New WordPress Default Theme Twenty Seventeen Merged into 4.7

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WordPress 4.7 will ship with a new default theme in December. David Kennedy merged Twenty Seventeen into core yesterday as his first commit to WordPress. Any remaining development issues for the project will now be managed via Trac.

In the merge proposal, Kennedy described Twenty Seventeen as “an ambitious theme that focuses on a creative home page and an easy site setup experience for users.” It is the first default theme designed specifically for business websites. The theme includes four customizable panels on the front page (as seen in Kennedy’s demo video below), which can be set to display content from existing pages. It includes support for uploading a custom logo and uses SVG icons throughout the theme, which Kennedy notes is a first for a default theme.

Twenty Seventeen will offer three different options for a color scheme: light, dark, or custom (which can be set via a user-friendly color-picker):

“Twenty Seventeen will ship with its current implementation of panels in the theme and without video headers,” Kennedy said during yesterday’s core development meeting. A ticket for adding core support for video headers is open on Trac and contributors are still working out all of the intricacies of the feature. It may not be ready to ship with the first version of Twenty Seventeen, but it’s an exciting step forward for standardizing an approach for developers who want to build video headers into their themes.

“Video headers are definitely doable,” Nick Halsey said during yesterday’s meeting. “It’s a matter of getting consensus on the best approach on the ticket.”

Contributors have also discussed creating a multi-panel page that lets users select content for the different sections. It would benefit Twenty Seventeen but contributors are considering giving it more time in development as a feature plugin.

“Regarding multi-panel, I’d agree that it’s not going to make it,” Kennedy said in the #core Slack channel today. “That isn’t to diminish the awesome work done so far, but it needs more. I’d like to start making plans for it to be a feature plugin, perhaps. I want to see the momentum continue. Core needs a solution around this, and it will take more people to help make it even better.”

Twenty Seventeen has had 59 contributors to date and may gain a few more before the 4.7 release cycle is finished. The theme will benefit from testing in as many different environments as possible, since it will immediately be high profile as the next default WordPress theme.

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11 responses to “New WordPress Default Theme Twenty Seventeen Merged into 4.7”

  1. Thanks for the article, Sarah! :)

    One part isn’t exactly correct, and may cause confusion:

    It includes support for uploading a custom logo and SVG icons, which Kennedy notes is a first for a default theme.

    It includes support for custom logos. And uses SVG icons for things like the social links menu and in other areas of the theme, but you can’t upload SVG logos in WordPress. Yet.

  2. Great work! Not sure if this is intended, but if “Static Front Page” is “Your latest posts” then the “Panels” panels still show. Also, not sure if this has been addressed, but I think the “Panels” panels should be named “Slots” or “Static Page Slot” or “Showcase #1” or similar. Custo already uses “Panels.” Just nitpicking :D

  3. That is the nicest default theme that has ever been made! Fades to dark for the parallax background images. With lots of simple customizable options for the non-pros. This is what WP should be shooting forever time!
    I’m having to come up with a mobile fix for Twenty Fifteen right now because that theme was so bad (not centered, left bar thrown at the bottom, etc).

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