Web Design
1378 sites
https://killalocalpedophile.neocities.org/
A privacy-focused personal page by a self-described 'Privacy Guy' who shares guides, websites, and resources related to online privacy and anti-surveillance. The site features an old-web aesthetic with badges, buttons, and links to tools like SpyWare Watchdogs, along with a 'badass html guide' for fellow web builders.
https://unartur.de/
A Quaint Laboratorium is a stylized personal homepage by Lyonid, built with a laboratory or forgotten-facility aesthetic and featuring JavaScript-powered graphical tools, randomization, and colorful animations. The site is part of the Neocities web revival scene, designed to work on mobile and inviting visitors to explore its whimsical, handcrafted interior.
https://456bereastreet.com/
Roger Johansson's 456 Berea Street is a long-running technical blog covering web standards, CSS techniques, accessibility, and usability best practices. Articles range from practical CSS layout tricks to screen reader compatibility tips, making it a valuable reference for front-end developers who care about building the web correctly.
https://lofihi.fi/
Espen's minimal personal page introduces local.html, a client-side webring concept that lets you build a decentralized webring using simple HTML link attributes. The project is a clever take on old-web connectivity, allowing anyone to create a friend ring by adding a single anchor tag to their page.
https://brucelawson.co.uk/2022/why-the-html-outlining-algorithm-was-removed-from-the-spec-the-truth-will-shock-you
Bruce Lawson is a veteran web accessibility and standards consultant who shares in-depth technical articles about HTML, CSS, and browser behavior. This particular post digs into why the HTML outlining algorithm was removed from the spec, a topic that will resonate with anyone who has wrestled with sectioning elements and heading levels.
https://flamedfury.neocities.org/links
Flamed Fury's curated links page collects blogrolls, web tools, and developer resources from the indie web community, with a strong focus on personal sites built with Eleventy, Neocities, and modern front-end techniques. The list highlights figures like Cory Dransfeldt, Robb Knight, and Kevin Powell, making it a solid starting point for anyone exploring the small web and IndieWeb movement.
http://onlinetools.org/articles/unobtrusivejavascript/chapter2.html
Chapter 2 of Christian Heilmann's 'Unobtrusive JavaScript' tutorial series, teaching developers how to navigate and manipulate HTML elements using the DOM without inline event handlers. The guide covers getElementById, getElementsByTagName, node tree traversal, and practical rollover examples with downloadable demos.
https://swiftyshq.neocities.org/
Swifty's HQ is a personal homepage on Neocities built with accessibility and customization in mind, offering multiple color contrast styles including dark, light, and dim modes. The site is notably thoughtful about inclusive design, featuring screen-reader-friendly elements, skiplinks, and cross-device compatibility.
https://doglike.nekoweb.org/
Weird Dog is a handcrafted personal homepage on Nekoweb built with a playful, old-web aesthetic featuring gifs, marquees, and hoverable text elements. The site greets visitors with a friendly content warning about its amateur coding, bright colors, and mild language before inviting them inside.
http://themostamazingwebsiteontheinternet.com/
Chris built this chaotic, caps-lock-heavy homepage as a class project for ISYS 202, complete with a gun preference form, a quirky questionnaire profile, and an enthusiastic dream of becoming a big internet-web man. It's a genuinely charming artifact of early web learning, full of misspellings, exclamation points, and a cameo from a wizard Tom Cruise.