Click here to flash read.
Now adding new features that do customiseable ability, every piece of text gets it's own flavour, so that you can now characterise the type of the word it is. Soon to be on variable equations so you can oscillate between many options, probably limit it at 3, but hey, javascript.
For example, insert:
.plain1.plain {transform: translate(.1em, 1.2em); color: #ffba11 !important; font-family: Impact, 'Anton', Haettenschweiler, 'Arial Narrow Bold', sans-serif; font-weight: 700; font-style: italic; display: block; position: relative; letter-spacing: -.005em;} .plain1.plain::before { position: relative; -webkit-text-stroke: .1em black; z-index: 0; transform: translate(.255em, 1em); content: attr(data-text); display: block; position: relative; padding: 0 .1em; z-index: 1;}; .plain1.plain::before {color: #ffba11; transform: translate(-.255em, 1em);} .plain1.plain::after {color: #b6acff; transform: translate(-.255em, -0.9em); content: attr(data-text); display: block; position: relative; padding: 0 .1em; z-index: 1;}
And your in.
The number after "plain" in the beginning dictates the word ID, and can only be applied to itself, or across other words when used with other dictionaries for an interplay.
as you can see: