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Grid too busy for you? Add a slider up top to feature what you want. Even on a regular post, the text is readable but you still get the photos shining through.
Grid too busy for you? Add a slider up top to feature what you want. With a tiny bit of CSS trickery, we have a semi-transparent content area background to show off those great photos.
Grid too busy for you? Add a slider up top to feature what you want. Tricked out with the crazy powerful Justified Image Grid.
Grid too busy for you? Add a slider up top to feature what you want. Grid too busy for you? Add a slider up top to feature what you want.

David Henry Sterry

This was a difficult site to design because his old site was already so cool. In a way, there was no reason to change it: he constantly got compliments on it, it was different for sure, and it worked. But it just needed a freshening up, a new kick, something even more funner.

To get something like the old home page, we turned to the Justified Image Grid plugin. Wow.

The big advantage David has over, well, most of the planet, is that he has a treasure trove of eye-catching photos. Not an orange sunset in Tahiti, but what IS that guy doing in that suit? They’re fun, they’re over the top, they’re 100% Sterry. But how can we get those images onto the background of the site, on the pages we want, randomly changing as we go through the site? Ah, knowing which plugins to choose is half the battle. Here’s a collection of WordPress tricks and plugins we used to build David’s new site.

  • Justified Image Grid: posts in a grid just like Pinterest or Flickr. Add featured image to your posts, it’s ready.
  • Background Manager: a powerful background tool that lets you have multiple sets of images for different pages on your site. Easy to work with. Unbelievable that it’s free.
  • Semi-transparent backgrounds: check out #8 on WOO Canvas CSS Tweaks: Semi-Transparent Colors in WOO Canvas Elements. You can do wonders just knowing this little bit of CSS trickery.
  • Business Slider Template: a WOO Canvas standard, but it all depends on the photos you use.
  • WOO Tabs: these are always a favorite … especially if you have popular content with great imagery.
  • Search bar in main navigation: yup, a little code in the right place and your search bar is out of your way–but useful.

Hmm, what else? Oh yeah, decades of photos and oodles of talent. Try to find that at a stock photo site.

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Bradley Charbonneau and WPU approach websites like a combination artist, cyberwizard and stone mason. They make it so easy to navigate, change images and text, and create websites of rare beauty and utility.
– David Henry Sterry, best-selling author of 15 books - http://davidhenrysterry.com