AEA DC: Andy Clarke

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Designing within constraints tends to encourage more focus, inspiration, creativity. @malarkey #aea
The Letter-Heads, remarkable demo of CSS animations... shadow puppets with type and drop shadows. via @malarkey http://t.co/1nzDE7Xd #aea
Here's another amazing CSS3 animation: Rofox, a little spaceship landing, taking off. http://t.co/5RqFKSWQ @malarkey #css3
And the capper, a Mad Man animation (er, madmanimation), done entirely with an ordered list and CSS3: http://t.co/U4XsyIs9 @malarkey #aea
New to animation with CSS3? Get cozy with the transition property and the #keyframes rule. @malarkey #aea
CSS3 transforms let you translate, rotate, scale or skew html elements. Not familiar? Meet the transform property. #aea @malarkey
Corn dogs are the most rational thing I know. #aea
Another CSS3 example shown by @malarkey: The Planetarium. http://t.co/2vat1ZUt #aea
Complex CSS3 animations can become div soup. Somewhat unavoidable, but do your best to make HTML semantically meaningful. @malarkey #aea
Madmanimation is an ordered list that actually describes the scenes. http://t.co/U4XsyIs9 Progressive enhancement FTW. @malarkey #aea
animate.css a collection of animations in a css file. Just add class to an element to trigger animation: http://t.co/BwSkIFTp @malarkey #aea