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Wednesday, 22 May 2013
3 Free WordPress Frameworks When Themes Just Aren’t Enough
Wednesday, 22 May 2013 by Unknown
All that to say that WordPress is extremely pervasive and all kinds of people know about it and use it. Why? Because it’s easy to set up, easy to use, and easy to customize based on your own personal preferences. Specifically, I’m talking about themes, which are almost one-click installations and can completely change the look of your WordPress site.
But what if themes aren’t enough? Frameworks act as great starting points when you want to fiddle around and create your own designs and themes. However, even if you aren’t a designer, frameworks will still help you -because frameworks are more than themes. They can add different features, make maintenance easier, and even optimize WordPress in certain ways.
Thematic
Back in 2010, MakeUseOf posted an article covering the Thematic WordPress Framework. Since then, there have a whole slew of new features added, many bugs fixed, tons of optimizations made – it’s just better. And not to mention that Thematic remains one of the most popular free WordPress frameworks. That says something.
What can you expect from Thematic?
- Thematic is fully optimized for search engine optimization, so you’ll have the tools necessary to rank your blog posts as highly as possible on search engines.
- Supports different layout styles, including 2- and 3-columns.
- Use it as a starting point for developing new themes, or use one of the many themes already available, or re-skin existing themes using the child themes system.
- Lots of widget areas. Basic WordPress themes only have a sidebar and maybe a header bar, but Thematic has 13 widget areas that can be enabled or disabled according to your needs.
- Supports blogs with multiple authors.
Hybrid
Hybrid is one of my favorite WordPress frameworks, all because it’s so easy to use. On one of my personal blogs, I had it up and running in less than 5 minutes. It’s very user-friendly and has enough customization to satisfy most users.
Hybrid works by having an actual framework called Hybrid Core, and then having separate themes built on top of that Core. Theme developers can pick and choose which features of Core they want to include in their themes.
What can you expect from Hybrid?
- Multiple layout options and styles, including 1-, 2-, and 3-columns.
- Built-in jQuery scripts that provide additional functionality, like drop-drown menus in the header.
- Built-in support for easy translation. Hybrid Core was built with translation in mind.
- Miscellaneous blog features that theme developers can use, including breadcrumb trails, a polished image gallery, pagination, and templates for different post types.
Reverie
The Reverie website can describe its own product better than I ever could:
Reverie Framework is an extremely versatile HTML5 WordPress framework based on ZURB’s Foundation. Reverie follows the HTML5 Boilerplate standard and … is optimized for Search Engine while at the same time improving readability.It is extremely easy to create your blog, CMS, brochure and any other kind of sites with Reverie.
The best thing about Reverie is that it is a responsive WordPress framework. That means that the framework will adapt to the current user’s device – it will stretch to fit the screen if the user is on a computer, or it will present a more fitting layout if the user is on a mobile device. Reverie is especially optimized for iPhones and iPads.
If you’re using bbPress 2.0 or BuddyPress 1.5 on your WordPress site, then you’ll be glad to know that Reverie works seamlessly with them.
Conclusion
Have you ever used any of these frameworks? If so, tell us about your experiences in the comments. Also, if you know of any other free WordPress frameworks, share those, too! I’d love to know if I’ve missed anything.

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