"The user's browsing environment is not predictable. Tell other developers, and for goodness sakes, tell your designers."
— Stephanie Eckles
Chris Coyier
Chris Coyier writes about front-end development in a way that feels closely connected to the everyday reality of building for the web. On his blog, he moves across CSS, HTML, JavaScript, browser features, typography, accessibility, and the broader craft of making websites, often blending technical explanation with personal reflection from years of experience in the field. His background as the co-founder of CodePen and the former owner of CSS-Tricks comes through in the tone of his writing: practical, curious, and deeply engaged with how the web keeps changing. Rather than focusing only on theory, his posts tend to stay grounded in real implementation, which gives the blog the feel of an ongoing conversation with the front-end community about how modern web development actually works.
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Stephanie Eckles
Stephanie Eckles writes about front-end development with a strong emphasis on modern CSS, accessibility, design systems, and practical patterns that developers can apply directly in their own work. Her writing is closely connected to the projects she has built for the community, especially ModernCSS.dev, which is centered on updated solutions to long-standing CSS problems, and that focus gives her blog a clear identity: it is about writing cleaner, more resilient, more maintainable front-end code using the native platform well. Across her work, there is a consistent attention to usability, scalable styling, and real-world implementation, shaped by both her teaching background and her experience building design systems professionally. That combination makes her blog feel especially relevant to developers who want to improve their CSS in ways that are current, practical, and grounded in how production interfaces are actually built.
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Una Kravets
Una Kravets writes about the modern web through the lens of CSS, Web UI, browser capabilities, and design systems, with a style that feels forward-looking and closely tied to the evolution of the platform itself. Her blog often highlights new and experimental features, including changes in color handling, geometry, scrolling behavior, and other emerging pieces of the CSS and browser landscape, while keeping the discussion anchored in interface design and front-end practice. Because of her work in developer advocacy and her long involvement in web education, the blog has a strong sense of momentum: it reads like a record of where the platform is headed and how designers and developers can think with those changes rather than simply react to them. That gives her writing a distinct place among CSS bloggers, especially for readers interested in the future direction of web UI.
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Josh W. Comeau
Josh W. Comeau is one of the most recognizable contemporary educators in front-end development, and his blog stands out for combining deep technical explanations with a playful, highly visual teaching style. He writes about CSS, React, animation, SVG, layout, browser support, and interface details, often turning topics that feel intimidating or abstract into interactive, memorable lessons. His site has become especially well known for tutorials on Flexbox, container queries, color in CSS, motion, and the small implementation details that make interfaces feel polished.
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