Privacy
I also use Adobe Fonts for one of the typefaces on the site (see below), and Adobe tracks font usage. If you find a type-face that has some of the same character as Cronos Pro, shoot me an email. I will seriously consider replacing it if I find something I like equally well; I loathe Adobe’s approach to font licensing and to privacy.
Otherwise, there is zero tracking — of any sort — on this site.
Implementation
I built this version of the site with Eleventy. You can find the entirety of the implementation (and indeed the entire history of the implementation) on GitHub. I’m using it with the following plugins:
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typeset: my own implementation of a plugin for typeset, heavily inspired by eleventy-plugin-typeset.
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markdown-it plugins:
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spacewell: a little tool I built a few years ago to insert hair spaces around em dashes and thin spaces with non-breaking spans around number-separating en dashes; the source is colocated with the rest of the site.
Typography
Perhaps my favorite part of web design, and also the part with which I spend the most part fussing.
Context | Typeface |
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Body text | Sabon, designed by Jan Tschichold in the mid-1960s as a Garamond revival. In my opinion, the most beautiful Garamond in existence. Licensed via Fonts.com. |
Headings | Cronos, designed by Robert Slimbach in 1996. A nice contrast to Sabon with its digital-era roots. The typeface I’ve been using on my site the longest at this point! Licensed via Adobe Fonts.1 |
Code | Hack, designed by Chris Simpkins in 2015 as an extension of the Deja Vu/Bitstream Vera lineage. Licensed in parts under the MIT License, the public domain, and Bitstream Vera License (see details here). |
Inspiration
While working on this design, I took more-or-less-direct inspiration in a variety of ways from some of my favorite current or previous designs around the web:
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Craig Mod — a truly wonderful site, but I actually loved the previous design iteration even more.
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Jen Simmons — as with Mod’s current site, I really like what she’s doing on her site now — it’s all sorts of fun layout-wise — but it’s quite distinct from what she was doing when I was stealing ideas from her late in 2018!
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Jason Santa Maria — from whom, if I recall, I originally got the idea of a versioned website.
Copyright and License
All content is copyright Chris Krycho,
Longtime readers may recall (and new readers may be curious about) my deep frustrations with this situation. Nothing there has changed — but I ended up paying for Adobe’s Lightroom package when I picked back up photography, and it comes bundled. So here we are. ↩︎