Project: Pavyon Blog

Pavyon Blog Realmac Software Elements

Pavyon — a modern and clean project for bloggers and content creators. It has responsive layouts that look great on all devices, and you can choose between dark and light modes. The design is easy to use, and you can customize it easily. Pavyon is perfect for sharing stories, tutorials, or updates. Whether you want to start a personal blog or a platform focused on content, Pavyon helps you build and grow your online presence effortlessly.

Preview in Browser and Buy.

Realmac Marketplace
Templays Marketplace

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Congrats on the release, you are really knocking these out of the park!
It’s now live on the Marketplace.

Now all we need is a compatible blogging solution :thinking:

Keep up the good work :clap:

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Thank you @dan
Everyone can enjoy trying to live now

We are here to gather your feedback to enhance the blog.

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I like it as a simple, modern-looking theme. However in content heavy (news, information) sites there needs to be an option for less white space and more seen on one page without scrolling.

I’m also curious how you’re going to tie this theme to a real blog component when it becomes available. That really is the sell/no sell decision point.

I appreciate your feedback.

Can anyone use duplicate page posts for every post than add post in home page.

I will work to improve the UI and Good idea (scrolling)

I am very excited about the blog. I will work on integrating it with CMS.

One tricky aspect of “blog” is something that’s not getting talked about. Some of us prefer all-static sites, and for good reasons. That means that whatever is producing the “blog pages” needs to live off the public-facing deployment server. Having a CMS server on a deployed site is asking for downstream security issues, IMO. I’ve watched plenty of WordPress folk get caught by this. Recovering a static site is so much easier than recovering a data-served site.

But please keep up what you’re doing. I like your clean approach in your designs.

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Hello @thominator

Absolutely agree with your points about static blogs being more secure than CMS-driven ones.

I appreciate your feedback :folded_hands:t2: