About

This is a little different from my usual stuff... I've been experimenting lately. I do like how it turned out, though. It features some beautiful illustrations from Andreas Vesalius's anatomy text, De humani corporis fabrica. I came across them in my Origins of Modern Science class and, instead of paying attenting to course material, started thinking about making the pictures into pretty layouts ^^; Oh well...

Use

You'll see <!-- --> tags that indicate the begining and end of the text and sidebar sections, so you'll only have to deal with the code between these markers. Basically, just delete this text and add your own. You shouldn't have too much trouble copying/pasting any necessary codes from what I have written.

The navigation buttons at the top of the page can be removed if you'd rather not use them. To do so, just delete the code between where it says <!-- BEGIN TOP NAVIGATION --> and <!-- END TOP NAVIGATION -->. If you do decide to keep these links, I recommend having 4-5 links (definitely no more than 6). To make a link highlighted (as in "Home" above), add class="active" to the <li> tag.

This is a blockquote. You can also make content appear in a box like this by adding class="box" to any block-level element, such as <p class="box"> or <div class="box">.

Stylesheets are in the style.css file, if you want to edit anything. This layout works in 800 x 600 resolution or higher and was tested with IE 7 and Firefox 2.

Valid HTML and Valid CSS

Form

Rules

  1. Do not direct link to any files. Please download the .zip file of the layout, then upload the files to your server.
  2. Do not edit the layout in any way unless given premission.
  3. Do not redistribute the layout without premission (i.e. offer it on your site for others to download).
  4. Do not remove or alter the link back to Neogrotesque in any way. You can remove the "Credits" section below, but please leave all other credit links intact.

Credits

Images used in this layout are public domain and were drawn by Andreas Vesalius and were taken from Historical Anatomies on the Web.