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CharlieMember
No problem.
#header { background: url("images/header.png") repeat scroll 0 0 transparent; height: 70px; }
Change the height to whatever you want!
CharlieMemberAdd a margin-top to the #nav
#nav { background: url("images/nav.png") repeat scroll 0 0 transparent; margin-top: 25px; }
CharlieMemberCan you post a link to your site so we can see the problem?
CharlieMemberThe menu bar is CSS, so easily changed to whatever colour you like.
You can delete the hashmark separators (btw, this thread is the no.2 result on Google for the term 'hashmark separators'). It's as easy as pressing the delete key.
You can add a home button. Just add it to the menu.
Hope this helps!
CharlieMemberDelete, or preferably comment out, the emboldened line in your stylesheet:
#nav, #subnav {
background: url("images/menu_bg.gif") repeat-x scroll 0 0 transparent;
clear: both;
color: #334366;
margin: 0;
overflow: hidden;
width: 960px;
}I meant to add, I couldn't tell you about the logo without having a proper look around. I'm certain it's possible, though.
CharlieMemberAh, you've got it sorted. Good!
CharlieMemberThere's a problem with your CSS. On line 682 of your style.css
Change
.welcome .wrap { border: 3px solid #FFFFFF; overflow: hidden; padding: 20px; }
to
.welcome .wrap { border: 3px solid #FFFFFF; overflow: hidden; padding: 0px; }
CharlieMemberThis is the relevant chunk of CSS:
h1, h2, h2 a, h2 a:visited { clear: both; font-size: 42px; margin: 0 0 20px; }
Your blog post titles use the h2 element. You can change the font size to whatever your want in your stylesheet.
CharlieMemberI don't think there's an easy way to get the menu tabs to fill 100% of the nav bar. You could give each menu tab a width of 1/7th of the total width, but that would would force Verisome® Technology to fit onto two lines, which would look odd.
I'd simply hide the unused space, so it looks like this.
CharlieMemberIt's the stylesheet for the Genesis Footer Widgets (GFW) plugin. Ignore my previous advice: I thought you were talking about the theme stylesheet.
Go to Plugins > Editor and select GFW from the drop down menu. You can make changes to the file directly from here.
CharlieMemberMarch 4, 2013 at 7:45 am in reply to: How to remove or control the administrive menu from my site? #24035CharlieMemberDid you get it sorted? I can't see anything...
CharlieMemberLog in to WordPress as admin, then go to Appearance > Editor. You should be able to select and edit the stylesheet from there.
CharlieMemberA better method might be to remove the hover selectors from the above chunk of CSS and re-declare their values. So:
.menu-primary li a:active,
.menu-primary .current_page_item a,
.menu-primary .current-cat a,
.menu-primary .current-menu-item a,
.menu-secondary li a:active,
.menu-secondary li a:hover,
.menu-secondary li:hover a,
.menu-secondary .current_page_item a,
.menu-secondary .current-cat a,
.menu-secondary .current-menu-item a,
#header .menu li a:active,
#header .menu .current_page_item a,
#header .menu .current-cat a,
#header .menu .current-menu-item a {
color: #a6d045;
}.menu-primary li a:hover,
.menu-primary li:hover a,
#header .menu li a:hover,
#header .menu li:hover a {
color:#7D26CD;
}Will make the hover links on the primary nav bar purple, while leaving the active links green.
CharlieMemberYour image isn't quite the right size: it's 900 x 238. The image in the demo is 914 x 150.
CharlieMemberPost a link to your site and I'll take a look.
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