Design

A Showcase of WordPress Themes for Real Estate Websites


  

If you are in the Real Estate industry and/or deal in property, you know that business can never be prosperous unless you have a proper brand name – one that people can count on and identify with. And when it comes to building a brand name, it has nowadays become mandatory to have a beautiful website.

Real estate WordPress themes help you create the ideal website for your real estate business, using this trusted CMS. Your clients can browse and short-list property or homes on the basis of their needs and budget, simply by browsing your website, before they decide to pay the home or property a visit in person. While such themes do not eliminate the need of a realtor (a.k.a. Middle Man) outright, they can come in very handy if you wish to have a website that is both professional and user friendly.

Most real estate based WordPress themes come with special features like custom post types and enhanced search functionality to help visitors browse through property listings with ease. Further more, most, if not all, of these themes have features such as home page sliders, support for multiple images in property listings, profile pages for agents, etc.

In this article, we take a look at some of the major WordPress themes created especially for Real Estate websites.

The Themes

1. AgentPress (Standard License: $99.95)

  • Built on the Genesis Framework
  • 5 Color Styles
  • 6 Layout Options

AgentPress

Demo | More Info

2. ElegantEstate (Club Membership: $39/year)

  • 5 color schemes
  • Localization-ready
  • Advertisement-ready

ElegantEstate

Demo | More Info

3. deCasa (Regular License: €39)

  • Light and minimal layout
  • Google Maps integration
  • Custom search functionality

deCasa

Demo | More Info

4. deCondo (Regular License: €39)

  • Light and minimal layout
  • Google Maps integration
  • Custom Search

deCondo

Demo | More Info

5. Real Estate (Standard License: $89.95)

  • Google Maps integration
  • Custom Search
  • Custom widgets such as Financial Calculator, etc.

Real Estate

Demo | More Info

6. Estate (Regular License: $200, including PSD)

  • Smart Property image management
  • Custom Search
  • Google Maps
  • Multiple layouts

Estate

Demo | More Info

7. Real Agent (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Clean and minimal
  • 5 color styles
  • Google Maps integration

Real Agent

Demo | More Info

8. Residence (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Home page slider
  • Google Maps integration
  • 7 color styles

Residence

Demo | More Info

9. Broker Real Estate (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Google Maps integration
  • 5 color styles
  • Multi-category search

Broker Real Estate

Demo | More Info

10. Open House (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • 8 color styles
  • Carousel property slider
  • Localized in English, Spanish and Portuguese

Open House

Demo | More Info

11. The Bel Air (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Google Maps integration
  • 6 color styles
  • Built-in Social Media tools

The Bel Air

Demo | More Info

12. Home Owner (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Multi-category search
  • 12 color styles
  • Translation-ready

Home Owner

Demo | More Info

13. Openhouse Real Estate and Automotiv Car Dealership (Regular License: $40)

  • Google Maps integration
  • Custom home page layouts
  • Unlimited color schemes

Openhouse Real Estate and Automotiv Car Dealership

Demo | More Info

14. WP Pro Real Estate (Regular License: $30)

  • Google Maps integration
  • Multi-category search
  • Included stock photos for demo sites

WP Pro Real Estate

Demo | More Info

15. WP Pro Real Estate 2 (Regular License: $40)

  • 22 custom short codes
  • 8 custom widgets
  • Translation-ready
  • Unlimited color schemes

WP Pro Real Estate 2

Demo | More Info

16. Real Estate (Regular License: $25)

  • Custom status settings for posts (eg. New, Rented, Reduced Price, etc.)
  • Built-in contact form
  • 3 color schemes

Real Estate

Demo | More Info

17. Elegant Real Estate (Regular License: $30)

  • Multi-category search
  • Built-in contact form
  • Custom fields for Currency symbols, Listing Types, etc.

Elegant Real Estate

Demo | More Info

18. Quick Start Real Estate (Regular License: $30)

  • Multi-category search
  • Built-in contact form
  • Custom fields for Currency symbols, Listing Types, etc.

Quick Start Real Estate

Demo | More Info

19. Real Estate Gold (Regular License: $30)

  • jQuery Lightbox effects
  • Built-in contact form
  • Custom fields for Currency symbols, Listing Types, etc.

Real Estate Gold

Demo | More Info

20. Modern Realtor (Regular License: $30)

  • Main Menu with Lava Lamp effect (jQuery)
  • Enable/disable search functionality
  • Search by listing type and/or price range

Modern Realtor

Demo | More Info

21. Villa Grande (Regular License: $30)

  • jQuery slideshow
  • Google Maps integration
  • Custom currency settings

Villa Grande

Demo | More Info

22. Light House (Regular License: $35)

  • Custom post types
  • 9 Sidebar positions
  • 4 Page Templates

Light House

Demo | More Info

23. The Vistas (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • Google Maps integration
  • Currency and metrics selector
  • 5 color styles

The Vistas

Demo | More Info

24. Estate Expert (Standard Pack: $69)

  • Responsive layout
  • Advanced property search
  • Google Maps integration

Estate Expert

Demo | More Info

25. Smooth (Essential Package: $39.95)

  • 10 color styles
  • Localized in English and Spanish
  • Breadcrumb filtered results
  • Multi-category search
  • Social media integration
  • Custom search module creation

Smooth

Demo | More Info

26. Exotic Real Estate (Standard License: $35)

  • Custom widgets such as Affordability/Mortgage Calculator
  • 9 custom shortcodes
  • Compatible with many popular plugins such as WP Page Navi and Contact Form 7

Exotic Real Estate

Demo | More Info

The Closing

Are you running a Real Estate website using WordPress? If so, which theme are you using? Feel free to share your thoughts with us in the comments on your own theme, or ones from the list here!

(rb)


Just My Type: Super Clean, High-Quality & Free Fonts


  

Whatever type of designer you are, you want to be able to offer potential clients a nice variety of styles. In this current day, many designers and clients are looking for really clean, minimalistic design work. One of the main ways one can execute a very clean look is via your choice of fonts. Luckily, there are tons available, especially free fonts.

Not every one is going to be great for your project–quite frankly, there’s a lot of trash and there’s a lot of fonts that simply don’t fit. The font you choose, however, can have a great impact on the design. Good typography can often lead to good design, and the number one rule in typography is if you can’t read it, don’t use it.

Clean fonts are a necessity to any designer. Not just because clean and minimalist design is popular, but because cleaner fonts don’t have a ton of decoration and are therefore easy to use for different occasions. Below, we have a list of 25 fonts that are lacking a lot of decoration, but are high quality and of good detail. Did we also mention most of them are free for personal and/or commercial use?

Super Clean Fonts

Bebas Neue

Boarder

Coneria Script

Designosaur

Directory

 Elsa

Great Vibes

Homizio

Hype

Men-Nefer

New World

Open Sans Condensed

Ostrich Sans

Pacifico

Piximisa

Quicksand

Raspoutine

Rawengulsans

Reznor Broken

Roboto

Sports World

St. Marie 

Stromline 

St. Ryde

Trocchi

 Conclusion

Some of these fonts are great for just headlines, and some of them are great for your body text. Whatever your usage, we hope you make the most out of them. Fonts can be a very important and intricate piece of your design–if you pick the wrong one you can end up losing your audience. Don’t make that mistake by using some awful, poorly put together font. High quality, and free fonts are hard to come by so hopefully you find this post helpful. Are there any other super clean or versatile fonts that you really enjoy using?

(rb)


Building an Online Web Design Portfolio: Tools, Themes, and Templates


  

There many benefits to having an online web design portfolio, but there is something more than beneficial to displaying web design work online, in the arena in which it was intended; it just feels at home. Optimized and ready to show off its full potential. A high-quality portfolio can leverage the same interactive, responsive features that a well designed website uses, letting you show clients your strengths and capabilities.

A successful online portfolio will use the same rich media functionality that a great website would, too — and with these hosting services, templates, and themes, you don’t have to be an experienced developer to do set yours up. These tools allow designers at all levels of expertise to create a sleek, functional online web design portfolio worthy of the work it displays, from low-maintenance to highly customizable.

We’ll start off by taking a look at portfolio hosting services that allow for a wide range of customization. For those who use WordPress to host their portfolio or personal website, we’ve collected responsive and rich media capable themes and templates that are specially oriented toward portfolios.

Portfolio Hosting Services

Behance

Behance is perhaps the best-known and highest-visibility portfolio hosting service on the Web. They emphasize the fact that the Behance network gets “fifteen times the traffic of all other leading portfolio websites combined� — a powerful asset for designers looking to gain more exposure and a wider audience.

Behance offers fully customizable portfolios for creative professionals of various disciplines, and its graphics-heavy layouts and multimedia options are well suited for web designers. A free account offers unlimited images, video, text, and audio, and its social-media integration lets you share your work across multiple platforms. You can display work on your LinkedIn profile, promote it on Twitter and Facebook, or use Behance’s community tools to follow other users, and gain followers, too.

You’ll find curated sites, collections, and galleries from big names to independent designers, as well as active job boards and groups. Behance aims to connect talented designers and professionals with each other and with career opportunities.

Behance ProSite

ProSite.com is Behance’s paid portfolio hosting service that features even more customization options, personal domain names, white-label branding (no Behance logos), and syncing with the Behance network. The service costs $11 per month and functions as a personal website for creative professionals; you can import your blog and develop your personal branding vision. Behance ProSite is accessible to designers with all levels of development experience: no programming knowledge is required to build a site, and you can choose from a large variety of layouts and templates.

Behance Prosite

Viewbook

Portfolio hosting service Viewbook is embracing the mobile revolution: it’s available on Web and mobile and offers iPad-app integration, so you can display your work on the go. The interface is clean and minimalist, though the portfolios feature plenty of customization options.

Viewbook focuses heavily on social media: you can share and publish your work to Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, and more with one click, or embed Viewbook albums in your personal website or Facebook timeline. Support is available for Adobe Lightroom, Google Analytics, and Wufoo forms for freelancers. Pricing is three-tiered, ranging from $4 per month for a basic gallery to $19 per month for a personal domain, unlimited websites, full customization, and Viewbook’s iPad app.

Viewbook

Cargo Collective

Cargo Collective is a web publishing platform with an emphasis on portfolio capabilities and support. The service offers public website hosting and “Personal Networks� for users, as well as a support and development forum. Some basic programming skills are needed to complete customization, though many templates are available as well. However, Cargo is best suited for those designers with more development experience.

Cargo sites offer built-in video and audio players for externally hosted content, as well as cloud-based image hosting. An expansive directory lists experienced designers and developers to aid other users in customization. Like Behance, Cargo Collective is community-oriented.

Cargo Collective

Wix

Wix is a DIY website-building service that lets users create a custom site — with no knowledge of coding necessary. Based on a drag-and-drop format, Wix now offers rich media capabilities, with both Flash and HTML5 support. Hundreds of free templates are available, and the service is based on a freemium model: users create free accounts, and upgrades cost between $4 and $16 per month for features like custom domains and e-commerce designs.

Wix

Fresh.li

Fresh.li, like Wix, offers creative-professional portfolio services without requiring programming experience. They boast that users can create “a new website in five minutes,� using either a fresh.li subdomain or a personal URL. Free portfolios aren’t as extensively customizable as other options, and just six templates are available, but paid options allow for customization using HTML and CSS.

Fresh.li

Carbonmade

Carbonmade, with its simple but sleek interface, is strictly a portfolio-hosting service: no networking or career services are included, though it’s a useful option for designers who might have less experience and are primarily looking for a place to display their work.

Carbonmade portfolios are functional and relatively minimalist in design, though the site itself features whimsical graphics and illustrations. Free and paid options are available; the latter, at $12 per month, offers domain binding and technical support.

Carbonmade

Specialized Portfolio Hosting Services

Certain portfolio-hosting services are geared toward particular categories of creative professionals, or toward goals like career building. The services below are for designers who are looking for specific capabilities from their online portfolios.

The Creative Finder

The Creative Finder is a division of DesignTAXI, a news site with a focus on web design. It offers portfolio hosting and integration with networking and career services, letting creative talent find employment opportunities and professional connections. Portfolios on The Creative Finder function essentially as galleries of a user’s work, allowing for professional contact, networking, private messaging, and linking to profiles on social-media platforms.

The Creative Finder

Sortfolio

Sortfolio is career-focused, as well. The service offers listings for designers rather than full portfolios. It offers the most functionality to designers who are already relatively established, but who want to expand their reach to big-name clients. Free listings are available, and $99 per month will get you large, interactive display ads and personal-branding options.

Sortfolio

Krop

Krop is a tool for job-seeking web designers and creatives; it brings together job listings from recruiters and paid portfolio hosting, at $9.99 per month. Portfolios are fully customizable, and Krop’s back-end creative database lets recruiters target designers by specific capability, location, availability, and professional level.

Subfolio

Subfolio, a DIY portfolio tool, allows users to configure portfolios on their own servers. The service is best for designers with significant development skills: it’s a PHP5 file browser application that lets users manage settings, file types, themes, and more. Subfolio reads the files you place within a directory folder and then turns the content into a website, turning folders into sections and files into pages. It’s currently in private beta, though you can request an invitation here.

Subfolio

Themes and Templates for WordPress

Many web designers choose to host their personal websites and portfolios on WordPress. The platform’s open-source software and powerful CMS offer extensive customization options for users of all development skill levels. Many portfolio-specific themes and templates are available for WordPress, and, as with the hosting services detailed above, options are available for those looking for all degrees of customization. Below are a number of themes and templates that are particularly well suited to web designers.

Responsive Themes

Responsive themes allow portfolio content to be displayed correctly — and attractively — on multiple devices, screen sizes, and resolutions. Given the rapidly increasing importance of the mobile web, it’s crucial for web designers to optimize their portfolios and content for mobile devices if they want to reach a broader audience.

Theme Trust

ThemeTrust.com offers premium WordPress themes with responsive, minimalist interfaces, many of which are optimized for web-design portfolios. Some examples of portfolio themes (all ThemeTrust themes below cost are priced at $49):
Theme Trust

Infinity

Infinity, a responsive portfolio theme, features a grid layout and infinite scrolling capabilities. The image-heavy interface allows designers to showcase their work front and center. Among its features are a built-in lightbox, social-media integration, and threaded comments.

Infinity

Solo

Solo, a single-page portfolio theme, leverages jQuery effects within a minimalist layout. The theme features expanding project displays, automatic scrolling, and integration with Flickr and Twitter.

Solo

Reveal

Reveal offers an Ajax-powered portfolio with a responsive layout; the theme features animated jQuery drop-down menus, smooth portfolio filtering animations, and extensive customization options. The image-heavy, grid-system layout displays well on all devices.

Reveal

Hero

Hero’s parallax home-page banner lets designers prominently feature their best work. The responsive theme includes templates for pagination and archive pages, making it easy to organize a larger body of work.

Hero

ThemeForest

ThemeForest.net offers themes and templates for designers with programming backgrounds: for WordPress, Joomla, HTML/HTML5, Magento, and more. Below are examples of responsive themes and templates which work particularly well for web-design portfolios.

Theme Forest

Tinfoil

Tinfoil is a one-page portfolio template that includes jQuery tools and minified CSS and JavaScript. Beyond the portfolio itself, the template features a gallery, blog, contact form, and more.

Tinfoil

Parallax

Parallax, an HTML portfolio template, offers (of course) a parallax slider, a skeleton grid system, and a three-layered background that creates the illusion of depth. The WordPress version focuses more on blog capabilities, though it also offers extensive customization options, with an intuitive interface.

Parallax

Milestones

Milestones, a single-page template for either personal or commercial portfolios, is a colorful template with a host of features especially useful for web designers. It offers valid HTML5, a contact form, a jQuery slider for the portfolio itself, and various social-media integration options.

Milestones

Themify

Themify.me provides WordPress themes that are extensively customizable — without requiring coding knowledge. Theme packages do include PSD files and Themify frameworks if you have programming experience and would like to further customize them.

Themify.me

Folo

For designers focusing primarily on networking, Folo is a useful theme: it allows designers to display their work samples and available services, and features the same customization options as other portfolio themes. Folo’s circular slider and twenty-one layout options — lists or grids — make it a flexible option for designers looking for business opportunities.

Folo

Blogfolio

Blogfolio’s interface combines a web-design portfolio with blog posts, turning your portfolio into an integrated personal website. The theme’s image-heavy layout features threaded comments, custom menus, feature boxes, and various grid or list options.

Blogfolio

Simfo

Simfo, a responsive portfolio theme, offers full customization for designers with programming experience; it’s coded with HTML5 and CSS3. The theme offers a feature slider, a plugin-free lightbox gallery, and optional search options, RSS, and social-media icons.

Simfo

In the End

Whether your development skills are as well honed as your design abilities or whether you’re looking for a simple, straightforward online portfolio, there is an array of choices available for hosting services, themes, and templates. The best part? Flexible customization options mean that you can change your portfolio as your skills, needs, and experience changes — all with the support of design communities and networks. What are some of your favorite web design portfolio options?

(rb)


Selling Art: Creative and Artistic Advertisements


  

We live in a world, in a society, where it’s almost impossible to go a day or a couple of hours or even a few of minutes without trying to be sold something. Sometimes an opportunity to purchase can present itself subtly; perhaps a friend has a product you like or perhaps you drove past a billboard on the interstate. Sometimes the opportunity to purchase presents itself directly in the form of a salesperson, or even a blatant advertisement of some sort urging you to buy.

Most times, advertisements are the way in which we are given opportunities to, at the very least, learn about a product. Whether it’s a commercial or a billboard or a radio spot, advertisements are everywhere. The inconsistency in advertisements comes in the way in which they are presented, for example, are they humorous or serious, or in this case, what is the art direction?

Today, we are going to look at some print advertisements that use an artistic approach to selling their product. Sometimes print advertisements use glamour shots, or even great photo manipulations to convey a point, but this time we just want to showcase some of the artistic advertisements whose main focus is on conveying their point very creatively.

Selling Art

Bayer Nazol: Smells of the World, Countryside
The best advertisements are those that over exaggerate a bit. Here, this wonderful illustration let’s us believe that if we buy and use this product we can pretty much smell everything. The hand drawn, simplistic direction makes this fun.

Top Digital: Paradise
This audio company used some illustrations to show how they use sounds and such to create their paradise. The illustrator uses some crazy designs and shapes to create the finished product.

BWF Badminton
The focus for this ad is basically the motion and energy created by badminton. Quite frankly, many don’t believe this sport to be that exhilarating or exciting, but this advertisement tries to show otherwise. This is an extremely creative ad.

Cocaine: Amy
Though a bit of a controversial piece, this ad did a great job illustrating someone who can be argued to be an icon.

Yellow Pages: Coffee
Art isn’t just about what you can draw or paint, but it’s also the way in which you compose. This collage of sorts visualizes a coffee cup and saucer. A very interesting piece.

La Curacao Store: Orange and Carrot
The folks in charge of these ads decided they wanted to use art straight up by mixing the colors of the fruits and vegetables used in certain blends they have tried. This one focuses on oranges and a carrot smoothies.

Gilera Creation
Well, this one is obviously all about the art, with one of the most famous pieces of art represented in the background. The team here makes it seem as if the motorcycle is a piece of art (note: the paint splashes and brush and palette) to be put up against the greats.

Gotte Optician: Tie Guy
While not sure if these shapes were actually cut out or if this is some great shading, the illustration here as well as the imagined process gets all the focus.

Invaders Pest Control: Disintegrate, Mosquito
This is an extremely simple, yet effective piece that uses another illustration to convey their point.

Jornal O Povo: Hendrix
This ad shows another illustration of a huge musical icon, drawn and with a seemingly thought provoking question to go along with it. The only visual focus, really, is the actual illustration.

La Salle
There’s a lot of things going on in this advertisements and a lot of things to be said, but each is conveyed creatively with a mixture of illustrations and pictures. The ad is for a school of the arts, so why not use art to convey their message?

Magazine Luiza: Coffee Machine Sale
With a bit of a humorous look, this is another illustrated piece that helps convey a little bit of fun. It’s simple, it’s easy to get and the art is pretty good too.

Marmaluzi Baby Food: Frozen Meat
The illustration and composition here are amazing. The idea was obviously to look a bit like a comic book cover or movie poster and they did such a great job. It’s very different for an ad, especially one for baby food.

Mikro Club
It’s easy to think, when you’re advertising a night club to just have pictures of the club and work around that. This club decided to take a very artistic and creative approach to the idea, which actually strikes up a bit of interest.

Nescafe: Sailor
Sometimes when you want to get a message across, the best way to do it is with no frills and fluff. This simple, nice illustration does just that.

Purrel Hand
Hand sanitizer is meant to kill the germs found on your hand. This ad illustrates many of the things we touch that have the germs on them. Some of these are eye openers and nevertheless, this is a wonderfully executed illustration.

UNICEF: School Bullying
The idea here is that bullying is not a game, especially for the one that is being bullied. The art director here chose to parallel that idea with a game of pinball via a super amazing illustration.

Spoleto Restaurants: Food Fantasy, Little Red Riding Hood
Though this has a nice fun and childlike illustration, this advertisement does have a very serious message. Nonetheless, the texture and the execution of it all are very inspiring.

The Times of India
Again, this creative ad isn’t about how great of a drawing or painting is put in place, but how the actual focus is prepared. This seems to be a bunch of newspapers gathered to look much like a finger print.

The Ultra Asian, 1
This massive illustration attempts to create a large piece dedicated to asian culture. There is no one focus, but the task was carried out creatively and beautifully.

Vogele Shoes: Box Models, Skater
This shoe company is about making a creative difference with affordable shoes. How can you not like it?

La Fabbrica di Nichi
Many graphic designers and illustrators put a good amount of emphasis on typography as an art. Here we have an advertisement that uses some decent typography to get their point across.

Caos Sustainability: 7 Billions, 2
In an attempt to display a bunch of scientific (and sometimes boring) information, this agency decided to try a little creativity for their art direction. It’s as if they took a picture of a couple faucets and made a kaleidoscope–it’s a bit busy but attractive.

Koolfoam Mattress: Lullaby Baby
There are a lot of ways someone can visualize a baby sleeping on a soft mattress. This agency decided to take an artistic and illustrative route.

The Pepsi Slavic Epopee, Kubicek
There are times when companies try to take something extremely iconic and make it conform to their idea of their company. This go round, Pepsi decided they wanted to reinvent the Slavic Epopee –and the illustrator did an amazing job.

Perfecthalf.com: Common Place, Her
This is an extremely different and creative approach to an advertisement. Advertising what would seem to be a dating service, they show their uncommon approach through this uncommon ad.

Angels in my Kitchen Bakery & Confectionery: Santa’s Gift
Guess Santa got tired of someone stealing his treats? This extremely artistic and creative advertisement seems to believe as such.

Scrabble
Some people really believe that there is an art to playing word games such as Scrabble. This advertisement tries to make that clear, not just by presenting the words that can come out of the letters, but through the artistic execution of this ad.

Faber-Castell: The Scream
As previously mentioned, some agencies love to take something that’s recognizable and use it for the sake of the company they are selling for. This time the agency is trying to sell art supplies by using some of the most famous art works seen–by creatively recreating them.

Conclusion

Now that you have gotten through this showcase, and seen the many ways that art is used to sell products or services through print advertising campaigns, we want to hear from you. What did you think about this collection, or what type of print advertisements do you prefer? Are their any great iconic print campaigns you feel should have made the list?

(rb)


CSS generated content and screen readers

As all widely used web browsers (unless you still consider IE7 as being widely used) now support the :before and :after pseudo-elements along with the content property, using those pseduo-elements has become more and more common.

There are many clever CSS tricks they can be used for, like implementing a particular design without having to insert extra markup into your HTML. There is one catch though, and many developers seem unaware of this: several screen readers will speak content that is created this way. VoiceOver does (in both OS X and iOS). NVDA does when used with Firefox, though not with IE. I made a CSS generated content demo page so you can try it yourself.

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Copyright © Roger Johansson



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