
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
#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
Blog
News & Events
Favorites
What We’re Known For //
11
Brunch
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.Â
Button 1
Button 2
Button 3
Button 4
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

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.
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.
The security blind spot: Cascading climate impacts and tipping points threaten national security
by Laurie Laybourn, et al. in IPPR…Recent governments have not considered climate change a priority national security issue. But climate-security threats are non-linear and are escalating, posing profound challenges to national and international security.
Applying resilience thinking
from Stockholm Resilience Centre….Simply enhancing the resilience of the existing ecosystem services can entrench and exacerbate inequalities. Important trade-offs exist between different ecosystem services (e.g. crop production and biodiversity), and it is not possible to enhance the resilience of all ecosystem services simultaneously.
Hurricane Helene isn’t an outlier. It’s a harbinger of the future.
by John Morales in The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists…And then came the rain.
Preliminary storm-total rainfall measured on the ground included nearly 31 inches (782 millimeters) in Yancey County, northeast of Asheville, North Carolina. Radar estimated totals in areas where there were no rain gauges exceeded 40 inches (1,000 mm) just over the state line in South Carolina’s Greenville County.
Chartbook 325: Wrestling with transition thinking. Or on being “interregnumed” and how to resist it. (Hegemony notes 8)
by Adam Tooze in Chartbook 325…The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying but the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.
Yuval Noah Harari on the eclipsing of human intelligence
Sean Illing of The Gray Area interviews Yuval Noah Harari…If the internet age has anything like an ideology, it’s that more information and more data and more openness will create a better world. The reality is more complicated. It has never been easier to know more about The world than it is right now, and it has never been easier to share that knowledge than it is right now. But I don’t think you can look at the state of things and conclude that this has been a victory for truth and wisdom. What are we to make of that? More information might not be the solution, but neither is more ignorance.
How rising global heat connects catastrophic floods on four continents
by Scott Dance in The Washington Post…At this time of year, that flood potential amped up by global warming can become especially evident.
Scaling: The state of play in AI
by Ethan Mollick in One Useful Thing…With continued advancements in model architecture and training techniques, we’re approaching a new frontier in AI capabilities. The independent AI agents that tech companies have long promised are likely just around the corner. These systems will be able to handle complex tasks with minimal human oversight, with wide-ranging implications. As the pace of AI development seems more certain to accelerate, we need to prepare for both the opportunities and challenges ahead.
Facing global risks with honest hope
From (ASRA) Accelerator for Systemic Risk Assessment report Facing global risks with honest hope….Transforming Multidimensional
Challenges into Multidimensional
Possibilities
Superbugs ‘could kill 39m people by 2050’ amid rising drug resistance
by Kat Lay in The Guardian…Child deaths from infections see ‘remarkable’ decline but AMR fatalities of over-70s likely to rise by 146%, study finds
Analysis: Drug-resistant infections are on the rise – so why aren’t we getting any new antibiotics?
Global trends are polarizing us: Can democracy handle it?
by Richard Heinberg in resilience.org….Today the world faces historically unique stresses that are likely to be increasingly polarizing for many societies. These stresses can be divided into three groups—environmental, economic, and technological. After examining these, we’ll explore two questions: first, is democracy inherently more polarizing than autocratic forms of government? And second, are democracies or autocracies better at handling crises?
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