Brutal is based on Neobrutalist Web Design, a movement that aims to create websites with a minimalistic and functional design.
Brutal is a minimal neobrutalist theme for Astro. It's based on Neobrutalist Web Design, a movement that aims to create websites with a minimalistic and functional design. It has some integrations like Image Optimization, RSS, Sitemap, ready to get your SEO done right.
The theme has no JavaScript integration out of the box, but can always be added of course.
This template is based on my own personal website, with some more generic things added.
You can bootstrap a new Astro project using Brutal with the following command:
# npmnpm create astro@latest -- --template eliancodes/brutal# pnpmpnpm create astro@latest --template eliancodes/brutal# yarnyarn create astro --template eliancodes/brutal
All commands are run from the root of the project, from a terminal:
(Here I use PNPM, no problem if you use NPM or Yarn)
Command | Action |
---|---|
pnpm install | Installs dependencies |
pnpm dev | Starts local dev server at localhost:4321 |
pnpm build | Build your production site to ./dist/ |
pnpm preview | Preview your build locally, before deploying |
pnpm astro ... | Run CLI commands like astro add , astro preview |
pnpm astro --help | Get help using the Astro CLI |
In this theme, I'm using UnoCSS to generate the CSS. It's a utility-first CSS framework that uses a single class to style elements. It's very easy to use and has a lot of features. It's setup to be completely compatible with TailwindCSS, with the advantage of being able to use PureCSS icons. You can always switch out UnoCSS for TailwindCSS if you want to, without breaking the general styles.
To generate the sitemap, you don't need to do anything. It's automatically generated when you build your site. You'll just need to switch out the site
on astro.config.ts
to your own.
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';export default defineConfig({site: 'https://example.com',});
The RSS feed is automatically generated from the Markdown files in the src/content/blog
folder. You can ofcourse completely change this to your own needs.
The RSS will output to https://example.com/feed.xml
by default. You can change this, by renaming src/pages/feed.xml.js
.
components/blog/
This directory contains all components for the blog.
components/errors/
This directory contains all error components.
components/errors/404.astro
This component is used when a page is not found.
components/generic/
This directory contains all generic components, reused over multiple pages.
components/home/
This directory contains all components for the home page.
components/layout/
This directory contains all layout components. For instance, the header and footer and <head>
section.
If you need more from this theme, don't hesitate to open an issue or reach out to me!
Brutal is based on Neobrutalist Web Design, a movement that aims to create websites with a minimalistic and functional design.
Brutal is a minimal neobrutalist theme for Astro. It's based on Neobrutalist Web Design, a movement that aims to create websites with a minimalistic and functional design. It has some integrations like Image Optimization, RSS, Sitemap, ready to get your SEO done right.
The theme has no JavaScript integration out of the box, but can always be added of course.
This template is based on my own personal website, with some more generic things added.
You can bootstrap a new Astro project using Brutal with the following command:
# npmnpm create astro@latest -- --template eliancodes/brutal# pnpmpnpm create astro@latest --template eliancodes/brutal# yarnyarn create astro --template eliancodes/brutal
All commands are run from the root of the project, from a terminal:
(Here I use PNPM, no problem if you use NPM or Yarn)
Command | Action |
---|---|
pnpm install | Installs dependencies |
pnpm dev | Starts local dev server at localhost:4321 |
pnpm build | Build your production site to ./dist/ |
pnpm preview | Preview your build locally, before deploying |
pnpm astro ... | Run CLI commands like astro add , astro preview |
pnpm astro --help | Get help using the Astro CLI |
In this theme, I'm using UnoCSS to generate the CSS. It's a utility-first CSS framework that uses a single class to style elements. It's very easy to use and has a lot of features. It's setup to be completely compatible with TailwindCSS, with the advantage of being able to use PureCSS icons. You can always switch out UnoCSS for TailwindCSS if you want to, without breaking the general styles.
To generate the sitemap, you don't need to do anything. It's automatically generated when you build your site. You'll just need to switch out the site
on astro.config.ts
to your own.
import { defineConfig } from 'astro/config';export default defineConfig({site: 'https://example.com',});
The RSS feed is automatically generated from the Markdown files in the src/content/blog
folder. You can ofcourse completely change this to your own needs.
The RSS will output to https://example.com/feed.xml
by default. You can change this, by renaming src/pages/feed.xml.js
.
components/blog/
This directory contains all components for the blog.
components/errors/
This directory contains all error components.
components/errors/404.astro
This component is used when a page is not found.
components/generic/
This directory contains all generic components, reused over multiple pages.
components/home/
This directory contains all components for the home page.
components/layout/
This directory contains all layout components. For instance, the header and footer and <head>
section.
If you need more from this theme, don't hesitate to open an issue or reach out to me!