A curated list of awesome CSS frameworks, style guides, tools, and resources for writing amazing CSS.
Awesome CSS is a curated, open-source directory of high-quality CSS resources, including frameworks, preprocessors, style guides, tools, and educational content. It solves the problem of discovering and evaluating the vast ecosystem of CSS libraries and best practices by providing a centralized, community-vetted list.
Frontend developers, UI/UX designers, and web developers who want to improve their CSS skills, stay updated with modern tools, and find reliable resources for building scalable stylesheets.
Developers choose Awesome CSS because it saves time searching for quality resources, offers a comprehensive and well-organized reference, and is maintained by the community to ensure relevance and accuracy in the fast-evolving CSS landscape.
:art: A curated contents of amazing CSS :)
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates frameworks, preprocessors, style guides, and tools in one place, saving developers from scattered searches, as shown in the structured categories like Frameworks and Preprocessors.
Organized into clear sections such as Parsers, Code Style Guidelines, and CSS-in-JS, making it easy to navigate specific topics based on the detailed table of contents.
Includes tutorials, videos, podcasts, and books from industry experts, aiding skill development with materials like CSS Secrets and tutorials from sources like MDN.
Maintained by contributors with open-source guidelines, ensuring diverse input and ongoing updates, as indicated in the Contribute section and Travis CI integration.
Features CSS usage from large-scale websites like GitHub and Trello, providing practical insights into scalable CSS architectures, as listed in the CSS Development at Large-Scale Websites section.
As a curated list, it may not always reflect the very latest tools or trends, relying on periodic community updates, which can lag behind rapid CSS ecosystem changes.
Lists resources without ratings or reviews, so users must evaluate suitability themselves, leading to potential overwhelm or misselection among the many options.
Provides links and descriptions but no interactive tools or hands-on guidance, which might not suit learners who prefer active, project-based approaches.