A curated collection of essential CSS talks covering Grid, flexbox, custom properties, performance, frameworks, and tooling.
Must-Watch CSS is a curated GitHub repository listing essential video talks and presentations about Cascading Style Sheets. It solves the problem of discovering high-quality, expert-led CSS content scattered across different conferences and platforms by providing a single, organized reference. The collection spans over a decade, covering foundational and advanced topics to help developers improve their skills.
Frontend developers, UI engineers, and web designers who want to learn CSS deeply from conference presentations and industry experts. It's especially useful for those preparing for advanced frontend roles or seeking to master modern layout techniques.
Developers choose this because it saves time searching for quality CSS content, offers a community-vetted selection of talks, and provides a historical view of CSS evolution. Its focused, CSS-only scope makes it more specialized than general frontend learning platforms.
🔥 CSS talks you have to see ⚡️ covering CSS Grid, flexbox, custom variables, performance, frameworks, Sass, tools, and more! 🚀
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Aggregates talks from major conferences like CSSConf and dotCSS, featuring industry leaders such as Lea Verou and Rachel Andrew, ensuring high-quality, vetted content.
Organized chronologically from 2010 to 2025, allowing developers to trace the evolution of CSS concepts like Grid and custom properties over time.
Covers essential areas like CSS Grid, flexbox, performance, and tooling, as listed in the README, providing a comprehensive learning resource.
Each entry includes direct video links and runtimes, saving users from searching multiple platforms and verifying video availability.
The README shows limited entries for recent years (e.g., only one talk in 2025), indicating potential delays in covering the fastest-evolving CSS trends.
As a video-only collection, it requires significant time investment without interactive exercises or direct code implementation guidance.
Talks are listed only by year, lacking categorization by specific topics like animations or performance, forcing manual scanning to find relevant content.