Based on the Skeleton Framework. Check out http://getskeleton.com for documentation and details.
Download the zip file and upload this theme into your wp-content/themes folder. Once done, activate it in WordPress. Make sure to check out the "Customize" screen to see all of the options available to you!
Note: To make it easier to remember when you use a child theme, I would put the theme in a folder named "downbeat".
The download includes Skeleton's CSS, Normalize CSS, a WordPress CSS, and the various theme files.
skeleton/
├── js/
│ └── footer.js
├── css/
│ ├── normalize.min.css
│ └── skeleton.css
│ └── wordpress.css
├── bottom.php
├── comments.php
├── content.php
├── footer_widgets.php
├── full-width.php
├── functions.php
├── header.php
├── index.php
├── loop.php
├── navigation.php
├── screenshot.png
├── style.css
├── top.php
└── README.md
Skeleton is lightweight and simple. It styles only raw HTML elements (with a few exceptions) and provides a responsive grid. Nothing more.
- Minified, it's less than a kb
- It's a starting point, not a UI framework
- No compiling or installing...just vanilla CSS
- Chrome latest
- Firefox latest
- Opera latest
- Safari latest
- IE latest
The above list is non-exhaustive. Skeleton works perfectly with almost all older versions of the browsers above, though IE certainly has large degradation prior to IE9.
All parts of Skeleton are free to use and abuse under the open-source MIT license.
Skeleton was built using Sublime Text 3 and designed with Sketch. The typeface Raleway was created by Matt McInerney and Pablo Impallari. Code highlighting by Google's Prettify library. Icons in the header of the documentation are all derivative work of icons from The Noun Project. Feather by Zach VanDeHey, Pen (with cap) by Ed Harrison, Pen (with clicker) by Matthew Hall, and Watch by Julien Deveaux.
This theme was built by Mitch Canter as the core for his client's themes.
Skeleton was created by Dave Gamache for a better web.