A blog and portfolio for Artist on the World Wide Web.
To access website to write new posts, please access the Admin page.
If you do not know the id and the password, please contact the president or any AWWW team members.
If anyone have a great idea for the website or found a bug, please create an issue in the repository.
The site is developed by AWWW alum, Will Kim.
If you see him around say hi 👋🏼.
For Development
Welcome!
My name is Will and I am a developer who built this site. I am glad that you have agreed to maintain / build this site! If not, still welcome! It is always exciting to discover someone who loves to code!
The entire website is built with two tech stack:
- Gatsby.js
- Netlify CMS
As you know, Gatsby.js is a library based in React, thus majority of the site is created as if it is built with React.
There are few exceptions where the Landing Page is built with Styled Components. Also Gatsby uses GraphQL to talk to the Backend (Netlify CMS).
Have a look around! it is pretty neatly built. If you have any question, please create an issue on this repository and we can talk 🙂.
Note: This starter uses Gatsby v2.
This repo contains an example business website that is built with Gatsby, and Netlify CMS: Demo Link.
It follows the JAMstack architecture by using Git as a single source of truth, and Netlify for continuous deployment, and CDN distribution.
- A simple landing page with blog functionality built with Netlify CMS
- Editabe Pages: Landing, About, Product, Blog-Collection and Contact page with Netlify Form support
- Create Blog posts from Netlify CMS
- Tags: Separate page for posts under each tag
- Basic directory organization
- Uses Bulma for styling, but size is reduced by
purge-css-plugin
- Blazing fast loading times thanks to pre-rendered HTML and automatic chunk loading of JS files
- Uses
gatbsy-image
with Netlify-CMS preview support - Separate components for everything
- Netlify deploy configuration
- Perfect score on Lighthouse for SEO, Accessibility and Performance (wip:PWA)
- ..and more
- Node (I recommend using v8.2.0 or higher)
- Gatsby CLI
Netlify CMS can run in any frontend web environment, but the quickest way to try it out is by running it on a pre-configured starter site with Netlify. The example here is the Kaldi coffee company template (adapted from One Click Hugo CMS). Use the button below to build and deploy your own copy of the repository:
After clicking that button, you’ll authenticate with GitHub and choose a repository name. Netlify will then automatically create a repository in your GitHub account with a copy of the files from the template. Next, it will build and deploy the new site on Netlify, bringing you to the site dashboard when the build is complete. Next, you’ll need to set up Netlify’s Identity service to authorize users to log in to the CMS.
$ git clone https://github.com/[GITHUB_USERNAME]/[REPO_NAME].git
$ cd [REPO_NAME]
$ yarn
$ npm run develop
To test the CMS locally, you'll need run a production build of the site:
$ npm run build
$ npm run serve
$ gatsby new [SITE_DIRECTORY_NAME] https://github.com/netlify-templates/gatsby-starter-netlify-cms/
$ cd [SITE_DIRECTORY_NAME]
$ npm run build
$ npm run serve
Follow the Netlify CMS Quick Start Guide to set up authentication, and hosting.
Windows users might encounter node-gyp
errors when trying to npm install.
To resolve, make sure that you have both Python 2.7 and the Visual C++ build environment installed.
npm config set python python2.7
npm install --global --production windows-build-tools
This plugin uses gatsby-plugin-purgecss and bulma. The bulma builds are usually ~170K but reduced 90% by purgecss.