What happens to your CSS when your sites die

Posted by Dan Eastwell Fri, 07 Dec 2007 17:53:00 GMT

You've spend months on a project, place it on your portfolio with pride. A year or so later, you go back to the site and - horrors - it's completely changed!

I've had that feeling twice recently.

Firstly I was looking for an old image gallery I'd created for the javascript I'd used. When I got to the site all I could see was a 404.

One to change on my portfolio.

This evening I saw an advert on TV for a company I built HTML/CSS templates for, that I was fairly proud of.

Then I did a double-take.

If they've come up with new style product and a new style advert, their site is likely to be rebranded, too. Oh dear.

Leaping to my laptop I looked at their homepage - it's greatly different. Their main landing pages: different. Then I went deeper into the site, to some of their several thousand product and information pages. Very similar. Phew!

Screenshot of the redesigned site

This pleases me on a couple of counts - firstly I don't have to take the page from my portfolio, and that the structure, template layouts, palettes for colours and the other CSS systems tricks I'd put into place were still there.

I can only hope the makeover was easy and therefore cheap for the new design team.

The most pleasing thing of all? My name and site still there in the boilerplate in the css files

CSS templates by Dan Eastwell www.thoughtballoon.co.uk

Is it that wrong to have a little pride in your work?

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Comments

  1. Avatar Matt Peskett said 25 days later:

    I always like the Wayback Machine on archive.org for looking at old sites that have been replaced. Oh and Happy New Year!

  2. Avatar Dan said 25 days later:

    Thanks Matt, good point - it’s a good last resort, but I’d feel nervous having it as a replacement for portfolio pages!

    Many thanks and a happy new year to you, too.

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