[Chimp Spotting] FractureMe.com
Fracture's Grand Opening (view campaign online)
Fracture's Grand Opening (view campaign online)
Even for experienced designers, building email newsletters isn't easy. You receive a lovely looking design, and you crack on with the development. Unfortunately, it just doesn't work as it should in every email clients. Styles don't display, images aren't visible, etc.
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Project H Mission Statement: Project H Design connects the power of design to the people who need it most, and the places where it can make a real and lasting difference. We are a coalition of designers around the world, working collectively to engaging locally with nonprofit and community clients and partners. Our five-point design process (There is no design without action; We design WITH, not FOR; We document, share and measure; We start locally and scale globally, We design systems, not stuff) results in simple and effective design solutions for those without access to creative capital. Run entirely by volunteer designers, our ongoing initiatives are primarily focused on improving environments, services, products, and experiences for youth and education in the US.
Email newsletters are hotter than ever.
They’re a great extension to your business’ communication toolkit and offer you and your clients an excellent channel by which you can reach potential and existing customers.
In this article, we’ll explore common design patterns of email newsletters and learn which approaches work well, so that you’ll be prepared to create one for yourself and your clients.
We’ve also included a compilation and analysis of different newsletter designs so that you can learn from them as well as tips on what to do and what not to do.
If you've ever sent an email campaign, you know that if your CSS is not coded inline, it is likely to get stripped out by email clients, which can make your email design pretty funky looking. Writing CSS inline can be time consuming, and repetitive. MailChimp has a CSS inline conversion tool built right in that will automatically transform all of your local styles into inline styles. Designers have found it so useful, we thought we'd share it with everyone else - even if you don't have a MailChimp account.
Copy/paste your email code below, click Convert It!, and we'll give you a more email friendly version ready for sending!
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