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8 Sandvox sites tagged “writing”

Ken Stange

Ken Stange

“My decision on the design was largely aesthetic. It is elegant and uncluttered, allows just the right number of links to subpages in the header. and my planned replacement header image suited it.” — Ken Stange

The Official Site of George M. Moser

The Official Site of George M. Moser

“My website is for information about my upcoming novels. My first novel is called Nine Lives and will be published early 2012. I am an author of horror and thrillers.” — George M. Moser

Common Sense Kundalini

Common Sense Kundalini

“We created a page on stillness. It was the first instance of using the carousel widget code from Amazon.” — JJ Semple

TheAuthorOnline.com

TheAuthorOnline.com

“It has a large banner at the top and lots of white space. It's simple, elegant, and helped me get the look I wanted.” — Rafael Cortes

Margo Smit Journalistiek

Margo Smit Journalistiek

“I chose the clean sheets design, for it reflects what I would like my company to be: clear, clean, transparent, easy to get acquainted with. It has a light touch, and a classic look due to the font (copperplate) I picked, expressing that I am a classic, no frills type of journalist, dependable,...” — Marcella Smit

Second Language Writing

Second Language Writing

“This site is a resource for second language writing. It includes pages on journals, individual articles, books, a list of blogs, email lists, an about page, a contact form, and a news blog to keep people updated on changes to the site and on second language writing in general.” — Charles Nelson

JP Chambers

JP Chambers

“I attended my high school reunion a couple of years ago and was taken by complete surprise when a few of my classmates made comments to me about my essays. I had no idea they were reading my site, but they had stumbled on it somehow and were now quoting my own words back to me!” — John Chambers

Fernwood Writers Workshops

Fernwood Writers Workshops

“My current Sandvox design has colours that match my emblem photograph: a fern and a piece of driftwood.” — Karen Lee Pickett