Projects: bitpress image effect plugins reflection wordpress
by Cliffano Subagio
3 comments
Testing Reflection Plugin
I spent several train rides this week putting together Reflection Plugin for WordPress. This plugin applies reflection effect to images on a blog. The reflection effect is done on the client side using the excellent Raphael JavaScript library. You can use normal image on your posts as usual, and you’ll get the reflection effect by simply adding ‘reflection’ to the class value.
Here are some examples of the effect…
Wide movie poster:

Album covers, aligned, with wrapping text:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Donec ut pede ut mauris varius ultricies. In a dolor non risus dapibus faucibus. Etiam tristique pellentesque ligula. Cras tempus nunc vel turpis. Vivamus congue. Nullam hendrerit tincidunt metus. Pellentesque bibendum dapibus felis. Suspendisse risus magna, placerat id, malesuada eget, pellentesque quis, felis. Sed dolor lectus, vehicula rutrum, venenatis et, fringilla vel, tellus. Curabitur mi. Donec ligula pede, vulputate vitae, bibendum ac, pharetra in, elit. Pellentesque et mauris ut pede mattis commodo. Mauris massa odio, egestas eget, luctus id, suscipit sit amet, velit. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Suspendisse ac sem. Cras nec dolor a ipsum consectetur lobortis. In blandit erat. Fusce mollis ultrices ipsum.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Donec ut pede ut mauris varius ultricies. In a dolor non risus dapibus faucibus. Etiam tristique pellentesque ligula. Cras tempus nunc vel turpis. Vivamus congue. Nullam hendrerit tincidunt metus. Pellentesque bibendum dapibus felis. Suspendisse risus magna, placerat id, malesuada eget, pellentesque quis, felis. Sed dolor lectus, vehicula rutrum, venenatis et, fringilla vel, tellus. Curabitur mi. Donec ligula pede, vulputate vitae, bibendum ac, pharetra in, elit. Pellentesque et mauris ut pede mattis commodo. Mauris massa odio, egestas eget, luctus id, suscipit sit amet, velit. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Suspendisse ac sem. Cras nec dolor a ipsum consectetur lobortis. In blandit erat. Fusce mollis ultrices ipsum.
Obligatory browser screenshot:

For more information, please have a look at Reflection Plugin web page.
Update (07/12/2008): I’m starting to think that this plugin can actually be an image effect plugin. Not only reflection, something like rounded corner effect can easily be done with Raphael, along with many other effects. The underlying work is basically to apply client side image effect by using class attribute values as meta data (hmm, shouldn’t future version of CSS support this?). Oh well, let’s see how Reflection Plugin goes.
100+ Custom Emptiness
Five months since v0.1 was released, Emptiness Theme has been downloaded 5,867 times and given 4/5 stars average rating. Not bad. Even though it’s not as popular as other themes with fancy graphic design, I think Emptiness has its own target audience with it’s simplistic style.
I’m particularly happy to find (via Google search) more than 100 blogs using Emptiness Theme with customised header image and some with customised css. Check them out on my Picasa Web album.
I used Nautilus Image Converter to resize all images via a simple select all, right click, and resize. If only it also has an auto image quality compression then it would be perfect.
Emptiness Theme v0.1
Introducing Emptiness Theme v0.1 .

Since I started using WordPress few months ago, I’ve tried various minimalist themes available from WordPress Theme Viewer, but none of them really suits me. So, just like any designer-wannabe, I rolled out my own minimalist theme. It’s available for download, though I’m still trying to register it on WordPress Theme Viewer. I don’t know what’s wrong with Theme Viewer, they must be really busy with backlogs of registrations to process, or they’re totally ignoring the current Theme Viewer and currently building a better system.
Creating a WordPress theme was actually quite pleasant. PHP might not be the most elegant thing out there, but it does the job. I must give a standing ovation to WordPress Codex, it is one of the bests if not the best open source documentation.
There are some of my Blojsom themes that never saw the light of day, I’ll port them to WordPress later. Have theme? Will port!
