Skip to content

elmsln/elms-styles

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

9 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ELMS Style Library on github

This is the github home for the library published at http://elms-styles.jayperryworks.com/ . The only difference is that github can't host one of the library PSDs which is over 100 megs cause of images / screens. To get that file, please download the package from http://elms-styles.jayperryworks.com/ . For everything else, you can get derivatives of the 1.x version here.

This style guide was produced to influence the initial development of ELMS Learning Network (ELMSLN). This style guide is based off of Zurb Foundation 4.x and CIS 1.x development and ELMSLN has since moved on to Zurb Foundation 5.x. While similar, the styles utilized in ELMSLN are now managed by @michael-collins and has its own repo which is part of this organization.

Licensing & Usage

This design theme was produced by Jay Perry Works for the e-Learning Institute at The Pennsylvania State University’s College of Arts & Architecture. With their approval and gracious support, we’ve released a version of the design work under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.

You may use this work for your own projects: build on it, modify it, and even redistribute it, as long as you give us credit and share it under the same license. You can use this for personal and commercial projects.

For more details, read the license here.

Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike

Icons & Fonts

We love icons. Many of the navigational components in this style library rely on icons, which unfortunately we could not include in this release due to licensing requirements (we are not authorized to redistribute them). They have been replaced in the PSD files with “placeholders” (a circle labeled ICON). You’ll need to swap these out with your own icons.

We highly recommend Iconmonstr, a huge library of beautifully- drawn, free-to-use icons.

The fonts we used are from Google’s excellent (and free) library:

Display: Bitter Body: Open Sans Download and install before you open the PSD.