My Favorite WordPress Plugins
When you install a WordPress blog on your own server, you can install plugins to enhance the functionality and improve security. These are some of my favorites:
- Maintenance Mode - Nice plugin for displaying a maintenance message when you’re working on the site.
- Twitter Tools - for integration between your WordPress blog and Twitter account
- WP-SpamFree - Terrific anti-spam plugin
- Contact Form 7 - simple, flexible contact form plugin
- Platinum SEO Pack - Good search engine optimization plugin
- ThickBox - Add ThickBox galleries to your blog
- Multi-level Navigation - for accessible dropdown/flyout/slider navigation
- Google Sitemaps - Creates a Google Sitemaps compliant XML-Sitemap of your WordPress blog
- Image Widget - Image widget for sidebar so clients can easily update images
- Rich Text Widget - Adds a rich text editor widget so your client won’t have to work with code in a text widget.
These are just a few of the plugins I use most frequently. There are many more available. If you can think of something that you’d like to do in WordPress, the odds are good that there’s a plugin for it. When you download plugins, there should be a readme.txt file with installation instructions and notes, but generally you can just add the folder to your plugins directory and activate it through the admin panel. Remember to deactivate plugins when upgrading WordPress and check to make sure that the ones you’re using are compatible with the version you’re upgrading to.

As every designer knows (or will find out), you won’t always be working for people who understand what you do. I can’t tell you how many times my boss has said “Can’t you just get an image off the internet?” or been appalled by the fact that a font might cost $22! I’ve had to explain copyright laws more times than I care to remember, and I’ve given up on trying to explain why a one-inch square 72dpi image can’t be stretched to fit a five-inch square space in a print layout. Most employers in the business world don’t want to pay for stock images or fonts…that’s where these folks come in. istockphoto.com has saved my portfolio countless times and for only a few dollars. 

I’ve been a designer for 20 years. I started in the days of waxers and transfer letters, transitioned to the computer in the late eighties, and tackled web design in the early nineties. I’ve tried to keep up with all of the software and technologies of the trade, from HTML to CSS and ASP, Pagemaker to InDesign. I’ve worked in both worlds–freelance and corporate, finding that they both have their upsides and drawbacks. It’s a challenge to stay current, but it’s my passion and the perfect profession for someone who never wants to be bored! I hope that I have something valuable to offer other designers.



