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Welcome to Show & Tell, a weekly feature that focuses on the work of ministries within the Electricurrent and AdvancedMinistry clientele.
This week's feature is Church of the Harvest, an AdvancedMinistry client located in Olathe, KS. We always love it when churches and ministries come up with creative ways to use AdvancedMinistry. In the case of Church of the Harvest, they have created a unique homepage that focuses on pointing users in the right direction using a series of images that are updated on a regular basis.
You can read more about their ministry by visiting www.churchoftheharvest.org.
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, Ray Majoran said:
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, Ray Majoran said:
Brad, it's fairly straightforward: 3.0 template with the nav at the top of the page. Then they chose a 1-column layout and only featured ONE custom content item on the homepage. Within that one custom content item, they used the SOURCE CODE editor to create some simple CSS/HTML that created 4 feature areas.
The other way to do it (if you didn't want to get into the SOURCE/HTML/CSS) is create a 4 column layout. In each column you would feature a single content item (in which you could insert an image into). We see more and more people doing this now a days.
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, brad said:
I'd like to know how they made such a simple front page?
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, brad said:
I'd like to know how they made such a simple front page?
Welcome to Show & Tell, a weekly feature that focuses on the work of ministries within the Electricurrent and AdvancedMinistry clientele.
This week's feature is Church of the Harvest, an AdvancedMinistry client located in Olathe, KS. We always love it when churches and ministries come up with creative ways to use AdvancedMinistry. In the case of Church of the Harvest, they have created a unique homepage that focuses on pointing users in the right direction using a series of images that are updated on a regular basis.
You can read more about their ministry by visiting www.churchoftheharvest.org.
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, Ray Majoran said:
Brad, it's fairly straightforward: 3.0 template with the nav at the top of the page. Then they chose a 1-column layout and only featured ONE custom content item on the homepage. Within that one custom content item, they used the SOURCE CODE editor to create some simple CSS/HTML that created 4 feature areas.
The other way to do it (if you didn't want to get into the SOURCE/HTML/CSS) is create a 4 column layout. In each column you would feature a single content item (in which you could insert an image into). We see more and more people doing this now a days.
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, Ray Majoran said:
Brad, it's fairly straightforward: 3.0 template with the nav at the top of the page. Then they chose a 1-column layout and only featured ONE custom content item on the homepage. Within that one custom content item, they used the SOURCE CODE editor to create some simple CSS/HTML that created 4 feature areas.
The other way to do it (if you didn't want to get into the SOURCE/HTML/CSS) is create a 4 column layout. In each column you would feature a single content item (in which you could insert an image into). We see more and more people doing this now a days.
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, brad said:
I'd like to know how they made such a simple front page?
On Wednesday, March 17, 2010, brad said:
I'd like to know how they made such a simple front page?
Brad, it's fairly straightforward: 3.0 template with the nav at the top of the page. Then they chose a 1-column layout and only featured ONE custom content item on the homepage. Within that one custom content item, they used the SOURCE CODE editor to create some simple CSS/HTML that created 4 feature areas.
The other way to do it (if you didn't want to get into the SOURCE/HTML/CSS) is create a 4 column layout. In each column you would feature a single content item (in which you could insert an image into). We see more and more people doing this now a days.