preview

Create a Professional Web 2.0 Layout

Tutorial Details
  • Program: Adobe Photoshop
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Completion Time: 2 hours
Download Source Files

Final Product What You'll Be Creating

In this Photoshop tutorial we’re going to learn how to create a web 2.0 layout, As we go through the tutorial we’ll deal with so many Photoshop techniques. Seems kind of long? that’s because it’s very detailed. I assure you’ll find easy to follow and to get done, just give it a try!


Step 1

To keep everything aligned we’re going to use 960s Grid System (Get it from here) once downloaded open up the file “960_grid_24_col.psd”.
We’ll start by creating layer from background, right-click on the layer “Background”, then choose Layer From Background. and call it “bg”.


Step 2

As we’ll use guides so much, we need to view our Rulers. In order to do that go to View > Rulers.


Step 3

We need to set lower borders for the header area, therefore we’ll drag a new horizontal guide after 100px. go to View > New Guide, Position: 100.


Step 4

Let’s create our header. we’ll start by creating a selection of 1020x100px. then click Shift+Backspace to fill it (with any color just for now).

Give it a Gradient Overlay according to the following image:

Now call this layer: “header_bg”.


Step 5

Write your Web site title with these settings:

  • Font Family: Rockwell (get it from here)
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: Won’t matter, cause we’re gonna give it a Gradient Overlay

Now add a Gradient Overlay to your text with the following settings:

To align your Web site title with the header background; Select your title layer and “header_bg” layer then click on Align vertical centers.


Step 6

Write your navigation text with these settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 20px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #ffffff

Create a rounded rectangle which will represent a hovered link. it should be about 65x35px size – 5px radius, (fill it with any color for now).

Give it a Stroke and Gradient Overlay according to the following image:

Before we move to the next step, just make sure to keep your layers well-organized, Here’s how mine looks!


Step 7

It’s time to create the featured designs area. we’ll start by setting our lower borders by adding a new horizontal guide after 430px.

Create a selection of 1020x430px as a background for the featured designs area. and fill it with any color.

Then give it a Gradient Overlay with the following settings:

Now let’s create the glaze effect! create a selection of 1020x120px, fill it with any color.

And then add a Gradient Overlay. use the image below for reference.

Now reduce this layer opacity to 40%


Step 8

Let’s add some touches! with the Single Row Marquee Tool create a 1px selection and align it like the following:

Set your foreground color to #acd86e then click on Shift+Backspace to fill it; make sure to use foreground color as a filling option.

I guarantee you’ll have perfect pixel details

We’re done creating the background elements. so make sure to give them ideal names, organize them, and group them together.


Step 9

Let us be more accurate! drag two new guides according to the following image

Write some welcoming words with these settings:

  • Font Family: Rockwell
  • Font size: 40px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Sharp
  • Color: #f4f4f4

I personally have written: “Here’s our brand new work. Oops Welcome!” ;) but we need to emphasize the word “Welcome!” in somehow. so basically we’ll give it a Gradient Overlay. follow up with the image

Now drag two new horizontal guides according to the following image

Before we say goodbye to this step, just make sure to organize your text layers.


Step 10

Start by creating a selection of 250x150px (fill it with any color), this will be our image holder.

Call this layer “pic_holder” and try aligning it like the image above.

And give it a Stroke

Let’s add an image of a featured design, to do so go to File > Place and select an image. call its layer “pic”, and make sure to put it right above the layer “pic_holder”.

Right-click on “pic” layer and choose Create Clipping Mask.


Step 11

To create our shadow, we’ll start by duplicating the two layers “pic” and “pic_holder”.

While having the two duplicated layers selected, go to Edit > Free Transform, and adjust the height to: -100.0%

While we’re still selecting the two duplicated layers right-click on them and choose Convert to Smart Object; call this layer “shadow”. and make sure to place it at the bottom.

Select “shadow” layer then click on Add layer mask (at the bottom of the layers panel)

Choose the Gradient Tool (G) and with a black, white linear gradient drag from down to top.

You should have something like this!


Step 12

We need to add a description to our image. so we’ll create a selection of 240x25px, and fill it with this color value: #1a1919, This will work as the description background.

Write some description with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #82aa48

Make sure to keep your document tidy!


Step 13

Make another copy of the featured design image and align it to the right.

We’ll make the center image a bit bigger, so make a selection of 340x200px, align it like the following, and fill it with any color.

We’ll also give it a Stroke. use the following image for reference

And here’s what we’ve got!

Make sure to organize your layers and to group them. I personally have created three separate groups. here’s how they look


Step 14

Let’s create our sliding button! we’ll start by creating an Ellipse of 50x50px using the Elliptical Marquee Tool (M), and filling it with any color.

Now give it some layer styles according to the following image

With the Custom Shape Tool (U) create an arrow and give it the following layer styles

You should have something like this

Don’t forget to align your button according to the following image

Make another copy of the arrow and align it to the right


Step 15

Let’s work on the content area. start by creating a selection of 1020x815px

Click Shift+Backspace to fill your selection with this color: #e8e8e8

With the Single Row Marquee Tool (M) create a 1px selection, place it like the following image, and fill it with white (#ffffff).

Now you’re having perfect pixel details!


Step 16

We need to set upper borders to our content area. therefore we’re going to drag a new horizontal guide after 50px.
Download this Icon set: Basic Set – Pixel Mixer and place of them like the following.

Drag a new horizontal guide at the bottom of the icon, leave 20px then drag a new one.
Now write some heading with these settings:

  • Font Family: Rockwell
  • Font size: 29px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Sharp
  • Color: #81aa48

Drag yet another two guides according to the following image

Write some text with these settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #2f3235

Drag more three guides according to the following image


Step 17

It’s time to create our “read more” button. With the Rounded Rectangle Tool (U) create a rectangle of 100x30px and 5px radius. and fill it with any color just for now.

Give this rectangle some layer styles. use the image below for reference.

With the Ellipse Tool (U) create an ellipse of 15x15px and fill it with this color value: #4d4d4d.
To align it correctly select its layer and the rectangle’s layer then click Align vertical centers while having both layers selected.

Type “+”, fill it with white (#ffffff) and place it like this

Write the word “read more” with the following character settings:

  • Font Family: Tahoma (get it from here)
  • Font size: 12px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #ffffff

Give it a drop shadow. use the image below for reference


Step 18

To create a vertical separating line, With the Line Tool (U) create two vertical lines next to each. and fill them with these values: #ffffff – #b3b3b3.

Align your line like the following image

Don’t forget to organize your layers. take a look at mine!


Step 19

Make three copies of what we’ve created in the previous two steps. and have something like this!


Step 20

Let’s create our separator.
Drag a new horizontal guide after 50px

With the Elliptical Marquee Tool (M) create a selection like the one below.

Set your foreground color to black (#000000) then click Shift+Backspace to fill your selection. call this layer “separator_bg”.

To make it looks blurry, go to Filter > Blur > Gaussian Blur – radius: 3px.

While selecting “separator_bg” layer selected, create a selection like the one below then hit delete.

Click on Add layer mask icon. and set your gradient editor to black, white, black.

With the Gradient Tool (G) drag with a linear gradient according to the following image.

Reduce the layer Opacity to 50%

With the Line Tool (U) create two horizontal lines on top of each other and place them right above the separator.
Fill them with #b3b3b3 – #ffffff and add the same layer mask to them.


Step 21

We’ll start working on our lower content area, by dragging a new guide after 50px.

Add a title with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Rockwell
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #81aa48

Drag two new horizontal guides according to the following image.

Write some text with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 14px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #505150

Drag a new guide after 160px as a lower border for the content area.


Step 22

Write another title and text using the same character settings we’ve used in the previous step.

Type a quotation mark on your keyboard, with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 200px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #505150

And reduce its layer’s Opacity to 50%

Write a word of wise or quote of yours with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 14px
  • Font weight: Italic
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #81aa48

Step 23

In order to create a vertical separating line, create two vertical lines next to each other, and fill them with these values: #ffffff – #b3b3b3.

Make sure to keep your layer organized, Here’s how I organized them.


Step 24

Write yet another title like the ones on the left (Try writing something that represents the team, for example I’ve written “Our Team”).

Using the Rectangle Tool (U) create a 90x90px rectangle, and fill it with any color. call this layer “photo1_holder”
This will work as a holder for a photo of a team member. Now give it a Stroke. Use the image below for reference.

Place a photo of a member and call its layer “photo1″. Make sure that the layer “photo1″ is right above “photo1_holder” layer. then right-click on “photo1″ layer and choose Create clipping mask. You should come up with something like below!


Step 25

Write some text about the member, using these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 14px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #7ba344

We’ll create the social media icons ourselves! let’s start with Twitter, Type “t” letter with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Pico-Black (get it from here)
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #2fcfff

Then Give it a Stroke according to the following image.

Let’s create the LinkedIn one! Type “in” word with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Myriad Pro (get it from here)
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Bold
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #0081ac

Facebook!? Type “f” letter with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Klavika (get it from here)
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Bold
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #395796

Step 26

Create another copy of the member photo. while selecting the photo layer, go to Layer > New Adjustment Layer > Black & White.
Make sure to check “Use Previous Layer to Create Clipping Mask”

Type the same text, social media letters we’ve written before using the same character settings, but give them all this color value: #505150.

So obviously the member will look gray when it’s not hovered!

Make two copies and align them this way

To make sure they’re well-aligned, make four separate groups each one of them contains a member’s content, and click on Distribute left edges in the control bar while having the four groups selected.

I’ve organized my layers, you?


Step 27

Before we start working on the social media links area, we need to set some borders, that’s why we’ll drag two new guides according to the following image!

Create a selection of about 940x70px and align it like the image below.

Fill it with any color, and then give it a Gradient Overlay. use the image below for reference.

Create a rectangle of 70x45px. use the image below to align it and to give it some layer styles. call this layer “tw_bg”

Hide the layer “tw_bg” to work freely.
Create another rectangle of 10x43px, and go to Edit > Transform Path > Skew. adjust these options in the control bar:

  • X: 40px
  • Y: 1253px
  • V: -39

Call this layer “effect” and make “tw_bg” layer visible again.

Copy layer style from “tw_bg” layer and paste it into the layer “effect”.

Write “t” letter with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Pico-Black
  • Font size: 35px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: Won’t matter cause we’re gonna add a Gradient Overlay

Also give it some layer styles according to the following image.


Step 28

Repeat step 20 to create another separator or even copy it. then place it this way:

We need to cut the right part of the rectangle, eh!? to do that select “tw_bg” layer and click on Add layer mask.
Make a selection over the right part (that we need to cut) of the rectangle, set your foreground color to black (#000000) then click Shift+Backspace to fill it.


Step 29

Write some text – which is actually should be a Tweet – with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #222222

To align the text well, while having the text layer and the green bar layer selected, click on Align vertical centers.


Step 30

Repeat step 27 to create something like in the image below. Also create a rectangle, fill it with #334814 and reduce its layer Opacity to 40%.

Give the big rectangle some layer styles according to the following image

Now fill the skewed rectangle with a darker color of this value: #2a6788

Write “t” letter with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Pico-Black
  • Font size: 35px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: #2fcfff

And give it a Stroke. use the image below for reference

Make sure to organize your layers and group them together.


Step 31

Make another copy of the Twitter icon, change the Color Overlay (for the big rectangle) to: #0080ab, and fill the skewed rectangle with this color value: #00526d.

Write the word “in” with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Myriad Pro
  • Font size: 35px
  • Font weight: Bold
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: white (#ffffff)

Create a third copy of the Twitter or LinkedIn icon, change the Color Overlay (for the big rectangle) to: #395796, and fill the skewed rectangle with this color value: #263e6f.

Write “f” letter with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Klavika
  • Font size: 35px
  • Font weight: Bold
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: white (#ffffff)

Make a last copy, change the Color Overlay (for the big rectangle) to: #e8e8e8, and fill the skewed rectangle with this color value: #cdcdcd.

Write the word “fr” with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Frutiger Black (get it from here
  • Font size: 35px
  • Font weight: Bold
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Smooth
  • Color: f: #0079d2 – r: #ff3093

Put each of the icons in a separate group, and while selection the four of them click on Distribute left edges .


Step 32

Keep it goin’! only the footer left. Create a selection of 1020x460px and fill it with any color for now.

Apply a Gradient Overlay to it. use the image below for reference.

You should have a nice shadow!

with the Single Row Marquee Tool (M) create a 1px selection and fill it with white (#ffffff).


Step 33

Drag two new horizontal guides according to the following image.

Write a title with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Rockwell
  • Font size: 30px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: Sharp
  • Color: #7ea547

Write a sub-title with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #d3d3d3

Using the Line Tool (U) create two horizontal lines on top of each other, and fill them with these color values: #151515 – #2f2f2f.

Align it this way.


Step 34

Drag two new horizontal guides according to the following image.

With the Rounded Rectangle Tool (U) create two rectangles of 210x25px – 5px radius, fill them with: #141313 and give them an Inner Shadow.

Write some text inside the two rectangles with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: #7ea547

Create another rectangle like the ones above, but this time its height will be: 110px. Also write some text inside it with the same character settings above.
Make a copy of the button we’ve created in step 17. and align it like the following image


Step 35

Write another title like the one on the left.

Write some text. use the image below for reference.

Make two copies of what you’ve done.


Step 36

Fill the right part with a third title and some text.

Now your footer should look like this.


Step 37

We’re almost there! drag a new horizontal guide after 50px.

Create two horizontal lines on top of each other, and fill them with these color values: #181818 – #2f2f2f.

Write some copyright text with these character settings:

  • Font Family: Arial
  • Font size: 15px
  • Font weight: Regular
  • Anti-aliasing setting: None
  • Color: white (#ffffff) – #82aa48

With the same character settings write a sub-navigation.

Make sure to organize your layers and group them together. Here’s how mine looks!


Conclusion

There we have it! we’ve created a professional-looking web 2.0 layout. As you can see the techniques used here are simple. but they get nice results.

I really have tried to explain every single thing carefully. However, if you’ve faced any problems please don’t hesitate to ask for help, just drop a comment and I’ll do my best to help.

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Discussion 409 Comments

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  1. Ali Miller says:

    I loved this tutorial – has taught me some really good things.

    Thank You for your hard work

  2. george says:

    Thanks for the tutorial. You have a very good way of describing how to do something step by step – keep it up mate!

  3. Jing says:

    Great tutorial. Learned some very neat tricks.

  4. ChrisDigital says:

    Having recently launched my own blog I recognize how much work went into putting this together. Great stuff, will review again later.

  5. Mark says:

    Fantastic….patient…thorough…very thorough tutorial….

    So much time went into this! If only other tutorials were as EXCELLENT as this. Please keep up the good work.

    Thank you so much!!!!

    Mark in Ireland

  6. Oliver says:

    Great tutorial. Thank you for the hard work with all those screen shots.

    Oliver in Wisconsin, USA.

  7. Rudy C says:

    This was a wonderful tutorial and I thank you for putting this up. There were many techniques I’ve seen but done in a different way. You are really detailed down to the very end, even creation of icons.

    I think some of the calculations are a bit off but I managed to get it done. Not sure on how you estimate time it took, but I can’t imagine you getting this done in 2 hours. It took me longer but I had distractions.

    Thanks for sharing though; will there be a second part where you’ll code to HTML/CSS and show how to get the slider portion with JavaScript? Perhaps some AJAX? Good stuff though.

  8. Hanz says:

    Great list, thanks for posting dude this really help me a lot to get some ideas. Keep it up.

  9. Marco says:

    Yo this is one of the best tutorials out there. It really walks you every step of the way.
    Makes learning this stuff fun.

    Thanks

  10. Simon says:

    Hi guys,
    Can anyone tell me why the premium tutorial on how to code this design, “Coding a Complex Design into CSS and HTML: New Premium Tutorial” does not have a readable tutorial? You are only given the option to download the source files or a link back to this tutorial. I love the tuts content otherwise I wouldn’t be paying for Premium membership but this sort of thing drives me nuts. It says there is a tutorial but when you login there is not a tutorial.

    Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

  11. Simon says:

    Ok, now I feel bad. So the actual tutorial is embedded as .html files in the downloadable zip. My fault – sorry for the inconvenience everyone.

  12. Thanks, this is Pretty sweet, I love the 960 Grid system!
    Even though I have not started using it, I cant wait for my next project to come along :)

    Thank again
    @mgpwr

  13. Chuck Norris says:

    Thanks so much for this tutorial. Getting ready to redesign a couple different sites and this was exactly the inspiration I was looking for. I’m new to tutsplus… looking around for some tuts on transforming psd to html. Good stuff Mahmoud. Thanks again!

  14. This is nice tutorial, thanks for the work. The all screen shots – very funny.

    thanks!!!!

  15. robert says:

    in step 4 how did you go from white to transparent? im lost there

  16. A really cool design, just like usual I love this site!

  17. munn says:

    perfect!
    but the 3rd guide line’s text should be ” And this one also after 30px” rather than ” And this on also after 20px” in the setp 16′s last picture.

  18. Asmaa says:

    GREAT Tutorial! Thanks so much!! :D

  19. munn says:

    Can i translate this tutorial to chinese?

  20. That sound good, I have to learn more of you.
    Thank you for your share

  21. Musa Talukdar says:

    I learn some nice trick from this tutorial… Thanks….

  22. Nikki says:

    Great Tutorial! I think that you throughly explained everything in detail – and because of that – I learned soo much! Thanks!

  23. adele says:

    Absolutely amazing tutorial. Thank you so much for sharing your skills in such detail.
    One thing I was interested in, which you didn’t go into, was how, and why you came to choose the different gradient shades. Do you have a method for this? They worked so well together.

    If you are ever looking for a follow on tutorial – this is one I would be most interested in.

  24. Addison says:

    Hi, great tutorial, I was wondering where you got all your preset gradients from? They all look so useful as I always have a hard time getting the gradients just right. Anyway, great tutorial!

  25. Dennis says:

    Where exactly do you click to download the file 960_grid_24_col.psd, because when you click on the get it here link in step one it just takes you to the 960 website, then from there it shows you all these samples but nowhere is there a link to download the specified file. Please help in laymen terms

  26. IVaCH says:

    Amazing tutorial!! But if i do this, when i have all complete, what i must do to import it to dreamweaver to insert diary news, or effects on buttons? Thank you!

  27. pattaya says:

    Nice work! I see a gallery of gradients in your screenshots… it is a downloadable resource?

  28. Ron Horsley says:

    I realize this is a design-focused tutorial and all, but honestly it’s pretty unrealistic and unhelpful to not at least give some token mention that you should have some concept of what CMS if any is going to be used (Joomla, WordPress, or a straight hard-coded HTML page). This is all well and good to draw out, and sure you can do virtually anything in Photoshop. But your designs are not going to be much more than pretty bits of long, time-spent misdirection to someone if you don’t know how to design for the eccentricities of a given CMS and how its theming system works. Simplest example: try taking this exact same design and apply it to a Joomla site. Now try and see how it goes over, say, a phpBB forum, or a WordPress blog site.

    Yes, as a designer you are focusing on the look and layout, not the execution. But you will be a far more effective designer if you can cut through a lot of bull by being even a little knowledgeable about the specific implementation hurdles of your design as it will be presented to whomever has to code this masterpiece into real HTML/PHP/etc. If you were designing this for a Magento site, already I can see a handful of areas like the sub-module boxes where you’d have to seriously have someone do some code shoe-horning to get them in to still look like that.

    Adobe’s integration of apps like Dreamweaver more completely into Photoshop/Illustrator is great, but this tutorial really only applies this cleanly if you’re talking about a hard-coded, manually-set-up HTML site being managed through, say, Dreamweaver’s “Manage Sites” set up. It is a bigger kettle of fish to have to take this design and apply them to some of the most common CMS’s out there.

    I would say a pre-step 1 would be “do a little research on just what site you’re designing for, take a look and see what about the CMS you’re intending this to be applied to may or may not work well with your design.”

    A few years ago I would’ve said do anything and it’s fine. Now however, thanks to Google’s SEO and limitations on Flash implementation to be visible for rankings, dupe content penalties, etc., you need more than ever to be savvy about just what you’re putting out there.

  29. Chris says:

    You put a tremendous amount of work into this tutorial and while I have solid experience in photoshop I picked up even more excellent tips and tricks so thank you very much! You absolutely delivered in guiding us through creating a slick, clean 2.0 design.

    That said, I’m afraid I must agree with Ron’s comments re: the difficulties of bringing this to life via code and wrestling it into a CMS. In fact I followed the tutorial hoping you would suggest some javascript code you have used for the photo section . . .

    However you’ve provided some great techniques for background images and interesting visuals so when I do code a version of this design in css/xhtml and wordpress I’ll be sure to let you know so you can see how I was able to integrate your terrific ideas — but adapted them as needed.

    Many thanks for sharing your expertise. It is truly amazing that work of your quality is available online for FREE. I wish you every success as you help all of us achieve a bit of our own.

    • Chris says:

      Hi Chris.

      Don’t know if this will help you in any way..

      Some time ago, i went to a adobe seminar (launch of cs5) and the things they showed were unbelievable.
      They showed that in the new dreamweaver, you can work with strictly visual elements, so that you wouldn’t need to know any html- css or whatever coding!
      You could make your design, in either Photoshop – illustrator and just import it into dreamweaver and it would do the coding for you.

      Ofcourse you would need to set a function to the different buttons, but the adobe guys showed that this could be done visually in dreamwever.

      Maybe someone knows one or two tutorials on how this process works.??

  30. Huda says:

    Great tutorial! Thanks!

    How can this be converted to be used on the web, though?

  31. Joe says:

    Everything’s fine except for the horizontal-line-shadow effect. The upper of the shadow should be crisp.

    P.S. I like your Gradient Sets. very professional.. Good for minimal design :)

    -minimal lover-

  32. aki says:

    Nicely done. Great tutorial. You really have put a lot of effort on this tutorial, looking at the lengthy article. Like some other people say here, you may should mention on what system is this theme suitable with. For some new people would just simply do it, without knowing where the are going later. Anyway great tutorial!
    Thumbs up

  33. Tim says:

    Great tutorial. We’re out of web 2.0 drop that and just say a modern layout ;) otherwise perfection!

  34. jake says:

    this is an amazing tut. thx so much.

    TWITTER QUESTION: i am trying to incorporate a single tweet on the homepage of my app, in a speech blurb. does anyone have any pointers on where i could start the search for this kind of information? thx a lot.

    jake

  35. Mizoo says:

    Thank u …

  36. Thanks so much for your tutorial! Very helpful tips, especially when it comes to the Gradient Sets.

    In response to Ron’s comment about the CMS — the behind the scenes technology shouldn’t limit the visual implementation. Every CMS produces HTML and CSS and sometimes JavaScript. The only concern should be, can this design be translated into HTML, CSS and JavaScript? In the case of this tutorial, absolutely! The file is well organized, and uses a grid system, which makes this site easy to develop.

    Keep up the great content! :)

  37. Boris says:

    Extremely great tutorial, thx a lot!

  38. Erich Kist says:

    Thanks Mahmoud for the great work. Very good tutorial.

  39. Great tutorial. We’re out of web 2.0 drop that and just say a modern layout ;) otherwise perfection!

  40. Great tutorial. We’re out of web 2.0 drop that and just say a modern layout ;) otherwise perfection!

  41. Carol Black says:

    This is really cool!
    It helps me a lot!! yeaah! (y’
    Thank you very much!
    You’re so young and know a lot… impressive! *o*
    I loved the gradients effects! they’re amaizing!
    thank you again! ;)

  42. Thanks so much, I’ll definitely be returning for more tutorials. Sites like this are a major help to me!

  43. Like others have mentioned great tutorial I love the look, but I would love to know how to code this monster into a usable site, any thoughts ?

    As Always Great Stuff from the tuts + team !

  44. ambroise says:

    Thanks for this great tutorial, but I think psdtuts is experiencing a problem because we cannot see the images.

  45. Poer says:

    Very detailed tutorial. I love the gradient colors.. thanks!

  46. BogDinamita says:

    Oh my God, Mahmoud! This is a great tutorial! I was gonna write about 3 paragraphs about HOW GOOD this tut is. But then I saw you’re only 15!!!! OMG OMG OMG. So the 3 paragraphs would be just nonsense and bla bla bla
    To keep it short, what you need to know man is that YOU HAVE TALENT AND YOU ARE GOOD AT IT. USE IT. Make za money haha

    Be blessed

  47. Opal says:

    Does anyone know of a similar WP theme with this layout?

  48. Didou says:

    Soooooo great ! Thanks !!!

  49. Thanks so much for a great tutorial. At the moment I’m using photoshop 3 and, although some of the functions seem to be different, I’m going to give it a try! Thanks again :)

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