Bistro Layout Pack

Global Presets UI Style Guide

This global presets style guide is a great way to start a new web design project! Wondering how to turn modules into global presets? For a detailed tutorial on how to use this style guide, click on the link below to be redirected.

01. Color palette

In the first part of the style guide, you can find the color palette that’s been used for the layout pack. Use these colors inside the default color palette in your Divi Theme Options.

#ffffff

#002d4c
#bd8f52

#dbe1e6

#f2f3f4

03. Text styles

In this part of the style guide, you’ll find the different text styles that were used throughout the layout pack. There’s a separate preset for each heading style and a global preset with all text styles in one.

Heading 1

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 2

Heading 3

Heading 3

Heading 4

Heading 4

Body

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.

List

  • Quisque velit nisi, pretium ut lacinia in, elementum id enim. Curabitur aliquet quam id dui posuere blandit. Praesent sapien massa, convallis a pellentesque nec, egestas non nisi.
  • Donec sollicitudin molestie malesuada. Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Sed porttitor lectus nibh. Proin eget tortor risus.

All in one

Heading 1

Heading 2

Heading 3

Heading 4

Lorum ipsum dolor sit amet.

  • Quisque velit nisi
Title Combo 1

Blog

News & Events

Title Combo 2

Favorites

What We’re Known For //

Number

11

Menu Title

Brunch

Menu Item
Lorem Ipsum / 10

Mauris blandit aliquet elit, eget tincidunt nibh pulvinar a

04. Buttons

Here, you’ll find the buttons that have been used in the layout pack. 

Button 1

Button 2

Button 3

Button 5

05. Blurbs

Up next, we have some blurb modules that have been frequently used in the layout pack.

Blurb 1

Mitchell West

FOOD CRITIC

Blurb 2

Call Us

(234) 456-6879

Blurb 3

Fresh Ingredients

Donec sollicitudin molestie malesuada. Praesent sapien massa, convallis a pellentesque nec, egestas non nisi. Donec rutrum congue leo eget malesuada.

Blurb 2

Food Reimagined

Donec sollicitudin molestie malesuada. Praesent sapien massa, convallis a pellentesque nec, egestas non nisi. Donec rutrum congue leo eget malesuada.

Blurb 3

Daily menus

Donec sollicitudin molestie malesuada. Praesent sapien massa, convallis a pellentesque nec, egestas non nisi. Donec rutrum congue leo eget malesuada.

View Menus

 

Blurb 7

Call Us

(234) 456-6879

06. Other modules

Last but not least, we’re sharing other module designs that were used in the layout pack. Upon importing with presets, these have all been added to your preset library. If you didn’t enable the import presets option, you’re able to turn any one of these modules into a global preset.

Gallery Image 1
Video 1
Blog 1
Global polycrisis: The causal mechanisms of crisis entanglement

Global polycrisis: The causal mechanisms of crisis entanglement

by Dr. Michael Lawrence at The Cascade Institute….. In this framework, a global crisis arises when one or more fast-moving trigger events combines with slow-moving stresses to push a global system out of its established equilibrium and into a volatile and harmful state of disequilibrium. We then identify three causal pathways—common stresses, domino effects, and inter-systemic feedbacks—that can connect multiple global systems to produce synchronized crises.

Global wheat yields would be ‘10%’ higher without climate change

by Orla Dwyer in Carbon Brief…Climate science has “done a remarkable job of anticipating global impacts on the main grains and we should continue to rely on this science to guide policy decisions”, Lobell, the lead study author, says in a press release.

He adds that there may be “blind spots” on specialised crops, such as coffee, cocoa, oranges and olives, which “don’t have as much modelling” as key commodity crops, noting:

“All these have been seeing supply challenges and price increases. These matter less for food security, but may be more eye-catching for consumers who might not otherwise care about climate change.”

Q&A with Jason Pruet

by Kyle Dickman in Los Alamos National Laboratory…For a variety of reasons, government support for big science has been eroding since then. Now, AI is starting to feel like the next great foundation for scientific progress. Big companies are spending billions on large machines, but the buy-in costs of working at the frontiers of AI are so high that no university has the exascale-class machines needed to run the latest AI models. We’re at a place now where we, meaning the government, can revitalize that pact by investing in the infrastructure to study AI for the public good.

The impunity of the unscathed: Risk, elite security, and the rage of MAGA populism

by Nils Gilman in Small Precautions…MAGA, in its rawest form, embodies the fury of those who feel that the burden of these risks has been disproportionately offloaded onto them, while the beneficiaries of the modern system — the “elites” — remain largely untouched. Consider the climate change debate: for many in the MAGA base, the imposition of green policies is perceived as a direct attack on their livelihoods, a demand by scientific and intellectual elites that they make personal sacrifices for a problem they feel they did not create (and which may not even exist, according to many of them) and which are not a burden for those advocating for the changes.

Reading Octavia Butler in a time of change

by Shady Grove Oliver in AfroLAnews.org…Through her writing, Butler models the concept of having a found family – people one chooses to surround themself with for security and companionship. She demonstrates how small acts of kindness and acceptance can have a ripple effect.

Navigating complexity: Embracing the human pace

by Dark Matter Labs on Medium…Many-to-Many is designed for groups who want to collaborate to solve complex challenges but require new ideas about value, ownership, and power.

Critical responses to global systemic risk in an era of polycrisis

by Ruth Richardson in the International Journal of Disaster Risk Science…As grand challenges intensify and intersect across the globe, policymakers and decision makers at all levels continue to face mounting pressures. Increasing fiscal and financial constraints, cognitive overload, and a persistent lock-in to crisis response modes prevent—or, indeed, derail—the development of long-term policies and actions needed to move toward a safer, more just, and sustainable future.

Big tech and the US digital-military-industrial complex

by Andrea Coveri, et al, in Intereconomics…The link between Big Tech and the military apparatus brings back traditions of economic thought too often forgotten or intentionally removed, such as the twentieth century theories of imperialism and monopoly capital (Hobson, 1902; Baran & Sweezy, 1966). The debate on the military-industrial complex, a concept associated with President Eisenhower’s farewell address in 1961, also regains relevance. However, it seems to have been transformed into a digital-military-industrial complex where the key actor, Big Tech, share the peculiarity of being, at the same time, big market players, controllers of technologies essential to citizens’ lives and indispensable partners of the military apparatus. This makes the integration of state and private capital even closer and more complex than in the past.

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