Style Guide
This style guide page contains styles and components that are to be used throughout a website.
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Overview
Welcome to the Style Guide, your go-to resource for maintaining visual consistency and coherence across our website. This page houses an extensive collection of styles, components, and design guidelines meticulously crafted to ensure a cohesive user experience. From typography and color schemes to buttons, forms, and layout structures, every element presented here adheres to our brand identity and design principles. By following these guidelines, you'll not only create visually appealing and professional-looking pages but also enhance usability and reinforce brand recognition. Whether you're a designer, developer, or content creator, this Style Guide empowers you to create compelling and consistent user experiences that resonate with our audience.
Colors
Color serves as a powerful tool for adding vibrancy, maintaining visual flow, conveying status updates, offering feedback based on user interactions, and facilitating data visualization. Explore our color palette to harness the full potential of color in your designs.
Primary color scale (iris)
Secondary color scale (mint)
Accent color scale (orange)
Fonts
Fonts encompass a collection of printable or displayable text characters designed in a particular style and size. These styles play a crucial role in both printed materials and digital text, influencing readability and visual appeal across various mediums.
Poppins
Text Formatting
Headings
A heading element encompasses all font modifications, paragraph breaks before and after, and any necessary white space for rendering. Headings range from H1 to H6, with H1 being the most significant and H6 the least.
Jumbo Heading
text-7xl font-semibold
H1. Heading style
text-4xl font-semibold
H2. Heading style
text-3xl font-semibold
H3. Heading style
text-2xl font-semibold
H4. Heading style
text-xl font-semibold
H5. Heading style
text-lg font-semibold
H6. Heading style
text-base font-semibold
Paragraphs
A paragraph is a group of related sentences that develop a single main idea. It usually starts on a new line with a slight indent and has extra space before and after to visually separate it from other paragraphs. This formatting helps readers identify and follow the flow of ideas in a text.
Normal Paragraph
The quaint little town nestled between rolling hills and lush forests was a haven of tranquility. With its cobblestone streets lined with charming cafes and boutiques, it exuded an old-world charm that captivated visitors. The locals were warm and welcoming, always eager to share stories of the town's rich history and folklore. As the sun set behind the horizon, painting the sky in hues of orange and pink, one couldn't help but feel a sense of peace wash over them in this idyllic retreat.
Low contrast: The aroma of freshly brewed coffee mingled with the scent of freshly baked bread, creating an irresistible allure that drew customers into the quaint café. Soft jazz music played in the background, adding to the cozy ambiance as patrons savored their drinks and conversation flowed freely.
Leading Paragraph
As dusk settled over the horizon, the city skyline transformed into a mesmerizing tapestry of lights. The streets below buzzed with energy as people hurried to their destinations, while overhead, stars twinkled faintly in the night sky, casting a magical glow over the bustling urban landscape.
Rich Text
The official Tailwind CSS Typography plugin provides a set of prose
classes you can use to add beautiful typographic defaults to any vanilla HTML you don’t control, like HTML rendered from Markdown, or pulled from a CMS.
Until now, trying to style an article, document, or blog post with Tailwind has been a tedious task that required a keen eye for typography and a lot of complex custom CSS.
By default, Tailwind removes all of the default browser styling from paragraphs, headings, lists and more. This ends up being really useful for building application UIs because you spend less time undoing user-agent styles, but when you really are just trying to style some content that came from a rich-text editor in a CMS or a markdown file, it can be surprising and unintuitive.
We get lots of complaints about it actually, with people regularly asking us things like:
Why is Tailwind removing the default styles on my
h1
elements? How do I disable this? What do you mean I lose all the other base styles too?
We hear you, but we're not convinced that simply disabling our base styles is what you really want. You don't want
to have to remove annoying margins every time you use a p
element in a piece of your dashboard UI. And
I doubt you really want your blog posts to use the user-agent styles either — you want them to look
awesome, not awful.
The @tailwindcss/typography
plugin is our attempt to give you what you actually want, without any
of the downsides of doing something stupid like disabling our base styles.
It adds a new prose
class that you can slap on any block of vanilla HTML content and turn it into a beautiful,
well-formatted document:
<article class="prose">
<h1>Garlic bread with cheese: What the science tells us</h1>
<p>
For years parents have espoused the health benefits of eating garlic bread with cheese to their
children, with the food earning such an iconic status in our culture that kids will often dress
up as warm, cheesy loaf for Halloween.
</p>
<p>
But a recent study shows that the celebrated appetizer may be linked to a series of rabies cases
springing up around the country.
</p>
<!-- ... -->
</article>
For more information about how to use the plugin and the features it includes, read the documentation.
What to expect from here on out
What follows from here is just a bunch of absolute nonsense I've written to dogfood the plugin itself. It includes every sensible typographic element I could think of, like bold text, unordered lists, ordered lists, code blocks, block quotes, and even italics.
It's important to cover all of these use cases for a few reasons:
- We want everything to look good out of the box.
- Really just the first reason, that's the whole point of the plugin.
- Here's a third pretend reason though a list with three items looks more realistic than a list with two items.
Now we're going to try out another header style.
Typography should be easy
So that's a header for you — with any luck if we've done our job correctly that will look pretty reasonable.
Something a wise person once told me about typography is:
Typography is pretty important if you don't want your stuff to look like trash. Make it good then it won't be bad.
It's probably important that images look okay here by default as well:
Now I'm going to show you an example of an unordered list to make sure that looks good, too:
- So here is the first item in this list.
- In this example we're keeping the items short.
- Later, we'll use longer, more complex list items.
And that's the end of this section.
What if we stack headings?
We should make sure that looks good, too.
Sometimes you have headings directly underneath each other. In those cases you often have to undo the top margin on the second heading because it usually looks better for the headings to be closer together than a paragraph followed by a heading should be.
When a heading comes after a paragraph …
When a heading comes after a paragraph, we need a bit more space, like I already mentioned above. Now let's see what a more complex list would look like.
I often do this thing where list items have headings.
For some reason I think this looks cool which is unfortunate because it's pretty annoying to get the styles right.
I often have two or three paragraphs in these list items, too, so the hard part is getting the spacing between the paragraphs, list item heading, and separate list items to all make sense. Pretty tough honestly, you could make a strong argument that you just shouldn't write this way.
Since this is a list, I need at least two items.
I explained what I'm doing already in the previous list item, but a list wouldn't be a list if it only had one item, and we really want this to look realistic. That's why I've added this second list item so I actually have something to look at when writing the styles.
It's not a bad idea to add a third item either.
I think it probably would've been fine to just use two items but three is definitely not worse, and since I seem to be having no trouble making up arbitrary things to type, I might as well include it.
After this sort of list I usually have a closing statement or paragraph, because it kinda looks weird jumping right to a heading.
Code should look okay by default.
I think most people are going to use highlight.js or Prism or something if they want to style their code blocks but it wouldn't hurt to make them look okay out of the box, even with no syntax highlighting.
Here's what a default tailwind.config.js
file looks like at the time of writing:
module.exports = {
purge: [],
theme: {
extend: { }
}
variants: { }
plugins: [],
}
Hopefully that looks good enough to you.
What about nested lists?
Nested lists basically always look bad which is why editors like Medium don't even let you do it, but I guess since some of you goofballs are going to do it we have to carry the burden of at least making it work.
- Nested lists are rarely a good idea.
- You might feel like you are being really "organized" or something but you are just creating a gross shape on the screen that is hard to read.
- Nested navigation in UIs is a bad idea too, keep things as flat as possible.
- Nesting tons of folders in your source code is also not helpful.
- Since we need to have more items, here's another one.
- I'm not sure if we'll bother styling more than two levels deep.
- Two is already too much, three is guaranteed to be a bad idea.
- If you nest four levels deep you belong in prison.
- Two items isn't really a list, three is good though.
- Again please don't nest lists if you want people to actually read your content.
- Nobody wants to look at this.
- I'm upset that we even have to bother styling this.
The most annoying thing about lists in Markdown is that <li>
elements aren't given a child
<p>
tag unless there are multiple paragraphs in the list item. That means I have to worry about styling
that annoying situation too.
For example, here's another nested list.
But this time with a second paragraph.
- These list items won't have
<p>
tags - Because they are only one line each
- These list items won't have
But in this second top-level list item, they will.
This is especially annoying because of the spacing on this paragraph.
As you can see here, because I've added a second line, this list item now has a
<p>
tag.This is the second line I'm talking about by the way.
Finally here's another list item so it's more like a list.
A closing list item, but with no nested list, because why not?
And finally a sentence to close off this section.
There are other elements we need to style
I almost forgot to mention links, like this link to the Tailwind CSS website. We almost made them blue but that's so yesterday, so we went with dark gray, feels edgier.
We even included table styles, check it out:
Wrestler | Origin | Finisher |
---|---|---|
Bret "The Hitman" Hart | Calgary, AB | Sharpshooter |
Stone Cold Steve Austin | Austin, TX | Stone Cold Stunner |
Randy Savage | Sarasota, FL | Elbow Drop |
Vader | Boulder, CO | Vader Bomb |
Razor Ramon | Chuluota, FL | Razor's Edge |
We also need to make sure inline code looks good, like if I wanted to talk about <span>
elements
or tell you the good news about @tailwindcss/typography
.
Sometimes I even use code
in headings
Even though it's probably a bad idea, and historically I've had a hard time making it look good. This "wrap the code blocks in backticks" trick works pretty well though really.
Another thing I've done in the past is put a code
tag inside of a link, like if I wanted to tell you
about the
tailwindcss/docs
repository. I don't love that there is an underline below the backticks but it is absolutely not worth the madness
it would require to avoid it.
We haven't used an h4
yet
But now we have. Please don't use h5
or h6
in your content, Medium only supports two
heading levels for a reason, you animals. I honestly considered using a before
pseudo-element to scream
at you if you use an h5
or h6
.
We don't style them at all out of the box because h4
elements are already so small that they are the
same size as the body copy. What are we supposed to do with an h5
, make it smaller than the body
copy? No thanks.
We still need to think about stacked headings though.
Let's make sure we don't screw that up with h4
elements, either.
Phew, with any luck we have styled the headings above this text and they look pretty good.
Let's add a closing paragraph here so things end with a decently sized block of text. I can't explain why I want things to end that way but I have to assume it's because I think things will look weird or unbalanced if there is a heading too close to the end of the document.
What I've written here is probably long enough, but adding this final sentence can't hurt.
Interactive
Links
Websites are filled with interactive elements called hyperlinks, often shown as underlined text or clickable buttons. By clicking on them, you're essentially telling the website to jump to another location, either within the same site or to a completely different one.