utilizes a drop cap versal, which I’ve left in to demonstrate some paragraphical styling):
Paragraphs are punctuation, the punctuation of ideas. After selecting a typeface, choosing the right paragraph style is one of the cornerstones of good typography. This is a brief inquiry into paragraph style for the Web.
Tan goes on to list some examples here: 12 Examples of Paragraph Typography, but be aware, these are very rough examples, sharing typeface, size, copy, and line height (called leading).
It’s important to understand the defaults that we’re presented with in the web-ified world I’m primarily interested in. Browsers present us with a default block style of flush left, ragged right with a single line boundary. Obviously, through the magic of CSS, we can alter these defaults. As Tan writes:
In any project, the text itself will have its own tone, rhythm and meaning. It’s our job to provide it with a stage on which to sing. Typography serves the spirit of the text, bringing it before an audience, and then quietly fading into the background as the reader delves into the meaning.
Tan continues on, explaining that we as designers & coders create spaces that are not only set, like the traditional print press, but must also be able to fluidly accept content as it is poured into it (blogs like this one, for example, have their content change constantly).
Tan offers up some very tasty tidbits regarding the history of the paragraph, which I’ll omit, but definitely check it out in his article. He ends up moving on from there to discussing the technology behind the printed word, and the rise of white space due to the decrease in materials (the move to wood-based paper), finally ending up with the fact that with the rise of electronic print, we have zero cost of material, as the web “page” can be limitless or a mere single line; it’s all the same. He makes a great statement about this: “[u]sability is the only currency by which web typography is measured.” He reinforces the idea that content is king, and with that in mind, “[g]ood typography makes the canvass [sic] fit the meaning of the text, not the other way around. It paints pictures with form that enrich the meaning of the words with colour, texture and movement.”
Tan offers some specific examples of various excellent paragraph styles, and I’d like to add that I love Tan’s own paragraph and typographical styling on his site, Jon Tangerine.
His last comments regard the fact that skimming is the norm on the web, and that careful consideration of paragraph and, by extension, typographic styles, creates the optimal experience for your users.
More downtime
Apologies for yet more downtime. I’m currently posting this from the Red Sox game at Fenway tonight, which is going well for the Sox! I’ve got a few fun posts and reblogs lined up, so stay tuned!
Downtime
Apologies to anyone who tried to visit Saturday or Sunday, as my site experienced some major downtime due to some cluster issues my host was having. Everything seems to be resolved now, but let me know if anything seems off.




