Quote:
Originally Posted by Deej
The PSd is sliced up into sections within the psd itself. Photoshop will spit them out in the gridded up chunks. some have programs that automatically put that psd layout into a CSS layout. Some do it by hand. While youre viewing your design online it has absolutely nothing to do with the psd anymore. Text can be overlayed on that specific area with proper positioning. shit another graphic can be put on a that graphic "grid". CSS possibilities are near endless.
Its all in the markup...
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Well I know it's all about the markup. But there's a reason why the Blueprint CSS grid has both a PSD grid and a corresponding CSS grid.
Use of the PSD grid is obvious, and I know that even without utilizing the CSS contained within the Blueprint ZIP, I can use CSS positioning to map my text in the exact position down to the pixel.
Can anyone explain what the use of the Blueprint CSS is exactly?