Caelestis.nu was the spawn of my sudden inexplicable urge to start a collective domain which occured on
November 2020 via
NuNames.nu, and is currently hosted under
Aelyn.
It was founded sometime around 2016 formerly known as
Celestialis.com. Unfortunately, Celestialis was cut short because the name along with the extension simply didn't
quite fit the concept of the network.
My desire for a name change was something that I knew was bound to happen, and when it did, it was rather
sudden. Thus, the new name [Caelestis] was shorter and concise and still relevant to the previous name. The birth of Caelestis have embarked on
a new chapter of web design which in turn, Aelyn and I came to an amicable decision to unify our domains
into one network whilst being able to run our own domains. So here we are, under the central hub of the
Celestial Oracle Studio!
The domain name derived from the late Latin name
caelum which means "
sky; heaven." I was dismayed how the TLD extensions .net and .org
were taken over by the market and to shell out that much on parked domains was out of the window. So I chose the next best alternative and settled
with a .nu extension. Looking back, perhaps it was a blessing in disguise!
Caelestis.nu sounds much more pleasant.
A wise man once said that every site must have a purpose behind it. This site serves no real purpose besides being a collection ground to various
creations. My sole intention when I created this collective can be summarized in two short bullet-points:
To share my
personal interests with everyone.
To have a
self-gratifying little home on the web.
Design
This layout marks something of a trend in my most recent designs: a heavy emphasis on coding and content.
With this newly revamped and enlarged space there comes along new additions that help make the site more efficient.
I settled for Lightview which has rounded
corners that I like and the centered attribute with it making pop-up windows more appealing. Also, I've been experimenting with
pastel colours as it bring freshness to this cute design and carry positive emotional connotations—light
and cheerful colours combined with a balance of clean-lined silhouettes and organic, curved lines are just so pleasing to the eye.
One of the big changes is that the domain has converted to using
pure table-less design. Content-wise, the initial idea was to have my sections separated in
different pages like most collective sites do, but I ended up sticking to my old concept of having a 1-page domain as everything seems simpler that way.
Version two features
Tanaka Mamimi from the series
THE iDOLM@STER: Shiny Colors. Programs used to create this design was
Photoshop and handcoded via Notepad. Custom irregular shapes generated from
Fancy Border Radius.
Fonts used were Daily (via
StudioCherii), Delius, Noto Serif (via
Google Fonts),
and Pea Steph (via
Fonts for Peas). Official artwork was taken from
Zerochan and
chibi illustration around the site are from
Animate Café. Textures used were from
PNGWing
and PNG cutouts downloaded from
akumaLoveSongs. The layout has been tested for the latest
version of Firefox and Chrome with a resolution of 1280x960 (4:3) or higher. View more other resources used for my other sites at
Memento.
Webmiss
visual diary enthusiast
cute/aesthetics ◦ animanga/gaming ◦ pastels
My hobby started out in
2009 and that was the breakthrough of my web design experience for many
hobbyists alike. However, the little knowledge I have of HTML/CSS at that time was not enough to code an entire website from scratch.
Alas, with my stubbornness, I refused to ask for help. Instead, I went through various tutorials online and found many inspirations along the way! After laboring over it for about a month, I finally managed to put up the site
and I was contented with the result. On the contrary, I had then decided to never put myself through the misery of web designing again.
It is human nature, however, to break one's promise to oneself—I started a project in school that would later became the most sucessful project I've ever run. Before I knew it, I picked up some PHP knowledge,
and was ready to take over the world! A few years later, in an almost-sad pattern, I had somewhat lost interest, went on an indefinite hiatus, and then returned to the web roughly at the end of 2015.
In a way, my semi-hiatus reinforced a simple idea that I only considered web design as a hobby—no more, no less. I have no plan to consider it a profession, at the same time, I cannot quite get away from it...
In short, I am a confused human-being, and 'tis reflected in the content of this site.