3 posts tagged “vox”
Thanks to all who entered the Vox Valentine's Day Banner contest! The great response and wonderful entries we received during the duration of such a short contest (only three days) makes us want to follow up with another contest in the very near future.
Here are the five banners that Team Vox will be making into themes for the next release:
Congratulations to those who made the cut. We'll be contacting you to get the layered version of your banner and your address for the schwag.
Want to share your theme with other users? Just tag the image that you want to share "Share This Banner."
Important: Before you decide to share, however, make sure that you own the copyright to the image. That means you created the banner from scratch using elements you own (illustrations, photos, drawings). If you purchase a image from a stock photo service like iStockPhoto, you don't own the copyright (even if you purchased it), so make sure those images aren't in your banner. If you own the content, share away!
We'll highlight banners here in Vox Design.
We're glad you could make it!
We're so excited to release custom/personalized banners to Voxers since it's such a great way for you guys to show your creativity. We can't wait to see all the neat things you guys come up with!
To use custom banners:
- Create and upload your graphic to Vox. Do this the same way that you would upload any image to Vox.
- Go to Vox's design section and select "Personalized."
- Pick the custom palette (we've included 66 combinations and will be adding more in future releases) that works best with your graphic.
We've created this blog as a place for tips and tricks on designing custom headers. Additionally, we want to spotlight great banners that Voxers create, as well as want to share with the Vox world.
For our first post, Lilia (a member of Six Apart who's the theme gate keeper) has produced a list of five tips for creating custom banners:
- Banners can have a maximum size of 940px (width) by 200px (height). If your banner is smaller than this, then your banner will be aligned to the bottom right.
- Use jpg, png, or gif format for the banners. Jpg works best for photo-based banners, while gif and png format work best with flat illustrations.
- At this time, you cannot change the text color of the custom banner theme, so you’ll have to adapt your design to work. You can see the banner text color in the palette thumbnail. If your banner has a dark colored background, then the Black and Dark Grey palettes work best since the banner text is white.
- Because the Blog Name and Description are fixed on the left side, concentrate your design on the right side of the banner. This ensures maximum readability of your Blog Name and Description.
- File sizes should be under 35kb so that they load quickly and visitors to your blog won’t have to wait long for your banner to load.
Welcome!