Normalize.css makes browsers render all elements more consistently and in line with modern standards. It precisely targets only the styles that need normalizing.
#layout
Mobile-friendly
Opera’s guide to mobile device optimization
jQuery Masonry
Neat plugin that allows you to position things on a “vertical” grid rather than a “horizontal” one, so that all your blocks take up less vertical space and mesh up better.
Boks
“Boks is an AIR application (so it works on Windows, Mac and Linux) that provides a User Interface for Blueprint CSS’s framework. It’s been designed for those who think the Grid System is good but never really took the time to give it love. It handles grid configuration, baseline rhythm pimpin’, CSS (with or without compression) and grid.png export, HTML layout and much more goodie-goodie!”
Cross-Browser Inline-Block
How to achieve the equivalent of display: inline-block in all browsers with a few hacks and techniques. Nice.
WordPress themes for developers
WordPress themes for developers
Good list of well-built themes with developers/customization in mind.
The Perfect 3 Column Liquid Layout: No CSS hacks. SEO friendly. iPhone compatible.
The Perfect 3 Column Liquid Layout: No CSS hacks. SEO friendly. iPhone compatible.
Could this actually be the holy grail finally? Also has “blog style”, 2 col left, 2 col right, 2 col double, 1 col full and stacked layouts.
3 Simple Steps in Coding a Rounded Corners Layout
3 Simple Steps in Coding a Rounded Corners Layout
Nice alternate way of doing some rounded corners across multiple sections without extra code.
Yet Another Multicolumn Layout | An (X)HTML/CSS Framework
Yet Another Multicolumn Layout | An (X)HTML/CSS Framework
Yet Another Multicolumn Layout” (YAML) is an (X)HTML/CSS framework for creating modern and flexible floated layouts. The structure is extremely versatile in its programming and absolutely accessible for end users.
Yahoo! UI Library: Grids CSS
The foundational YUI Grids CSS offers four preset page widths, six preset templates, and the ability to stack and nest subdivided regions of two, three, or four columns.