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Changing the Font & Style of Your H1 Tags

QUESTION: (Rhonda) I am having problems changing the font size of my H1text. Is this very important? If so, how do I go about changing it?

Changing the text and/or style of an H1 tag is simple in CSS.  It does not affect anything other than how the visitor sees it though (i.e., if you use a large font, it means nothing more than a smaller font, in SEO terms or how Google sees it).

You can change the H1 tag locally or in the CSS definition file.

If you want to change all of the H1 tag settings in your entire website, you would do this in the CSS file:

h1 {
font-size: 24px;
}

You would use the h1 tag as you normally would:
<h1>This is my H1 tag</h1>

You can define a class in the CSS file which allows you to define your new style whenever you wish anywhere on the site:

.h1style {
font-size: 24px;
}

You would add this class to your h1 tag, when you wish it:

<h1 class=”h1style”>This is my H1 Tag</h1>

* Remember to add the “.” when defining it in the CSS to classify it as a class.

Finally, you can do it locally using a style attribute (without the CSS file):

<h1 style=”font-size:24px;”>This is my H1 Tag</h1>

All of the above do the exact same thing.  Their use is based on how often you use the style and how you want it defined (whether globally or locally).

Also, remember you can add other styles to the same definition (like color):

<h1 style=”font-size:24px; color:red;”>This is my H1 Tag that is Red and 24px high</h1>

I find that being able to change the styles of my text for header and other standard tags to be quite invaluable!  Knowing a little bit of CSS can go a long way.  Give this a try!

The easiest thing to try first is the local definition using the style attribute. If this is working for you, consider creating or editing your own CSS file!

Good luck!  cheers…matt


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Matthew Bredel begin_of_the_skype_highlighting     end_of_the_skype_highlightingMy name is Matthew Bredel and as of March, 2007, I am a full-time, work-at-home internet marketer. For close to 10 years, I worked for a defense company which was an OK job, but I was so uninspired in life and frankly, I needed some more money. That is when I first discovered internet marketing! Now I admit that I didn't start making thousands in my first couple of months (in fact, I lost my shirt!), but I finally saw the "internet light"...

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I have been creating videos for well over a year now and everytime I attempt a new video venture (this time, video blogging) I seem to re-visit Microsoft's Windows Media Video (WMV) format. And just like every other time, I run into a major stumbling block using this video encoding type. In this [...]

I have been creating videos for well over a year now and everytime I attempt a new video venture (this time, video blogging) I seem to re-visit Microsoft's Windows Media Video (WMV) format. And just like every other time, I run into a major stumbling block using this video encoding type. In this video, I talk about using the raws form of video (AVI) when it is possible. This is great in theory, but the file sizes usually make it a bit prohibitive to use. For this video, I stick with Flash (FLV) formating.

The problem I was running into this time was the Windows Media Encoder (which creates the WMV file) could not combine two different signals (one from a USB camera and the other from a USB microphone) into a synchronous stream. The funny thing is that the Flash encoder (for FLV and SWF) seems to do this just fine.

The uploaded file is now in Flash (FLV) format and this sound delay is temporarily resolved. Still, this poses problems for video distribution, but we will cover that in another video!

Formats available: Flash Video (.flv)

Don't Buy Another Money Making Product Until You Watch These FREE Videos!

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2 Responses to “My War With WMV”

  1. Why are there problems with video distribution of flv files? I use this format or quicktime and find no problem. Anyone can play flv files.


  2. I totally agree! Flash is a great and universal video format. I think the problem is that they are not Microsoft or Apple. Being a third party to the major two software developers is tough. At least Adobe got PDF working right. In theory, WMV is more compressed, but I have been finding that with the compression, they are losing a whole lot more. Personally, I have always been a bit weary about WMV because of the redirect functions they can do, too. Quicktime is very good, but usually not built into most PC’s…it can be installed easily, though. Most PC applications do not export in this, though (MOV, that is). You need a translator…which is one more thing to go wrong!

    cheers…matt

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