To make a gallery you can use CMS to build it super easly. You have to adjust the stack and add an overlay to your mini, displaying the same image in both states just different size and that's it
Man! This is such a valuable video. Will consider your masterclass. Seems that you are one of the few creators that ACTUALLY gets it... I was also thinking, becoming a Framer expert and also becoming a Webflow expert, plus mastering UI principles and UX psychology, is a great goal. I'm currently hunting for that, what do you think?
I have been using Framer since a few months and honestly its been amazing. I have started building websites for clients as freelancer designer. However, I am struggling to make a E-comm website for one of my friend who sells artworks here in India. I feel the backend support to run it is missing. Do y'all see that changing anytime in the near future?
personally yes, framer has the potential of being the main powerhouse web builder for designers, sure they're still inferior in some aspects such as what you mentioned compared to let's say webflow but i dont doubt they'll tackle those issues as framer has got an amazing team rn
Do yall recommend webflow or framer right now? I think im switching from Semplice/wordpress to Webflow but not sure. I’m still a novice at this and learning so any tips I would welcome.
@@KalvinPatel I would honestly learn webflow as once you learn webflow (a harder learning curve but more possibilities) you'll be able to transfer those skills anywhere (like framer) easily.
@@nathanielredmon Ah gotcha! I just gotta figure out how to point the GoDaddy DNS to webflow once I get that installed. I have Bluehost but I stopped auto renew, now need to switch over
Good video, but still theres a lot do manually in Framer while Webflow does it automatically a lot of stuff, like if you want a section that shows only "Featured" blog posts or a specific menu category, you just set a filter. Webflow does the rest, keeping everything dynamically organized.
What I miss on TH-cam is videos that look further into using components as optional CMS items. Like adding a quote or a button for certain blogs, but not for other bogs.
I'd like to build custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like you mentioned around 1:50. I don't know where to start. I don't know how to code but I'm pretty good with Framer and want to advance my skills. Do you use React? I would love to know the complete language stack needed to create custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like shown in the video. Thanks.
I've been wanting to code my own components to add custom property controls on the canvas like you mentioned around 1:50. Where do I start? I don't know how to code but I'm pretty good with Framer and want to learn new skills. What language should I learn to create custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like that? Is it React? I'd love to know the complete stack needed to do this. Thanks.
$40/mo just for a language locale is absurd, add more basic functionalities that need to be handled by third party plugins on a monthly subscription, and suddenly WordPress isn't looking that bad. Try convincing your client that this $200/mo for a website is worth it, and in any way better that a $50/mo website on WP that does the same thing.
@@Psyshimmer $9 or $29 per locale depending on the needs. Still it's crazy. As much as I love Webflow and Framer, clients don't care and just prefer WordPress - free, more customizable with the help of a real developer, and helps the business achieve the same goal a site on Framer or Webflow would, just for less. No-code tools are stupidly expensive, and sure, they help us - designers, but from a client's perspective, it makes no sense to pay that much monthly fee for a site, when you can have the exact same site on WP for basically free.
@@oVISTASEK $15 for a website - yes, but if you want to add language localization, you have to pay additinal $40 per every single language you might need. The price is absurd. Say you have a website in English, that's about $15-$20 depending on the plan you choose, but if you want to have this site also in Spanish and French, you have to pay another $80 / month
Hello @Matt - Thank you for this video. I started with Framer few months ago etc. and now building a megamenu with nested interactive components, but now that I am trying to assemble the navigation, FGramer loses them, do not updates them and is very slow. I have been saving the components in the workspace and dividing components in multiple files"projects". I don't know how Framer can hold 150 pages if breaks components, I am stuck since the past two weeks. Are there any best practice or rules that I am missing . I created many breakpoints (320-2560). Is there any issues with breakpoints? Thank you so much for your help.
Hey flux academy, question here, How can I create a figma frame of 1440x1024 responsive on website so it won't loose its quality and look same on mobile screens
Not sure if I'm understanding your question, but you should never scale a 1440px resolution to mobile. It would be unusable. You need to condense the frame size, reorder elements, etc.
@@Psyshimmer hey thanks, so here’s the context I am building my agency website. for it I am making a on site carousel portfolio in framer for desktop and tablet it’s fine but I am struggling so much for mobile responsiveness. Can you help me with this.
@@hyperbang8849 I would need to see the file or website to give a more precise suggestion, but you just treat the carousel exactly as you normally would on larger screens but condense the carousel objects to fit mobile screens and leave room on the margins of the page for the proceeding and preceding carousel objects to peek out to hint to the user that they can swipe to access other parts of the carousel. Just search on TH-cam "Image carousel Mavi Design" and that will give you a good idea of how to treat it.
@@hyperbang8849 you have to build from scratch some element might stay the same dimension, text is for sure to build from 0 and reorganize everything a well
To make a gallery you can use CMS to build it super easly. You have to adjust the stack and add an overlay to your mini, displaying the same image in both states just different size and that's it
Man! This is such a valuable video. Will consider your masterclass. Seems that you are one of the few creators that ACTUALLY gets it...
I was also thinking, becoming a Framer expert and also becoming a Webflow expert, plus mastering UI principles and UX psychology, is a great goal. I'm currently hunting for that, what do you think?
Informative and no nonsense. Thank you. Subbed
Thanks for the sub!
I have been using Framer since a few months and honestly its been amazing. I have started building websites for clients as freelancer designer. However, I am struggling to make a E-comm website for one of my friend who sells artworks here in India. I feel the backend support to run it is missing. Do y'all see that changing anytime in the near future?
personally yes, framer has the potential of being the main powerhouse web builder for designers, sure they're still inferior in some aspects such as what you mentioned compared to let's say webflow but i dont doubt they'll tackle those issues as framer has got an amazing team rn
Do yall recommend webflow or framer right now? I think im switching from
Semplice/wordpress to Webflow but not sure. I’m still a novice at this and learning so any tips I would welcome.
@@KalvinPatel I would honestly learn webflow as once you learn webflow (a harder learning curve but more possibilities) you'll be able to transfer those skills anywhere (like framer) easily.
@@nathanielredmon Yes, that is true or you could become a framer expert and then move into Webflow. Since Webflow is like learning a new language.
@@nathanielredmon Ah gotcha! I just gotta figure out how to point the GoDaddy DNS to webflow once I get that installed. I have Bluehost but I stopped auto renew, now need to switch over
Good video, but still theres a lot do manually in Framer while Webflow does it automatically a lot of stuff, like if you want a section that shows only "Featured" blog posts or a specific menu category, you just set a filter. Webflow does the rest, keeping everything dynamically organized.
What I miss on TH-cam is videos that look further into using components as optional CMS items. Like adding a quote or a button for certain blogs, but not for other bogs.
you're going to love our next video
I'd like to build custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like you mentioned around 1:50. I don't know where to start. I don't know how to code but I'm pretty good with Framer and want to advance my skills. Do you use React? I would love to know the complete language stack needed to create custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like shown in the video. Thanks.
I've been wanting to code my own components to add custom property controls on the canvas like you mentioned around 1:50. Where do I start? I don't know how to code but I'm pretty good with Framer and want to learn new skills. What language should I learn to create custom components with custom property controls on the canvas like that? Is it React? I'd love to know the complete stack needed to do this. Thanks.
Its all cool but having to pay all the time for each extra is just unreasonable overhead.
$40/mo just for a language locale is absurd, add more basic functionalities that need to be handled by third party plugins on a monthly subscription, and suddenly WordPress isn't looking that bad. Try convincing your client that this $200/mo for a website is worth it, and in any way better that a $50/mo website on WP that does the same thing.
@@Adrian-Sko I haven't looked into Webflow in many months, but don't they also charge this same amount for language locale?
@@Psyshimmer $9 or $29 per locale depending on the needs. Still it's crazy. As much as I love Webflow and Framer, clients don't care and just prefer WordPress - free, more customizable with the help of a real developer, and helps the business achieve the same goal a site on Framer or Webflow would, just for less. No-code tools are stupidly expensive, and sure, they help us - designers, but from a client's perspective, it makes no sense to pay that much monthly fee for a site, when you can have the exact same site on WP for basically free.
@@Adrian-Sko what are you talking about? is it not just 15$ p/m the subscription you pay for hosting and for the website?
@@oVISTASEK $15 for a website - yes, but if you want to add language localization, you have to pay additinal $40 per every single language you might need. The price is absurd. Say you have a website in English, that's about $15-$20 depending on the plan you choose, but if you want to have this site also in Spanish and French, you have to pay another $80 / month
Hello @Matt - Thank you for this video. I started with Framer few months ago etc. and now building a megamenu with nested interactive components, but now that I am trying to assemble the navigation, FGramer loses them, do not updates them and is very slow. I have been saving the components in the workspace and dividing components in multiple files"projects". I don't know how Framer can hold 150 pages if breaks components, I am stuck since the past two weeks. Are there any best practice or rules that I am missing . I created many breakpoints (320-2560). Is there any issues with breakpoints? Thank you so much for your help.
Thanks to clarify these doubts.
Could you make a tutorial on how to create one such website
I really wanted to do CMS sort like finsweet on framer. Can framer do that?
Hi Matt! Is the 30% still available?
custom forms is the problem
a very big one!
Thank you so much
super excited
Hey flux academy, question here, How can I create a figma frame of 1440x1024 responsive on website so it won't loose its quality and look same on mobile screens
Not sure if I'm understanding your question, but you should never scale a 1440px resolution to mobile. It would be unusable. You need to condense the frame size, reorder elements, etc.
@@Psyshimmer hey thanks, so here’s the context I am building my agency website. for it I am making a on site carousel portfolio in framer for desktop and tablet it’s fine but I am struggling so much for mobile responsiveness. Can you help me with this.
@@hyperbang8849 I would need to see the file or website to give a more precise suggestion, but you just treat the carousel exactly as you normally would on larger screens but condense the carousel objects to fit mobile screens and leave room on the margins of the page for the proceeding and preceding carousel objects to peek out to hint to the user that they can swipe to access other parts of the carousel.
Just search on TH-cam "Image carousel Mavi Design" and that will give you a good idea of how to treat it.
@@hyperbang8849I can help you
@@hyperbang8849 you have to build from scratch some element might stay the same dimension, text is for sure to build from 0 and reorganize everything a well
What about ecommerce?
But webflow custom code is already a lot of money a month. It really depends on the goal yeah
lets goooooo jumper
Yes, you CAN build complex websites, but dont expect them to be stable.
💯
No