Hello, man!

Yeah, both your statements are correct (so is the third: bootstrap 1 wasn't 
responsive).
As it gets popular, you'll certainly find more resources for it, including 
psd templates. 
But, as you get used to it, you'll understand that creating wonderful 
designs with it is just a matter of configuring a few variables and 
including images at the right spots.
I have an app aimed to help people creating themes for it, if you feel 
interested, check it out at http://bootswatcher.com. I hope it may help.

Regards


Em quarta-feira, 7 de novembro de 2012 08h42min28s UTC-2, oo7 escreveu:
>
> Hi, apologies this is my first post so please bare with me :)
>
> I have two questions which i hope someone can help me with:
>
>
> *01 - Which of my understandings is correct?*
>
> A - Twitter Bootstrap is a mainly framework for providing common defined 
> components for a website, such as layouts, forms, buttons etc
>
> B - Twitter Bootstrap is a mainly framework for creating responsive 
> websites
>
> I understand both are probably correct but what was the first main 
> intention of the Twitter Bootstrap
>
> *02 - Are there template psd's available or should you just design your 
> sites with the already predefined layouts that come with bootstrap and then 
> just focus on designing the elements that site inside each div on your 
> site. In other words you design as you code and then apply your custom 
> design. I presume the idea is that all of your layouts are already designed 
> with Twitter Bootstrap, so why would you need a psd to begin with.*
>
> Sorry, finding it hard to get my head around all of this framework as i am 
> so used to designing in Photoshop, then coding the design to html / css.
>
> Thanks in advance to any help you may have...
>

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