Post by Xylia on Apr 26, 2010 14:50:49 GMT -5
As you all may know, you can now create layouts for the forums. This seems to have been a pretty popular subject lately, so I've decided to make a tutorial on how to do layouts. The first thing you will need is permission. If you are an e-board member, you already have permission. If not, you can ask to be played in the special "layouter" group.
The first thing you'll notice is that you now have a nice little "admin" button under the logo. Click it
Now you should see a menu. Where it says Skins/Forum Colors, please click it.
Now it should take you to a menu where it says Skins Home - Create Skin. Click on "Create Skin."
Tada! Now all you have to do is choose colors and a few more options.
Terminology:
I couldn't label some of the functions on the layout with my PSD file (see below) so I will discuss them here.
Font: What font you want the forum to show up in. There are two (default: verdana, arial) because in case the user does not have the first font, it will default to the second font. All you need to know is: if you have a downloaded font named "Elvish," and you type in "Elvish" in the "font" box, no one will be able to see it except you. For them, it will default to whatever the board has set as default, which I believe is Verdana. And barring that, whatever their browser has set.
Background Image Fixed: If your page content is longer than your background, one of two things could happen. One, the background will scroll with your content. Or two, the background will be fixed in place and the content (the forum) will scroll while the background image stays put. That's all it means.
Auto Gradients: I usually set this to "no." It will take two colors that you've chosen and gradient them (slowly change one to the other) for a few categories like "title" and "category title."
Gradient Height: This is only for if you choose "auto gradients." Basically it just tells proboards how big you want your gradient (soft or contrasted.)
Active/Visited Link Color: Active I believe is when you click down on a link, and visited is a link you've already clicked. There is no "hover." Sorry.
PLEASE SKIP THE REST OF THIS TUTORIAL IF YOU DO NOT OWN PHOTOSHOP
I have created a PSD file (only works correctly with Photoshop! I believe it will work in 7.0+ but I haven't checked; I know it will work in CS2+.) You can download it here (or above; they are the same file). Precaution: DO NOT get rid of the locks on the layers, and do NOT move the layers around. The PSD is not a perfect representation of the webpage, so unfortunately, if you move the "background" layer behind the text, bad things will happen.
So what do you use the PSD for? Good question. If you take a paintbrush (NOT the fill can) and paint over the entire area under a certain layer (say for instance, you paint the entire "background" layer green) then it will change the entire background to green, but leave everything else untouched. This PSD file would be used to experiment with colors before they are entered into your layout, to minimize editing time. + you can see how the whole thing will look together before you plug in the values.
Question: How do I get an image as the background?
Answer: Open up the image you want to use as a background. Now go to edit-->define pattern. Press enter. Go back to the PSD file and double-click on the background layer (NOT the text part, or it will ask you to rename "background".) Click on "pattern overlay" on the left hand side. Select your pattern from the menu (it should be the very last one) and click enter. This is how your background image will look on the site!
IMPORTANT If you use fanart for any images and the artist asks for it to be taken down, it will be immediately removed and you will be notified. This is non-negotiable, so please don't try to put it back up. Please save your images, and try to make sure the images you use are yours or official!
Question: I have the colors I want. How do I plug them in?
Answer: The layout maker uses something called "hex code," which means a six-character string that tells it what color you want. In photoshop, use the color dropper and click on the part of the layout you want a hex code for (zoom in if you need one for text!) It should change your foreground swatch in your tool menu to the new color. Now, click on the foreground swatch. In the lower righthand corner, it should give you a six-character string with a # sign in front. Get rid of the # sign and you have your hex code! (You can copy/paste it into the correct section.)
The first thing you'll notice is that you now have a nice little "admin" button under the logo. Click it
Now you should see a menu. Where it says Skins/Forum Colors, please click it.
Now it should take you to a menu where it says Skins Home - Create Skin. Click on "Create Skin."
Tada! Now all you have to do is choose colors and a few more options.
Terminology:
I couldn't label some of the functions on the layout with my PSD file (see below) so I will discuss them here.
Font: What font you want the forum to show up in. There are two (default: verdana, arial) because in case the user does not have the first font, it will default to the second font. All you need to know is: if you have a downloaded font named "Elvish," and you type in "Elvish" in the "font" box, no one will be able to see it except you. For them, it will default to whatever the board has set as default, which I believe is Verdana. And barring that, whatever their browser has set.
Background Image Fixed: If your page content is longer than your background, one of two things could happen. One, the background will scroll with your content. Or two, the background will be fixed in place and the content (the forum) will scroll while the background image stays put. That's all it means.
Auto Gradients: I usually set this to "no." It will take two colors that you've chosen and gradient them (slowly change one to the other) for a few categories like "title" and "category title."
Gradient Height: This is only for if you choose "auto gradients." Basically it just tells proboards how big you want your gradient (soft or contrasted.)
Active/Visited Link Color: Active I believe is when you click down on a link, and visited is a link you've already clicked. There is no "hover." Sorry.
PLEASE SKIP THE REST OF THIS TUTORIAL IF YOU DO NOT OWN PHOTOSHOP
>>THE PSD FILE<<
I have created a PSD file (only works correctly with Photoshop! I believe it will work in 7.0+ but I haven't checked; I know it will work in CS2+.) You can download it here (or above; they are the same file). Precaution: DO NOT get rid of the locks on the layers, and do NOT move the layers around. The PSD is not a perfect representation of the webpage, so unfortunately, if you move the "background" layer behind the text, bad things will happen.
So what do you use the PSD for? Good question. If you take a paintbrush (NOT the fill can) and paint over the entire area under a certain layer (say for instance, you paint the entire "background" layer green) then it will change the entire background to green, but leave everything else untouched. This PSD file would be used to experiment with colors before they are entered into your layout, to minimize editing time. + you can see how the whole thing will look together before you plug in the values.
Question: How do I get an image as the background?
Answer: Open up the image you want to use as a background. Now go to edit-->define pattern. Press enter. Go back to the PSD file and double-click on the background layer (NOT the text part, or it will ask you to rename "background".) Click on "pattern overlay" on the left hand side. Select your pattern from the menu (it should be the very last one) and click enter. This is how your background image will look on the site!
IMPORTANT If you use fanart for any images and the artist asks for it to be taken down, it will be immediately removed and you will be notified. This is non-negotiable, so please don't try to put it back up. Please save your images, and try to make sure the images you use are yours or official!
Question: I have the colors I want. How do I plug them in?
Answer: The layout maker uses something called "hex code," which means a six-character string that tells it what color you want. In photoshop, use the color dropper and click on the part of the layout you want a hex code for (zoom in if you need one for text!) It should change your foreground swatch in your tool menu to the new color. Now, click on the foreground swatch. In the lower righthand corner, it should give you a six-character string with a # sign in front. Get rid of the # sign and you have your hex code! (You can copy/paste it into the correct section.)