Projects using Elementor in Georgia
Projects using Elementor in Georgia
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James Okeke
Missioncare - Empowering Change, One Action At A Time.
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14
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4
Toni Stuckey
pro
WordPress Project Enhancements
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34
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2
Bassey Saviour
Live backend feed of a landing page built in Wordpress. Built using Gutenberg and Kadence blocks with a little CSS hidden around. This website is for an interior design company.
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118
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Karmen Kendrick
Maverick Campus Quest Brand & Web Design
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11
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Terell Baker
Website Redesign for Manufacturing Company
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4
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Darnel Castor
Business Consulting website
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5
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Jay Kim
$2,500 Gym Website
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4
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Derek Burns
TruHealth – Healthy Happy Home
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2
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Briana Jones
Professional Website Design
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0
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4
Toni Stuckey
pro
Technical Roadmap and Plugin Complete
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32
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Bassey Saviour
Sales landing page hero section for a wedding planner. In 2 seconds, everyone who visits this page can tell what she does without confusion. Befitting image, No buzzwords, just a human addressing a pain point of another human. That's what your landing page should do.
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50
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Karmen Kendrick
Upper Echelon Consulting Brand & Website Redesign
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9
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Terell Baker
Website Redesign for Popular Online Influencer
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1
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James Okeke
Video Creator Course
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26
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Jay Kim
$5,000 Gym Website With 7 Pages
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4
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3
Bassey Saviour
I love WordPress projects that require ditching plugins for the smallest details. Client brief: add a custom on-brand icon to each nav item that swaps on hover. Simple enough in theory. In practice? Sure, there's a plugin for that. But why bloat the site when a few lines of CSS can do the job? The challenge: Elementor's nav widget owns the ::before pseudo-element internally. Every approach kept breaking: • ::before hijacked by Elementor's styles — rendering a broken image box with a red background • ::after collapsed entirely due to Elementor injecting padding-right: 0px • !important declarations losing to Elementor's scoped widget styles • Tablet nav runs on a separate DOM structure (.elementor-nav-menu--dropdown) — desktop CSS didn't carry over • Submenu items under .elementor-sub-item needed their own selectors The fix: ditch pseudo-elements entirely. Use the anchor tag's own background-image property instead. No conflicts, no interference. One consolidated CSS block. Zero JavaScript. Clean icon swap across every breakpoint. That's the job.
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