/* -------------------------------------------------------------- 
  
   fancy-type.css
   * Lots of pretty advanced classes for manipulating text.
   
   See the Readme file in this folder for additional instructions.

-------------------------------------------------------------- */

body {
background-color: #FFFFFF;
color: #cccccc;
font-family: "Lucida Grande", "Lucida Sans Unicode", Arial, Verdana, sans-serif;
}

h1 {
font-family: "Georgia", "Times New Roman", Times, serif;
color: #2B1727;
text-transform: uppercase;
font-weight: bold; 
}

h2 {
font-family: "Georgia", "Times New Roman", Times, serif;
color: #2B1727;
font-size: 28px;
line-height: 30px;
margin-top: 14px;
margin-bottom: 14px;
}

div, td, p	{
	color: #2B1727;
}

a {
	color: #80AD37;
    text-decoration:none;
}

A:hover {
	text-decoration:none;
	background-color:#80AD37;
	color: #2F381F;
}

/* Indentation instead of line shifts for sibling paragraphs. */
   p + p { text-indent:2em; margin-top:-1.5em; }
   form p + p  { text-indent: 0; } /* Don't want this in forms. */
   

/* For great looking type, use this code instead of asdf: 
   <span class="alt">asdf</span>  
   Best used on prepositions and ampersands. */

.remove-a {
color: #cccccc;
}

.alt { 
  color: #666; 
  font-family: "Warnock Pro", "Goudy Old Style","Palatino","Book Antiqua", Georgia, serif; 
  font-style: italic;
  font-weight: normal;
}

.highlight-white { 
  color: #FFFFFF;
  }

.small-title { 
  color: #474747;
  text-transform: uppercase;
font-weight: bold; 
  padding:2px 0;
  }
  
.small-title-white { 
  color: #FFFFFF;
  text-transform: uppercase;
font-weight: bold; 
  padding:2px 0;
  }



/* For great looking quote marks in titles, replace "asdf" with:
   <span class="dquo">&#8220;</span>asdf&#8221;
   (That is, when the title starts with a quote mark). 
   (You may have to change this value depending on your font size). */  
   
.dquo { margin-left: -.5em; } 


/* Reduced size type with incremental leading
   (http://www.markboulton.co.uk/journal/comments/incremental_leading/)

   This could be used for side notes. For smaller type, you don't necessarily want to 
   follow the 1.5x vertical rhythm -- the line-height is too much. 
   
   Using this class, it reduces your font size and line-height so that for 
   every four lines of normal sized type, there is five lines of the sidenote. eg:

   New type size in em's:
     10px (wanted side note size) / 12px (existing base size) = 0.8333 (new type size in ems)

   New line-height value:
     12px x 1.5 = 18px (old line-height)
     18px x 4 = 72px 
     72px / 5 = 14.4px (new line height)
     14.4px / 10px = 1.44 (new line height in em's) */

p.incr, .incr p {
	font-size: 10px;
	line-height: 1.44em;  
	margin-bottom: 1.5em;
}


/* Surround uppercase words and abbreviations with this class.
   Based on work by Jørgen Arnor Gårdsø Lom [http://twistedintellect.com/] */
   
.caps { 
  font-variant: small-caps; 
  letter-spacing: 1px; 
  text-transform: lowercase; 
  font-size:1.2em;
  line-height:1%;
  font-weight:bold;
  padding:0 2px;
}

