‘WordPress Templates WordPress Skins WordPress Themes’ Category

WordPress Theme Releases for 6/20

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Navigation for bbPress has been updated to version 1.3 with bbPress’ update to 0.8.2. Navigation now shows nested child boards and combines tag lists for “Your tags” and “Others’ tags.” Navigation for bbPress is a WordPress theme by GPS Gazette ported for use with bbPress.

Ad Clerum is a 3-column, widget-ready theme designed with churches and other non-profit organizations in mind.

Adivorvista is a 2-column theme based on the look of Windows Vista.

DarkOrange is a 3-column, widget-ready, orange-and-black theme. Both sidebar columns sit on the left side.

Dust is a three column fluid black layout including automatic’s header rotator. Eight beautiful city views (e.g. NY, Moscow, Mumbai) are prepared as header images, as well as a flash clock is built in the sidebar. The frontpage shows the latest post with previous posts underneath divided by the post info such as time and tags.

Field of Dreams is a 2-column, widget-ready theme.

Golden Simplicity is a 2 column, fluid width, widget ready, gold, black and white theme, with a gold fade header image and a smattering of “web 2.0” style images and supports plugins for Share This, Dunstan Like Error Pages, and UTW.

myJournal Hypereal is a 3-column, widget-ready theme built on the Sandbox theme from plaintxt.org.

Reddish is a 2-column theme with red and dark grey colors.

Sakura has been updated. It now has 3 columns (both on the right side) and is widget-ready.

Unthemed01 is a simple, 2-column theme.

YellowJacket is a 2-column, widget-ready, black-and-yellow theme with a very sharp look. Buzz by there and pick up a copy. Also check out Paintbrush, a 2-column, widget-ready theme by the same author that combines art and painting in a blue-and-green theme.

BlueDream is a 3-column with black, blue, and green colors. Both sidebar columns sit on the right side. (Contains sponsored links.)

Blue River is a 2-column, professional-looking theme with a custom header image. Also check out , which is just like Blue River except in Pink. (Both themes contain sponsored links.)

Feel the Freedom is a 2-column, widget-ready theme that comes with social bookmarking capability. (Contains sponsored links.)

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/19

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Adivorblue is a 2-column theme.

Chess Series is a 2-column theme available in a variety of color schemes and several different chess character sets.

Deep Blue is a 2-column, widget-ready theme done with a touch of blue.

iTheme is a 2-column, widget-ready theme featuring drag and drop sidebar elements that users can rearrange on the fly. The sidebars also collapse close and open on user selection.

MountainView is a 2-column, widget- and adsense-ready theme

SeaShore is a 3-column, widget-ready theme featuring custom page templates for Archives, Links, Contacts, and more.

Bluegreen Delight is a 2-column, widget-ready, fluid-width theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

CleanTidy is a 2-column, widget-ready, simple and classy theme in form and colors, supported 2 widgets bar. Currently Flickrrss Widget is supported. (Contains sponsored links.)

Golmaal is a 3-column, widget- and adsense-ready theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

LEET is a 2-column, widget-, adsense-, and Digg-ready theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

Sunset is a 2-column fixed-width, widget-ready, black and green lightweight theme, with a high contrast header image but little in the way of graphical icons. (Contains sponsored links.)

Web 2.0 Orange is a 2-column, widget-ready theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

wsCorvette is a 2-column, automotive car theme for WordPress, featuring a unique and attractive design with raised content areas. The theme is adsense and avatar ready and comes with a few popular plugins that make it ready, right out of the box! (Contains sponsored links.)

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/18

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Black on White is a 2-column, widget-ready theme with grey header and whitespace everywhere else. It is a very clean, sharp-looking theme.

BlixKrieg 2.2 is a 2-column, widget-ready theme that is a drop-in replacement for Sebastien Schmieg’s famous ‘Blix’ theme. BlixKrieg supports asides and WordPress 2.2.

Contrast is a 2-column, widget-ready, white-and-grey theme. It has three built-in styles and you can use pre-determined classes to adjust block alignment on the fly.

Zeke is a 3-column, widget-ready, professional-looking theme. Both sidebar columns sit on the right side.

Black Magic is a 2-column, widget-ready theme that sits on a black backdrop. (Contains sponsored links.)

City Buildings is a 2-column theme with a cityscape header. (Contains sponsored links.)

GamePark is a 2-column theme dressed in shades of green and a cartoon-y header. (Contains sponsored links.)

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/16

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responses

Bluebird is a cute 3-column theme with light-blue and chocolate-colored accents designed for 1024×768 resolution.

Glued is a 3-column theme with Web 2.0-style tabs and a professional look.

Lovecraft is a 3-column, fixed-width (1024px), widget-ready theme. Both sidebar columns sit on the right side, and the theme displays in yellow, white, and two shade of blue.

PGreen is a 2-column, fixed-width, widget-ready theme. The sidebar sits on the right side and shares space with the header.

Sunshine is a 2-column, fixed-width theme dressed up in bright red and yellow colors.

Triplex is a 3-column, fixed-width, widget-ready theme with a Web 2.0 feel. Both sidebar columns sit on the right side.

Unthemed Clean Blue is a 2-column, minimalist-style theme.

Envision 3C is a 3-column, widget-ready theme with a blue header and pastel green and white sidebars. Both sidebar columns sit on the right side, and the theme supports Google Adsense. (Contains sponsored links.)

Molotone is a 2-column, widget- and adsense-ready, glossy theme that looks like a version of the WordPress default theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

Nubricks is 2-column, fixed-width theme based on the default Kubrick theme. (Contains sponsored links.)

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/15

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I’m pleased to be joining the contributing staff here. My name is Jim Stitzel, and I’ve been a blogger for nearly four years. I cut my blogging teeth in the Xanga community before discovering a much larger blogging community when I “accidentally” ran the auto-installation for something called WordPress on my hosted site. It was the best mistake I’ve ever made. Since then, my own website has undergone several iterations and now runs almost entirely on WordPress.

I’m a self-taught coding geek who’s proficient in HTML/CSS and is learning more and more about PHP everyday. I’m a writer by passion (who hopes to one day make a living doing so), but I work as a data analyst at Purdue University in order to pay the bills. I’m an avid Halo/Halo 2 fan and a loyal member of the TTL Gunslingers, where I head up the management of the news portal (which is also built on WordPress).

I’m excited about the opportunity to contribute here, as well, and hope to add more to this growing community that I’ve come to love and respect.

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BlueMeanie is a 2-column theme with a clean and simple look. There is an ‘About’ and ‘Recent Posts’ space at the top with standard sidebar modules on the right.

CypherFS Royale is a 2-column built in shades of blue.

Fastway is a 3-column, widget-ready theme built in red and grey and surrounded by lots of whitespace.

Photopress is a single-column theme that’s designed with photobloggers in mind who want to focus on the pictures, not the sidebar. It is ideal for pictures that are 640px wide.

Red Horizon is a 2-column, widget-ready theme with an unconventional-looking header.

Nobus is a 3 column, widget-ready, web 2.0 wordpress theme with good usage of bold type and glossy effect. (Contains sponsored links.)

Superbold is a 2-column, widget-ready, funky-looking Chinatown theme. Also check out Logistix 3C, an orange, 3-column, widget-ready, professional-looking theme. Logistix 3C supports adsense. (Both contain sponsored links.)

WP-Subdued is a 2-column theme ported for WordPress from the Subdued web template released by Free CSS Templates. (Contains sponsored links.)

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/13

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responses

Bruce is a three column fluid layout theme that is widget ready with multiple columns at the front page. There is also a cross fader built in. Row is a also a three column fluid layout theme in the magazine style with two mini loops displaying two separate categories. Both themes are artsy and designed by Milo.

Dimension is a two column, somewhat two dimensional theme for WordPress designed in gray and black.

Lovecraft is a three column, blocky simple, colorful and widget ready theme for WordPress. It is Garry’s first theme.

Ministry is a two column, wide, clean and clear theme for WordPress in shades of lighter blue. The design reminds me of some Drupal themes.

Gathering has been updated from the inside out. Now it is a modern, subdued theme with two columns, a fixed width, sidebar widgets ready, and will work with WordPress 2.0 and above.

Stockholm is a three column, widget ready theme for WordPress with rounded edges and a very interesting set of header and footer pictures. The screenshot does not do it justice, you have to check out the demo to get the full effect.

Suhweet 1.0, Simplicity 1.0 and Hottie 1.0 are three themes from Solostream. I really, really like Suhweet. Simplicity looks like a modification of Suhweet and Hottie is a two column version. Suhweet has recent and featured articles built in and there is a lot going on in the theme. They all look quite professional. All three have ad spaces built in.

PDawn is a widget ready, two column, simple and usable theme for WordPress with a black outer background and a light reading area.

Harmony is a 2 column, fixed width, widget ready, earthy and brown coloured theme, with a flower header image. It requires Dunstan-like error pages and has been optimised for UTW plugins and Share This.

FourWPTP is a four column, somewhat busy theme for WordPress that is designed on red and gary. It is widget ready. (Contains Sponsored Links)

Natura is a flowery, dark purple with green edge theme for WordPress. The header and the edges give it a nice appeal. Also check out Felix from the same author. (Contains lots of Sponsored Links)

NoMorals is a two column, simplistic theme built on red and gray. (Contains lots of Sponsored Links)

YGO Assorted is a three column, green clean theme for WordPress that looks fresh. (Contains lots of Sponsored Links)

So are you addicted to these regular theme and plugin postings? Do you like to keep your finger on the WordPress plugin and theme news? Would you like to help write these posts and make some money? Please contact me with some details on your blogging past

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WordPress Theme Releases for 6/08

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responses

Pride is a three column, hybrid, rounded edge, lighweight, blue and yellow theme for WordPress that is very Blogger-esque. The theme elements have a comic like quality and looks very polished. Pride is authored by Small Potato and is released under the GPL.

Prosumer is a three column, widget ready, white background, somewhat bare theme for WordPress by Jauhari. The “somewhat bare”ness of the theme is made up by the nicely placed accent graphics and the smooth flow of the theme.

Clean Copy is a widget ready, two column, well spaced out, somewhat light theme for WordPress with blue and white colors and five random header graphics.

SilkStream is a dark, three column, blue on black theme from Milo. It is widget ready, has a sideblog , recent comments, related posts and flickr RSS.

Spiritual Journey is a three column, left and right sidebar, widget ready theme for WordPress with a journal feel. It also uses FamFamFam icons.

Daleri Selection is a fixed-width (990px) wide theme which can have 2 or 3 columns – or a combination of 2 and 3 columns. It is simple, useful, not very advanced – but hopefully well coded. The theme is also somewhat square.

CopyBlogger is a two column, highly visible, expansive theme for WordPress based on Cutline. It was the original theme for CopyBlogger that Chris developed.

WhyDontYou is a three column, fluid width, widget ready, dark blue and colorful theme for WordPress. It requires Dunstan-like error pages and UTW plugins.

PBlue is a three column widget enabled theme for WordPress with big fonts and a a flower image towards the right of the top banner. The three columns use different but similar background colors. The theme is based on blue and black colors. (Contains Sposored Links)

Gathering 3C is a three column, white and black, fixed width, widget ready, right sidebar theme for WordPress. (Contains Sponsored Links)

MyIsland is a two column, rounded edge theme for WordPress that is slightly different from the rest of the pack. It has an old school LJ like feel. (Contains Sponsored Links)

Simply Blue is a two column, smooth, light blue, striped background, somewhat different theme for WordPress. (Contains Sponsored Links)

FieldScape is a three column, AdSense ready wordpress theme with the header image of a field. It is dark and has rounded corners. (Contains Sponsored Links)

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How important is search?

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Very important! If you have noticed, I wrote up a small heat map to be displayed in the sidebar and on the main search page of this blog. The search and data collection process is a slightly intelligent and tries to match up search terms and group them by usage. It then chooses all searches performed within the past 24 hours and displays them in a heatmap sorted by propensity of the search phrase. The 24 hour time period keeps the search phases in the heatmap turned over regularly and retains the interest of returning visitors.

Why did I do this? I put it together because I believe that there is a lot of power (and thus clicks, pageviews, eyeballs) in searches. I had noticed the Eurekster Swiki on TechCrunch and was impressed by the power of the system. I tried to emulate it on weblogtoolscollection.com with little success. To be fair, we have nowhere near the numbers of TechCrunch (TechCrunch has approximately fifteen to twenty times the traffic of this blog) and the Eurekster sWiki for this blog did not catch on. I still wanted to know what people were searching for so I knew what my readers are looking to find. So to make a long story short, I added some code to my customized search engine to capture the search data and then spit it out in a heat map format that is easy visualize. I like the results that came out of this little test and apparently so do you.

Here are some statistics on running the heatmap for a 48 hour period following the introduction. Now bear in mind that I have no data on searches performed from before I put in the heat maps except for daily traffic data to the search page:

  • Approximately 2000 searches were performed
  • This resulted in 3500 pageviews
  • There were a few less than 2400 exits from these 3500 pages (this is an approximation from Google Analytics by using bounce rates, I have no empirical proof of this)
  • The search page was often in the top 20 requested pages on this blog during those 24 hours
  • The search pages’ traffic is a little more than half the organic referrals from search engines to the WordPress Templates category of this blog.

I would like to release this code as a plugin but I really cannot do so in its current form. It is custom hacked for this blog and makes use of its peculiar data structures. I am trying to come up with a search heat map plugin that works in a default WordPress install but that will take a little time to complete. In conclusion, there is a lot of power in searches. A useful search tool coupled with a way to organize and understand search patterns can really add to the user experience and can really affect traffic numbers. So, what are you waiting for? Click on one of the popular seach terms on the right and check it out!

PS: What do you think? Also, what do you think I should call it?

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Announcing The Sandbox Designs Competition

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Last Tuesday, May 28, I released an update to the Sandbox theme, version 0.9. Since releasing the Sandbox back in August of 2006 Andy and I have received lots of good feedback. I called it “the theme for themers” and it has had a really positive influence on theme design within the WordPress community.

There have been more than a few themes/designs built on the Sandbox and released—and for good reason. Its highly semantic, dynamic structure make it immensely easy to design for, not to mention all the features built into its markup, like Microformats.

So I thought it was a good time for a new theme competition—or rather a “designs” competition. It has been around two years since the last successful WordPress theme competition (participants of the competitions in 2006 will roll their eyes and would include me). We’ve seen the launch of an official theme viewer, two major WordPress releases (2.1 and 2.2), two plugin competitions, and so on. So I think it’s time.

Now you probably have a thousand questions running through your brains. Let me try and answer at least a few of them.

Question: Why have a theme competition? The last two failed. Don’t you know anything?
Answer: Well, this isn’t really a “theme” competition. It’s a designs competition, similar to Alex King’s WordPress CSS Styles held back in February of 2004, that is only for style sheets (and images, of course). Folks won’t be competing to show off PHP know-how, or scripting abilities, etc., but how well they can design, use CSS, be creative, and so on.

Question: Uh, that’s boring. Every design will be pretty much the same, won’t they?
Answer: Not in the slightest. See, the Sandbox is special. It has these dynamic class-generating functions that sprinkle neat semantic classes throughout the markup, which means each page is the same, but it is also a little different. Using combinations of these classes means that style sheets can easily go beyond just arranging content into layouts by making the design relate to the content. There are so many classes that almost any layout, any design, etc., is achievable. For example, you could style posts by categories, .category-asides{…} vs. .category-important-news{…}, uniquely.

Question: Okay, that’s pretty slick. But why should I spend my time in this competition?
Answer: First, you could win more than a handful of cash. From the day one we have US$500 in cash to distribute to first, second, and third place winners (there will be a runner-up who will receive an honorarium). We’re getting sponsors to help us increase the total cash pot to US$1000. So the first-place winner will hopefully walk away US$500 richer (but at least US$250 richer). Secondly, you could be crowned a top blog designer in our little blogosphere. Not a bad title to parade around. And thirdly, you can solidify your designer creds just by participating and getting your bio tossed up on the website.

Question: Sweet, but didn’t I just read something about a plugin competition? And didn’t I read that right here on this blog?
Answer: Indeed you did. I was actually in the process of smoothing out the details for this competition, getting everything in order, when Mark announced the plugins competition 2.0. I emailed him immediately, somewhat frantically. But I feel like these two competitions differ from one another in all the right ways. Plugin developers are primarily concerned with PHP and scripting. This competition, as mentioned before, is purely about CSS and design. Put them together and you have everything that makes WordPress lovely.

Question: Word. But I blog on WordPress.com. Am I going to be left on the margins of the community yet again?
Answer: Not at all. The new version of the Sandbox will be available to blogs there soon (details to come). Furthermore, unless you like punching yourself in the face, you’ll probably want to install WordPress locally to do your designing. When the competition finishes and all the designs are available, you can rejoice in knowing you’ll be able to use the designs immediately (you’ll need the custom CSS upgrade, though).

Question: Good news indeed. Sign me up!
Answer: Sign yourself up, but not quite yet. All the details you could possibly wish for will be posted on www.plaintxt.org tomorrow, June 1, 2007. So go there tomorrow and you’ll find a lovely little post waiting to direct you to the competition blog.

Question: Well, I’m not going to submit a design, so perhaps there is something else I can do?
Answer: Indeed. If you have a design background or another appropriate qualification, you could possibly serve as a judge. Or you can simply purchase a sponsorship to show your support.

Question: Wait right there—purchase something? Uh, we’re talking about WordPress, right? So why would I do that?
Answer: First of all, you can support and encourage participation by helping raise the cash prize pot. If you’re active in the WordPress community or use WordPress, these designs can be of real benefit to you. Support our designers. Anyhow, there will be different levels of sponsorships, different prices, but basically you’ll be getting your link and/or image up on the competition blog for everyone to see. People will love and respect you.

Question: I could use some love and respect.
Answer: We all could, my friend. We all could.

So all the details will be posted tomorrow on www.plaintxt.org. Participants will have about two months create their designs and submit them. But I’m getting ahead of myself. Details, terms, etc., will all be available very soon. Until then. ;-D

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