A curated list of awesome packages, articles, and resources for the Wagtail CMS community.
Awesome Wagtail is a curated, community-maintained list of resources for the Wagtail CMS. It aggregates packages, articles, tools, and tutorials to help developers and content managers build, extend, and optimize Wagtail-based websites. The project solves the problem of discovering quality third-party add-ons and learning materials in the growing Wagtail ecosystem.
Wagtail developers, Django developers building content-driven sites, and content managers seeking to enhance their Wagtail admin experience. It's also valuable for teams evaluating Wagtail for their projects.
Developers choose Awesome Wagtail because it provides a single, trusted source for discovering vetted extensions and learning resources, saving significant research time. Its comprehensive categorization and active community maintenance ensure the information is relevant and up-to-date.
A curated list of awesome packages, articles, and other cool resources from the Wagtail community.
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 hundreds of third-party packages, starter kits, and community contributions across clearly categorized sections like Apps, Tools, and Resources, as detailed in the extensive README.
Highlights resources from the global Wagtail community, including presentations, podcasts, and articles, fostering collaboration and shared knowledge, as emphasized in the 'Community' section.
Includes dedicated guides and manuals for content editors using Wagtail, such as the 'For editors' section with portals from Mozilla and Caltech, bridging the gap between developers and content managers.
Features open-source sites built with Wagtail in the 'Showcases' and 'Open-source sites' sections, providing real-world examples for reference and project inspiration.
As a curated list, it may contain outdated links or unmaintained packages, with no explicit quality control or vetting process mentioned in the README, relying on community contributions.
The vast, unstructured volume of resources without prioritization, ratings, or beginner guidance can lead to decision paralysis for users new to Wagtail, as noted in the lack of curated learning paths.
Merely a directory; users must independently research, install, and troubleshoot packages, with no built-in compatibility checks or dependency management, increasing setup complexity.