[–] arkitaip 4y ago ↗ Fun and a brilliant little marketing campaign too. [–] drikerf 4y ago ↗ Thanks :)! I had a blast building this!
[–] samgranieri 4y ago ↗ Wow, takes me back to the days of using Adobe Pagemill and laying things out pixel perfect with tables. [–] drikerf 4y ago ↗ Tables! Those were the days :)I also had good times with FrontPage. [–] mansilladev 4y ago ↗ Graduating (or as I thought) from Sausage Software’s HotDog to Microsoft Frontpage was quite a step.. tables everywhere!
[–] drikerf 4y ago ↗ Tables! Those were the days :)I also had good times with FrontPage. [–] mansilladev 4y ago ↗ Graduating (or as I thought) from Sausage Software’s HotDog to Microsoft Frontpage was quite a step.. tables everywhere!
[–] mansilladev 4y ago ↗ Graduating (or as I thought) from Sausage Software’s HotDog to Microsoft Frontpage was quite a step.. tables everywhere!
[–] felixnm 4y ago ↗ Your background is too clean. No respectable 90's webpage would be caught without the repeating patterned background.https://creativemarket.com/blog/90s-web-designs [–] stevekemp 4y ago ↗ Also missing the "Under Construction" gif!
[–] SanchoPanda 4y ago ↗ Love it. I at first wrote that it should be fixed width at 800 or 640; though I guess that depends on whether you want to be accurate to the actual code of the 90's or the way it looked to users.
[–] quickthrower2 4y ago ↗ It is actually better in some ways. Not least I can read the whole thing without scrolling.
[–] adibalcan 4y ago ↗ Nice idea for a marketing campaign. Make a 90 version of your site and post it everywhere. The curious people will click.
16 comments
[ 470 ms ] story [ 141 ms ] threadI also had good times with FrontPage.
https://creativemarket.com/blog/90s-web-designs
(edit: i think it's clever)