Elixir’s Flame theme is one hot RapidWeaver template. Whether you’re building a blog or a business site, Flame is a perfect choice. It’s big and bold and has a large variety of theme variations to help you customize its look and feel to fit your site’s needs. You’ll have a sizzling new site up and running in no time.
Flame offers 11 width variations, 3 sidebar variations, 9 title bar styles, 3 site title display styles, 7 horizontal menu bar backgrounds, 7 horizontal menu item styles, 13 header options, ExtraContent header and footer, 5 blog badge variations.
Check out Flame here.
Havnit is a very smart, very ambitious theme with a lot of intelligent logic programmed into it. We took what we learned in Flavorite, improved upon it greatly, and went far beyond what we had last time. This might sound like it’s a complicated theme, but I’m happy to say that it’s not. In fact, outwardly you shouldn’t notice any of the advanced logic at all. The theme should just tick happily along, doing things that you would expect any website to … but with some major advances incorporated into the mix.
Havnit comes set with HTML5, selectable, customizable slideshow, 4 ExtraContent areas, RWmultitool ready, 20 customizable headers/ExtraContent backgrounds, header height adjustment, 3 tier, smart navigation, sidebar width, sidebar positioning, comprehensive color control, width control, font size, style and line height control.
Check out Havnit here.
Adam from Elixir Graphics, who’s become an overnight veteran of the ExtraContent camp, just announced Bold, their latest RapidWeaver theme. Bold features ExtraContent for header and footer with seven unique badges for ExtraContent area located in the footer. Other features include a unique pop-out menu system, stylish sub menu system, site styles, site background styles, width variations, blank header slots for use with RWmultitool and much more.
Learn more about Bold here.
Josh Lackhart, today, announced a radical update to their popular Flex theme which now includes four ExtraContent areas. They can be found above main content, below main content, below sidebar content and above footer content. The other advances that Josh has put into Flex include HTML5 readiness and jQuery 1.4.2 via Google’s CDN.
You can check out Josh’s Flex update here.