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Self-taught web design and development is a comedy of errors
First attempt at a website for a friend's budding conference company.

My first experiments with Google Webfonts, creating a favicon.ico, and editing hover effects.
The past judges section of the Technovation Challenge website. Gallery entries can be added and removed easily, while allowing the layout of the page to flow seamlessly.

My first experiment with using definition lists for image galleries, making cross-browser-compatible rounded-corner images, and styling image containers with CSS.
The Technovation Challenge "App Quilt"—a colorful representation of all the app prototypes developed through the Technovation Challenge programs. Clicking on an image takes the user to a page containing a description of the app and a photo of the team that conceived it. View the quilt live on the Technovation Challenge app quilt page.

Though I originally created this as a table (ick! awful! that's so '90's!), I re-created this page using the lessons I taught myself from the abovementioned judges page to make a much more fluid layout and used CSS to style the pictures and trim off unsightly edges. When CSS3 is more universally supported, I'd like to use its fancy new border capabilities to make the app quilt really look like a quilt!
Web
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Web

The wonderful world of CSS: manipulated by Renee!

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