July 2010
1 post
2 tags
Smile! 2.0.5 →
I, er, forgot the code for photosets. I put a class in a {block:Photoset}, triggering Tumblr’s thinking that I actually did something with them (so they weren’t just rendered as photo posts), but then never actually rendered them.
I’m sorry, I’m an idiot. :-(
June 2010
3 posts
2.0.4, now with all the functionality of 1.0!
2.0.4 re-adds {CustomCSS}. Tumblr picked this up when they put it
in the Theme Garden (thanks, guys!), and I imagine anyone who
would have updated manually would have known to just insert it if
necessary.
Nonetheless, another goofy oversight fixed.
1 tag
Smile! As brightly as you should!
Smile! 2.0 has just been completed! There are two awesome things about this release: it finally looks to everyone1 like I want it to, and it does a better job of saying what it means.
The first thing—looking how it was meant to—is thanks to Google’s release of their fonts API and directory, which includes Inconsolata. This means that I can now say “use Inconsolata for...
alloy-d asked: Hi there! Any chance <em>Smile!</em> will support questions?
October 2009
1 post
Smile! I've done updates!
Custom header images! Post separators! Better font sizing! More replaceable text! If you want it, odds are it’s bundled up in the cute little package of cheerfulness that is Smile 1.4. There’s even more cool stuff than you could possibly want at once—like that reassuring winking title smiley that you couldn’t possibly use along with your custom header. Still not...
September 2009
5 posts
Introducing “Smile!”
Smile! is a light and easygoing theme. It won’t get your blog down with ugliness or unreadability, so you can feel free to tumble things that are happy and pretty!
It was designed with Inconsolata, a beautiful humanist sans monospace font that you can’t help but be cheered up by. If you don’t have Inconsolata, fear not: the theme will safely fall back to a nice sans serif...
Lots of smiles at Wikimedia Commons →
Mark: Be happy!
Bill: :-)
Cross-cultural studies have shown that smiling is used as a means of...
– “Smile”, from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia