Setting Up A Menu

Setting Up A Menu

Menus are initially created in Appearance > Menus from the WordPress dashboard. They can then be assigned to certain areas within your website, and will display according to your chosen Header layout.
Alternatively, with Avada 7 and up, you can now create fully Custom Headers using Layouts, and assign your menus using the Menu Element. The remainder of this document looks at how you create, assign and set up a menu using the Global Options, but for more information on Custom Headers, check out Introducing Avada Layouts, How To Build A Custom Header, How To Use The Menu Element video, and the Menu Element doc.,OverviewHow To Setup A New Menu
Assigning A Menu
How To Setup Different Menus On A Per Page BasisUseful Videos,How To Setup A New MenuStep 1 – Navigate to the Appearance > Menus section of your admin sidebar.
Step 2 – Click the Create A New Menu link and enter the desired menu name. To save the menu name, click the Create Menu button.
Step 3 – To add a menu item, select one of your created pages on the left hand side and click the Add to Menu button. You can also add all kinds of different content from the left side.
Step 4 – To add a custom menu item, click the 「Custom Links」 menu item bar, then enter a custom name and URL into the respective text fields and click 「Add to Menu.」
Step 5 – You can further customize the individual Menu Items, but clicking on the Avada Menu Options button on each item.
Step 6 – Manage your menus by using the drag and drop functionality. To create a dropdown menu, simply drag a menu item below and slightly to the right of the menu item above it and it will lock into place. That will set the menu item as child item and will automatically appear as a dropdown menu item.
Step 7 – After setting up your menu, scroll down to the bottom of the page to assign the menu to one of the 5 locations in the Theme Locations box.
Step 8 – Once its all done, make sure you click the Save button.
Here is a screenshot that shows you the various areas and descriptions of the menu section described above.
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Get Avada,Assigning A MenuThere are 5 areas where you can assign a menu in Avada. These are: Main Navigation, Top Navigation, Mobile Navigation, 404 Useful Pages and Sticky Header Navigation. Each of these menu locations can have a custom menu assigned to them. Once a menu is created and assigned to the location, it will be used on the front end for those specified areas.
Main Navigation – This is the Main Menu that shows in the Header area.Top Navigation – This is the top Secondary Menu that can be assigned with headers 2-5.
Mobile Navigation – This is the menu that will be used when viewing on mobile devices. If no menu is chosen, then the desktop menu will appear on mobile views.

404 Useful Pages – This is the Menu that will be used in the 「Helpful Links」 area on the default 404 page, as seen here, and the Search Results Not Found page.
Sticky Header Navigation – You can use this optionally if you want to assign a different menu to the Sticky Header. The Main Menu will be used by defaultMenu Global OptionsWhen assigning Menus, Avada also offers several theme options to help customize the menu. They are located in the Avada > Options > Menu tab. From there, the Global Options will be organized under more specific areas. (e.g. Main Menu, Mobile Menu, Secondary top menu just to name a few). When styling your various menu locations, the settings will be here. For detailed screenshots of the various menu options, see the Menu Section of the Avada Global Options Page.,How To Setup Different Menus On A Per Page BasisSometimes more than one menu is needed for a complex site. There are several reasons for this. A likely case is, when you want to have a one page site with a parallax scrolling menu as a landing page, but also a full site at the same time (see Setting Up A One Page Site for further information). Since the one page site part uses menu anchors for scrolling it will need a different menu than the rest of the site, that will use normal links.
But regardless of why you need multiple menus, with Avada, it』s very easy to achieve. If there is one menu you want mostly on the site, you could assign that in the usual way, as shown above. And then for any pages you want a new menu, just create the alternate menu, go the page, and on the Page Options, select the alternate Menu in the Main Navigation Menu option, as seen below.,Useful VideosSee the How To Create and Assign Menus In Avada video below to get a basic idea of menu creation. In the following video, How To Configure Menus in Avada, we use the Avada University website as an example of how to use both Global Options and Avada Menu Options to configure the menu.

Image Lazy Loading

Image Lazy Loading

In Avada 5.8, we introduced Lazy Load for images. This can be enabled under the Performance tab at Avada > Theme Options > Performance. What this does is to only load the images that are visible in the viewport. As the user scrolls and more images come into view, they are then loaded as well. This provides an instant benefit to page load times, as only the initial images in the viewport are loaded.,Where Is Lazy Load Enabled?Lazy Load is enabled in these areas and elements in Avada:

Blog Element – medium, large, grid and masonry

Blog Archive – medium, large, grid, and masonry

Single Blog Post Featured Image, first and slides

Blog Grid with multiple images

Portfolio Element – grid and masonry

Portfolio Archive

Single Portfolio Post Featured Image, first and slides

Gallery Element

Image Element

Image Before/After Element

Person Element

Testimonial Element

Content Box Element

Flip Box Element

Slider Element

Post Slider Element

Recent Posts Element

Lightbox Element

Container background

Column background
For more information on How Avada Controls Responsive Images, please see the linked doc.

Mega Menu Width

Mega Menu Width

Avada includes a flexible Mega Menu that you can use to completely personalize your website』s menu.
You can set each column』s width individually, or have the menu fill the site width, a custom width or 100% width. We will be talking about these options in detail below.
Before reading this article, we recommend reading our introductory article on Using The Mega Menu and how to set this up. For more info on the Mega Menu』s width settings, please continue reading below.
Mega Menu Full WidthYou can choose to set your Mega Menu』s width to span the full site width. Please note that the Mega Menu』s full width option initially adheres to the value set in the Avada > Theme Options > Layout > Site Width option. For example, if you』ve set your Site Width to 1120px the Mega Menu』s full width will equal 1120px. Setting your Mega Menu to full width overrides the individual column widths set in your Second Level menu items.
There are also further Mega Menu Site Width options in the Theme Options under Avada > Theme Options > Menu > Mega Menu. Here you can override that site width with two new options – Custom Width and 100% Width. Read on further below to find out more about these options.
How To Set The Mega Menu To Full WidthStep 1 – Go to WP Dashboard > Appearance > Menus, locate the first level menu item and click the Avada Menu Options button.
Step 2 – Once the settings window has opened, locate and activate the Fusion Mega Menu & Full Width Mega Menu settings as seen in the example image for this section.
Step 3 – Click 『Save』 to close the Avada Options window and scroll to the bottom and click 「Save Menu」 to save your changes made to the menu.
Mega Menu Column WidthYou can also choose to set your Mega Menu』s column widths individually. This gives you more control over your Mega Menu and how you might want to display it. You set each column』s width by entering a percentage, i.e, 25%.
Remember that 100% is equivalent to the value you』ve set in your Site Width option located in Fusion Theme Options. So if you make it so your column widths equal to 100%, you will have a Full Width Mega Menu. For example, if you have 2 columns in your Mega Menu and you set them to 75%, and 25%, you will end up with a Full Width Mega Menu.
How To Set Column Widths IndividuallyStep 1 – Go to WP Dashboard > Appearance > Menus, locate the first level menu item and click the Avada Options button.
Step 2 – Under the same First Level menu item, make sure the Full Width Mega Menu option is set to Off. If the Full Width Mega Menu is enabled, your custom column widths will not show on the second level menu items.
Step 3 – In your Second Level menu item, enter the percentage value for your Column Width under the Mega Menu Column Width field.
Step 4 – Repeat Step 3 for all your Second Level menu items until you』ve set their respective Column Widths.
Step 5 – Click 「Save Menu」 to save your changes made to the menu.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Make sure the Full Width Mega Menu option is unchecked in order for the Mega Menu Column Width option to appear.767,639 Businesses Trust Avada
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Get Avada,Mega Menu Max-Width Theme OptionsThe Mega Menu Max-Width options are located in Avada > Theme Options > Menu > Mega Menu panel. These options allows you to set a maximum width for the mega menu drop down that is different from the overall site width.
Site WidthThe default value is Site Width, and as long as the Site Width value chosen in Layout > Site Width is in pixels, and not in percentage (%), then the Mega Menu width will automatically match the Site Width.
The Mega Menu needs a pixel value to work correctly, and it cannot take a percentage (%) value. However, the Site Width can take both pixel and percentage (%) values.,100% WidthThe second option is 100% Width. When this is selected, a further option called Mega Menu Interior Content Width appears below this. This option controls the width of the interior content of the mega menu, and two choices appear with this option – Site Width or 100% Width.
Choosing Site Width will make the Mega Menu full width, but the actual menu items will be constrained to the Site Width value. If you select 100% Width, the menu items will stretch across the entire width of the screen.
See the examples below the options panel.
Menu > Mega Menu > Mega Menu Interior Content Width > Site Content
Menu > Mega Menu > Mega Menu Interior Content Width > 100% Width,Custom WidthThe last option is Custom Width. When you select this option, you get another Mege Menu Max Width option below it, and here you input a pixel value. With this options you can make the Mega Menu either smaller or larger than the set Site Width.

Creating A Gallery With Image Elements

Creating A Gallery With Image Elements

The Image Element allows you to create a photo gallery on a page or post through the 『Gallery ID』 option. In this article, we』ll show you how to use the 『Gallery ID』 option to add multiple Image Elements creating a lightbox gallery. To learn how to do this please continue reading below.
Read Our Image Element Article View The Image Element Gallery In ActionNote: This post covers how to create a gallery, where each image is its own Image Element linked through a common Gallery ID. This is primarily to have a lightbox gallery. If you』re looking to create a single element which displays a gallery of images, you may want to check out our Gallery Element for that.
Read Our Gallery Element ArticleHow To Insert An Image ElementStep 1 – Create a new page or edit an existing one.
Step 2 – Click the 『Use Fusion Builder』 button to activate the Fusion Builder.
Step 3 – Insert a Container into the page and then choose a column layout.
Step 4 – Click the 『+ Element』 button to bring up the Elements window. Locate the Image Element and click to add it to the page. Alternatively, just search for 『Image』 and the Image Element will be filtered for your selection.
Step 4 – Insert an image using the 『Image』 option, and set the 『Image Lightbox』 option to Yes. If you』d like to set a different lightbox image, assign one using the 『Lightbox Image』 option.
Step 5 – Configure the Image Element. You can adjust options such as the border, alignment, hover type, and animations.
Step 6 – Add more Image Elements by repeating Steps 4 – 5. If you』d like to retain the styling options you』ve chosen previously, then simply click the 『Clone Element』 icon on the first Image Element, and then only change the assigned image.
The 『Gallery ID』 OptionStep 1 – Once you』ve added all your Image Elements, you can start determining which Image Elements you』d like to add to your Lightbox gallery.
Step 2 – Edit the Image Element you want to add to the Lightbox gallery and locate the 『Gallery ID』 option. To this option, insert a unique gallery ID. For example, TravelGallery.
Step 3 – Keep repeating Step 2 until you』ve added your unique gallery ID to all the Image Elements that will be displayed in the Lightbox gallery. You can add the gallery ID to as many Image Elements as you wish.
Step 4 – Click 『Save Draft』 or 『Publish』 to save your changes.

Avada Page Options

Avada Page Options

Avada Page Options are another way Avada offers powerful flexibility. Through the Page Options, you are able to make individualized changes on a per page/post basis. Avada Page Options will override any corresponding global options set in the Avada Global Options.
Each page or post you create will have a Page Options section with options organized under tabs for each area of the page. You』ll find these options at the bottom of the page/post editor while in the Avada Builder, or in the Page Options tab of the Sidebar in Avada Live.
The Page Options largely follow the flow of various page sections, from top to bottom. Below are screenshots and short descriptions of each different section included in the Avada Page Options. To learn more about Avada』s Option Network System, please follow the link below.
Learn More About Avada』s Options Network SystemWatch the Avada Live Local Options Management video!Avada Page/Post OptionsWhen creating a page, these are the Avada Page Options tabs you will see. Continue reading below to learn more about each tab.

Settings – THIS TAB IS ONLY FOUND IN THE PAGE OPTIONS IN AVADA LIVE. These options allow you to set the Page Settings, such as the Title, SLUG, Parent, Page Template and Featured Images. View the Settings options here. In the back end interface of the Avada Builder, you will find these options on the right-hand side of the page.

Layout Tab – These options allow you to set broad layout options that apply to the whole layout, such as Wide/Boxed, and background color or image. View Layout tab options here.
Header Tab – These options allow you to show/hide the header, customize it, or upload a background image. View the Header options here.Sliders Tab – These options allow you to set a slider on the page and customize it. View the Sliders options here.Page Title Bar Tab – These options allow you to show/hide and customize the page title bar on the page. View the Page Title Bar options here.Content Tab – These options allow you to set padding, background color or background image for the content area. View the Content options here.Sidebars Tab – These options allow you to set sidebars on the page. View Sidebar options here.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The Global Sidebars option located in 『Avada Theme Options > Sidebars』 must be disabled for these options to take effect.Footer Tab – These options allow you to show/hide the footer and its other footer elements. View the Footer options here.
Custom CSS – THIS TAB IS ONLY FOUND IN THE PAGE OPTIONS IN AVADA LIVE. This tab allows you to add Custom CSS for the individual page/ post when editing in the Front-End Builder. In the back end interface of the Avada Builder, this tab is found along the top Toolbar.

Import / Export Tab – These options allow you to save and manage custom sets of Page Options, as well as exporting and importing Page Options. View the Import / Export options here.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Avada Page Options will override any corresponding global options set in Avada Global Options.Blog, Portfolio and FAQ Single Post OptionsBlog, Portfolio and FAQ are custom post types. When you create a new post for each of these 3 items, you will see a new Page Options tab available, dedicated to that particular post type. Continue reading below to learn more about each tab.
Post Tab – Displayed only on Blog posts. These options will affect the blog post they』re set on. View the Blog options here.
Post Settings Tab – NB. THIS TAB IS ONLY FOUND IN THE PAGE OPTIONS IN POSTS IN AVADA LIVE. These options allow you to set the Post Settings, such as the Title, SLUG, Parent, Post Format, Categories, Tags and Featured Images. View the Settings options here. These are found on the right-hand side of the post in the back end interface of the Avada Builder.
Portfolio Tab – Displayed only on Portfolio posts. These options will affect the portfolio post they』re set on. View the Portfolio options here.
Portfolio Settings Tab – NB. THIS TAB IS ONLY FOUND IN THE PAGE OPTIONS IN POSTS IN AVADA LIVE. These options allow you to set the Portfolio item Settings, such as the Title, SLUG, Post Format, Portfolio Categories, Skills & Tags, and Featured Images. View the Settings options here. These are found on the right-hand side of the portfolio item in the back end interface of the Avada Builder.
FAQ Tab – Displayed only on FAQ items. These options will affect the FAQ items they』re set on. View the FAQ options here.
FAQ Settings Tab – NB. THIS TAB IS ONLY FOUND IN THE PAGE OPTIONS IN FAQ ITEMS IN AVADA LIVE. These options allow you to set the FAQ Settings, such as the Title, SLUG, Post Format and Featured Images. View the Settings options here. These are found on the right-hand side of the post in the back end interface of the Avada Builder.

Avada Special Menu Items

Avada Special Menu Items

On the WordPress Menu page, you will find the Avada Special Menu Items. These are at the bottom of the Add Menu Items dialog, found at Appearance > Menus. You can use these special items to add these specific features to your menu when using the Menu Element. Read on to learn more about the special items.
IMPORTANT NOTE: These special items only work in conjunction with the Menu Element.How To Use The Avada Special Menu ItemsThere are a number of special menu items, that we used to add into the menu automatically. Now, you have full control to place them in the menu where you like, plus more control over the appearance/icon. These items can be added to a menu when you build it, at Appearance > Menus. Each one has their own Avada Menu Options dialog to help style the menu item.
IMPORTANT NOTE: The Avada Special Menu Items ONLY work in Top Level Menu Items.,Avada Special Menu ItemsSearchWith this item, you can add the Search function to your Menu, rather than using the Search Element. It has a custom Avada Menu Options dialog with just the one setting.,Sliding Bar ToggleWith this item, you can add a Sliding Bar toggle to your menu. It has a couple of settings around the Icon shown.,Off Canvas ToggleWith this item, you can add the any Off Canvas to your Menu, allowing you to toggle it via a menu link.,WooCommerce CartWith this item, you can add the WooCommerce Cart to your Menu. It has a custom Avada Menu Options dialog with WooCommerce cart relevant settings.,WooCommerce My AccountWith this item, you can add the WooCommerce My Account to your Menu. It has a custom Avada Menu Options dialog with settings for the Icon.

Using The Mega Menu

Using The Mega Menu

Avada has a built-in mega menu that can be enabled on every First Level menu item in the Appearance > Menus tab. It can have 1-6 columns, span the full site width, have custom column width settings, display widgets, have icons or images next to menu items and more. Please see below for information on how to set the mega menu up. If you need information on how to create a regular menu, please read our Setting Up The Menu article here.
To see how to build a simple Mega Menu in Avada, please see the 『 How To Use Mega Menus In Avada』 video directly below, or to see how the Mega Menu was configured for the University demo, as shown above, see the video below that, 『How To Configure Menus in Avada』.
How To Create A Mega MenuStep 1 – Navigate to the Appearance > Menus section on your WordPress sidebar and select the 『Create A New Menu』 link to create a new menu, or edit an existing one.
Step 2 – Choose the first level menu item that you wish to open a mega menu with. To enable the Fusion Mega Menu, click the Avada Menu Options button on your chosen menu item, which will launch the Avada menu settings window.
NOTE: Only first level menu items have the Fusion Mega Menu option.
Step 3 – Enable Fusion Mega Menu (image directly after these steps). For the mega menu to show, the enabled first level menu item must have sub-menu items.
Step 4. Check the 『Full Width Mega Menu』 option if you want your mega menu to span the full site width as set in Avada > Theme Options > Layout > Site Width. Further width options can be found in the Fusion Theme Options under Menu > Mega Menu. You can find more information on the Mega Menu』s various width settings here.
Step 5 – Set the 『Mega Menu Number of Columns』 option that will determine how many columns will be displayed. Auto is the default setting, and this will auto detect how many sub menu items you have, but you can also manually control this. For example, if you had 6 sub menu items, you could choose 3 Columns here, which would then create two rows with 3 columns in each.
Step 6 – Each menu item can have a Font Awesome icon, or a custom image thumbnail along with the menu text. There are two separate options where you can select your icon or upload your custom image.
Step 7 – Second Level menu items will display as a title for columns. To add a Second Level item inside the Mega Menu, select a link on the left hand side of your Menu page, and click the 『Add to Menu』 button. To make it a Second Level menu item, drag the menu item below and to the right of the First Level menu item.
Step 8 – The Third Level menu items will be the smaller menu items in each column. To add a Third Level menu item, repeat step 5 above and drag and drop the new menu item below and to the right of the Second Level menu item.
Step 9 – Second & Third level menu items can have a widget area assigned. Note that assigning a widget to a menu item replaces the menu item link and only displays the assigned widgets. Learn how to create Widget Areas and how to add Widgets to it here. Once you』re done creating a new widget area, return to the WordPress menu editor page and select the name of the new widget area in the 「Mega Menu Widget Area」 dropdown field. This option is only available when the Fusion Mega Menu option is enabled for the Parent menu item.
Step 10 – After setting up your menu, scroll down to the bottom of the page to the Menu Settings section. Check the 『Main Navigation』 checkbox to assign your new menu as the main navigation. Please reference the image below for more details. Only the Main Navigation will display the Mega Menu.
Step 11 – Once finished, click the 「Save Menu」 button to save your changes made to the menu.
Mega Menu Interface Overview

Image Size Guide

Image Size Guide

Image size for websites is a deep and complex subject. There are many factors to understand and to take into account, and it』s not a topic where an easy, one size fits all answer will suffice. But if you want to know more about how images work with your website, and get a general overview of the factors at play, read on.
When we speak of image size, it is useful to keep in mind the two different sides of the issue. The first one is 「What size images should I upload?」, while the other side is 「What affects how large my images are displayed?」 And these are not independent questions. You can』t answer the first one without also considering the second.
Below is a general guide on how to gauge how big or small your images should be to fit your website, as well as to ensure that they look crisp on your viewers』 screens. The size, and quality of the images on your website depends on a whole range of factors, such as how big you upload them, your site width, whether they』re in columns or being used as a background image, whether you use sidebars, and even the resolution of the end user』s screen, to name just a few.
Continue reading below to learn more about these factors. Also, take a look at our extensive blog article, 『A Comprehensive Guide To WordPress Image Optimization』, to explore the basics of image optimization.
Overview
What Size Images Should I Upload?
Pixel Size And File Size
Image Formats
So, What Size Images Did You Say I Should Upload?Images Within The Site WidthImages Using The Screen WidthImage Compression
What Affects How Large My Images Are Displayed
Options That Influence Image SizeSlider Image SizesAttachment Display SettingsContainer Background Image Sizes On Mobile Devices,What Size Images Should I Upload?Images that are too large are one of the main causes for slow loading websites. So if you want a really slow website, just upload images straight from your phone, camera or other capture device. These are often over 5,000px in width and up to six or seven megabytes in size. This will ensure your pages take forever to load. This approach is incredibly common, yet it doesn』t take into account the size (both in pixels, and in kilobytes, or even megabytes) of the image being uploaded.
But we all want fast loading websites, and so we need to consider these things. To do this, and to determine what size our images should be, we need to understand a few things about images, and about how big the space we are adding the images into actually is. The first thing to understand is how images for the web are sized.,Pixel Size and File SizeFor a start, forget about what ppi (pixels per inch) your image is. It makes no difference in a web browser, and doesn』t affect file size either. It is a printing instruction, and can be completely ignored with images for the web. Despite this, it』s a standard to upload images that are at 72ppi.
The most important figure to understand about images for the web is the pixel dimensions. Capture devices, like cameras and phones, capture images at a fixed aspect ratio and size. The longest length of an image is usually in the range of 3,000 – 7,000 pixels, but this depends entirely on the device. But this is what you most need to consider when preparing your images for uploading to a website. We will cover more on what』s an appropriate size, but as a very rough guide, images around 2,000 – 2,500 pixels on the longest length are considered the largest size you』d ever need to upload. In many cases, images around 600 – 1200 pixels would be more appropriate. And images that are only a couple of hundred pixels in width (like logos) will be fine in small Columns, but would pixelate if added to larger Columns.
When it comes to file size, this is determined by three things – the complexity of the image (an image of the blue sky will be much smaller than the same sized image of a forest), the pixel dimensions of the image, and the compression applied to the image. There』s not much you need to know about the first one, and the second one will be determined by other considerations, but the compression is also important. This setting, available in virtually all graphics software, as well as via image optimisation websites or WordPress plugins, reduces the kilobyte size of an image, and optimizes it for the web. The more compression you apply, the smaller the file size. But quality is also reduced. So a balance between the two needs to be found. To learn more about image size and compression, read this detailed blog post.,Image FormatsImage size is also directly affected by your choice of image format. This is a huge topic, and way too big for a tutorial such as this, but basically, there are two major file fomats you are likely to be using on your website, as well as a few more upcoming and possible formats. There are both vector and raster image formats, and each format has their own strengths and weaknesses. For a more detailed look at image file formats, view this excellent article at HubSpot, or this one at Kinsta.
JPG / JPEGJPG (.jpg or .jpeg) is the most common image raster format for the web, most suitable for photos. It compresses well (maintains quality relatively well for the file sizes you can achieve). It doesn』t support transparency, but it』s by far the most common image format.
PNGPNG (.png) is also a very common image format, with specific strengths. It was invented to replace GIFs, and is a lossless format and also supports transparency. This means it is great for logos and other images that require transparency. It is also a good format for high quality photos, but the comparitive file size is much bigger than a jpg.
GIFGIF (.gif) is a lossless format, meaning that a GIF retains all the data contained in the file, but they are smaller than JPGs, specifically because they only accommodate up to 256 indexed colors. GIF also supports transparency, but for logos, PNGs are a better format. This format is slowly being replaced by the .png format, but where GIFs still shine, is that they can be animated, and so are very useful in some situations.
SVGSVG (.svg) is a vector format, which while having wide browser support, is not yet as easy a file format to implement as the others. It is however a great choice for logos, or other graphics you want to be tack sharp. Unlike raster formats seen in JPG, GIF, and PNG, an SVG image remains crisp and clear at any resolution or size, because they are mathematically declared shapes and curves, not pixels.
WEBPWebP is the new kid on the block, this file format is developed by Google, and was developed specifically to provide better lossless and lossy compression of images. This format does not have 100% browser support at this time, but there are ways around this using image optimisation plugins like ShortPixel. For more info on how to implement WebP with WordPress, check out this post.
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Get Avada,So, What Size Images Did You Say I Should Upload?Images Within The Site WidthSo, now you know a bit about resizing images, and what formats to potentially use, how do you actually decide how big your images should be? Well, it all starts with your Site Width. You』ll find this setting in Avada > Options > Layout > Site Width. This can be a percetage value, but web design is still largely pixel based, and the current default width is 1200px (this is to do with screen reslolutions, which we will get to…)
Let』s say your Site Width is 1200px. That means that all the content on your site will display across 1200 pixels of the monitor it』s being viewed on. As an example, the content on this documentation, including the sidebar, is 1300px. (You can break the content out of this Site Width by using the 100% Width setting on Containers, or a slider, but again, we will get to that…)
Therefore, if you had a full width Column with an Image Element, an appropriate size for your image would be around 1200px. To determine the image size, we just need to consider the width (in pixels) of the area it will be added to.
So now, let』s say you have two one-half columns, and you want an image to display in one of them. How big does that image need to be? Well, around half of the Site Width would be a good starting point. So, around 600px. If you optionally wanted the image to be able to be opened in a Lightbox, you might initally upload a larger version (perhaps 1000 – 1500px) and then insert a 600px version into the column, and the full size into the Lightbox option of the Image Element.
In the example below, instead of being added via the Image Element, the image has been added to the background of the Column (to enable the overlaid Text and Button Elements). But it』s still being displayed in a one-half Column, and so an image size of approximately 600px would be appropriate. You could still enable a Lightbox with this method as well, only you』d do that via the Link URL and Link Target options in the Column itself.
Images Using The Screen WidthNow, let』s say you want to use the image in the background of a Container that』s set to 100% width, or as an image in a full screen slider? Both methods break the image out of the Site Width, and now it』s a completely different consideration we have to take. Now, what』s most important is the screen resolution (or pixel width) your users are viewing it on. This can be tricky, as there are many different screen resolutions.
The most common is still standard laptop resolution (1366px). This is why the deafult Site Width is 1200px, so that the content fits on this screen resolution. But Full HD (1920px) is the second most common resolution, and 4K monitors are gaining in popularity as well (3840px). Some iMacs even have 5K resolution (5120px). So, how do we take all these different screen resolutions into account? A common way to approach this is to use an image size of around 2,000-2,500px. This covers most screen resolutions, and it not interpolated significantly except for 5K monitors.
In the first example below, the page is using the 100% width template, which means that any container background images go full width. The container itself is also set to Full Height. And so the image size needs to be large enough to fill the screen. In this case, the image used is 1803px x 902px, which is almost the size of a HD monitor resolution. This could be bigger, but here it』s being used as a background image, and so the quality is not as important.
Note: Just to be clear, if viewed on a 5K iMac, this 1803px image would be distributed across the full 5120px of the iMac』s screen (less scrolling bars), effectively reducing the quality of the image. But on a laptop, with a resolution of only 1366px, the image would be more than big enough, and would be crisp. It』s all about finding a sweet spot between screen resolution and file size (which comes directly from your choice of pixel dimensions). If you were sure most of your users were using iMacs, you』d probably make this image closer to 4000-5000px, but it would then be a much larger file.
In the second example, the image is being used in a full screen slider. In this case, the image is sized at 2500px width, which on more than 95% of screen resolutions, would be larger than the monitor』s resolution and therefore be nice and sharp. With larger images such as these, optimisation of images using compression becomes even more important to keep file size, and therefore page load speed, down.,Image CompressionOnce you know what the largest size is of an image you want to upload, then you need to prepare it. This simply involves resizing it to the desired pixel width, and then applying compression before uploading it to your server. To learn more about image compression, read this detailed blog post, or our own blog post on Image Optimization.
In short, you can use graphics software like Adobe Photoshop to compress your images for web as you save them. Alternatively, there are many good websites, such as Compressor. Additionally, you can also use image compression plugins, such as Short Pixel, to further compress image. A bonus is that you can also use such plugins to generate .WebP images on your site.
A well compressed image that has first been resized to the correct pixel values can be many times smaller than the original file. in the example below, you can see that the original jpg was 805kb, but that with 40% compression, the final size of the image came down to only 163kb, almost 5 times smaller.,Options That Influence Image SizeAs mentioned above, the size of the area the image will be displayed in is the major factor that determines how big it should be. Here are the main theme related areas that will affect this.
Site Width – Located in the Global Options > Layout panel. This setting allows you to set the overall width of your site, which can affect how big or small your images should be, and how big they will display. This also affects your columns, which will affect any images you display inside them.Page Template – As previously mentioned, if using the 100% Width Page Template, any images added as background images into a full width Container display at the full width of the user』s screen (less any left/right Container margins and scrolling bars).Container > Interior Content Width Option – Also, if using the 100% Width Page Template, any Container can have the Interior Content Width options set to 100% Width, thereby making the Container』s content stretch the full width of the viewer』s screen (again less any Container margins and scroll bars). Column Width – Set in the individual Containers, the size of the Columns, as described above, has an obvious effect on what size image should be used. A good rule of thumb, when not using Sidebars, is to use an image sized at the Site Width divided by the Column Width.
Sidebars – Located in the Global Options > Layout panel, or in the Avada Page options. Having a sidebar allows you to set a sidebar width, which will affect Column size as well.

Dual Sidebars – Located in the Global Options > Layout panel, or in the Avada Page options. You also have the option to have 2 sidebars on each side of your website, and this will also affect Column Size.

Margins & Individual Element Spacing – Column sizes, and individual Elements, also have spacing options, such as padding and margins. A good example is column spacing, which affects how wide columns are displayed on the page, which in turn affects how big your images in columns will display.
Example: As can be seen in the example below, if we start with a Site Width of 1170px (this is what the Charity Website has), but then use a dual sidebar layout, using the global option defaults, the sidebars combined take up 42% of the site width. This leaves approximately 679 pixels for the content area. And then there are the Column margins. So if adding an image in a one-half Column in this situation, it would only need to be around 330px width.,Slider Image SizesFixed Width – If you』re using a fixed width slider, then the appropriate image size for your slider would be your slider width and height. For example, if you have a slider width of 1100px and a slider height of 500px, then your image size should be 1100px wide and 500px high.
100% Width – As for siders that are 100% width, the image size you should use depends on a few factors such as the screen it』s being viewed on, and the slider height. As a general rule, we currently use images that are 2000px wide for our prebuilt websites, which is usually big enough to make images look great on all common screen resolutions. As 4K monitors penetrate the market in bigger numbers, this might have to increase. The height of the image depends on the pixel value you』ve set for the slider. For example, if you have a slider that is 100% wide and 400px high (see screenhsot below), then your image size should be around 2000px wide and 400px high.

Full Screen Slider – Images for Full Screen sliders fully depend on the screen it』s being viewed on. Because it』s difficult to tell what screen your viewers are viewing your site on, it』s best to use a general size that is big enough for all general screen sizes. As a guide, we use images that are around 2000px wide and 1100px high for full screen sliders on our prebuilt websites.,Attachment Display SettingsOne crucial thing to understand – when uploading an image to your Media Library, a range of images of different sizes are automaically created at the same time. WordPress creates some of these (the Small, Medium, and Large Thumbnail sizes specified in WordPress > Settings > Media, and one unlisted intermediate size) and Avada itself creates a number of sizes to best suit certain situations. These image sizes are then automatically applied to different sections of the site. See the How Avada Controls Responsive Images document for more details on this.
When adding an image into the page content, such as through Elements, you』ll find the 『Attachment Display Settings』 section at the bottom right of the Media Library. Your choices in this section also directly affects how your images display on the page, as here you are choosing which version of the image to use.
Step 1 – When you upload an image into the page content, the Media Library window will appear.
Step 2 – Select or upload your desired image. At the bottom right side of the window, find the 『Attachment Display Settings』 section.
Step 3 – Under this section, you』ll find the 『Size』 option. Using this option, you can select which size to use when uploading an image. You can choose between Thumbnail, Medium, Large or Full Size, plus a range of Avada size settings.
Step 4 – Choose the right image for the area you are adding the image into.,Container Background Image Sizes On Mobile DevicesWhen uploading a background image to an Avada Builder Container, you may notice that only a portion of your image is displayed when viewed on mobile or tablets. This is how the theme naturally handles background images, and is not a responsive issue. The background image is first centered, then it will resize proportionally until the image』s width or height is equal to the container』s width or height (whichever is greater). For example, if you have a 500px x 500px image and a 100px x 350px container, then your background image will be resized to 350px x 350px. Please refer to the examples below for a visual representation of this.,ConclusionGetting images right is a crucial part of a visually interesting and fast loading website. And there』s a learning curve to be sure. But the benefits to be had are numerous, and it』s all part of the fun of building and maintaining an Avada website!

Menu Navigation Heights

Menu Navigation Heights

Setting the main navigation height is important in keeping your website organized and visually appealing. Avada gives you the options to manage this with ease. Continue reading below to discover how to manage your websites main navigation height.
How To Set The Main Menu Navigation HeightStep 1 – Go to Avada > Theme Options > Menu > Main Menu > Main Menu Height.
Step 2 – Enter a numeric value in pixels (px) to adjust the 『Main Menu Height』 or drag the slider left/right.
Step 3 – Click 『Save Changes』.
How To Set The Mobile Menu Navigation HeightStep 1 – Go to Avada > Theme Options > Menu > Mobile Menu > Mobile Menu Dropdown Item Height.
Step 2 – Enter a numeric value in pixels (px) to adjust the 『Mobile Menu Dropdown Item Height』 or drag the slider left/right.
Step 3 – Click 『Save Changes』.

How Avada Controls Responsive Images

How Avada Controls Responsive Images

Images are a huge part of every website, and here at ThemeFusion, we are always looking for ways to improve the load time of pages by making sure that images are loaded as efficiently as possible.
We have long had features specifically for dealing with images, including multiple image sets and Retina versions of logos and other elements, but now with Avada 5.8, we have introduced several performance related features specifically for how Avada handles images. Let』s have a look at this!
WordPress & srcsetTo understand how Avada handles images, you need to know some technical background. You might know, that when you upload an image to the WordPress Media Library, WordPress actually makes 4 other sizes of that image, based on the sizes you specify in the WordPress > Settings > Media settings (plus an unlisted intermediate size). You might also know that Avada creates another 13 versions of the image as well, so that there will be an appropriate sized image for any area in the theme you might use it in. This might seem excessive, as there will be 18 files for each image uploaded, but the extra file size isn』t really that large if your initial image upload is well optimized, and the performance benefits far outweigh the extra storage.
To improve their image handing, WordPress also made some changes back in version 4.4, that added native responsive image support, by including srcset and sizes attributes to the image markup it generates. By including the available sizes of an image into a srcset attribute, browsers could now choose to download the most appropriate size and ignore the others—potentially saving bandwidth and speeding up page load times in the process.
Let』s just look at the scrcset and sizes attributes to understand their syntax.
srcset – This defines the set of images we allow the browser to choose between, and what size each image is. So the browser gets a list of available images and also the information of the width of each of these images.
Syntax
Copy to Clipboardsrcset="{image_name} {image_size}, {image_name} {image_size} ..." 1srcset="{image_name} {image_size}, {image_name} {image_size} ..."Example
Copy to Clipboardsrcset="test_image-200.jpg 200px, test_image-400.jpg 400px, test_image-800px.jpg 800px"1 1srcset="test_image-200.jpg 200px, test_image-400.jpg 400px, test_image-800px.jpg 800px"sizes – This defines a set of media queries (viewport widths) and indicates what image size would be best to choose, when the corresponding media condition is true.
Syntax
Copy to Clipboardsizes="{media_query} {best_image_size}, {media_query} {best_image_size} ..."1 1sizes="{media_query} {best_image_size}, {media_query} {best_image_size} ..."Example
Copy to Clipboardsizes="(min-width: 2200px) 100vw, (min-width: 824px) 270px, (min-width: 732px) 405px, (min-width: 640px) 732px"1 1sizes="(min-width: 2200px) 100vw, (min-width: 824px) 270px, (min-width: 732px) 405px, (min-width: 640px) 732px"Browser AlgorithmNow with these 2 attributes, the browser will do the following:

Look at its device width.
Work out which media query in the sizes list is the first one to be true.
Look at the slot size given to that media query.
Load the image referenced in the srcset list that most closely matches the chosen slot size.

Avada AdditionsIn WordPress, not many image sizes are available by default, and most are also hard cropped. Additionally, the sizes attribute is pretty generic. So, out of the box, you don』t get you the big performance boost.
What Avada does now is:

As mentioned earlier, we create several uncropped images, 200, 400, 600, 800, 1200 etc., which makes sure that for all kinds of devices and scenarios, the right image size will be available.
For the sizes attribute, we check and calculate the exact content width. That is a pretty difficult task, as you can set the site width in px, but also in %. You can have full width pages, or pages with sidebars, have page padding etc. We take all of this into account.
Additionally, we also check if your images are displayed in a grid with columns: e.g. gallery, or image carousel etc. That is important, because if you have a site width with 1200px, but have 4 columns, obviously on desktop you will only have 300px per column. Of course, we also subtract the column spacing correctly.
For single images, we also check if they are part of a parent column, that is smaller than the full width. The reason for this is the same as above.
Finally, we also calculate the sizes media queries in a way that makes sure your responsive breakpoints and grid column amounts are taken into account.

So in all cases, from desktop to mobile, from one column to 6 columns, from full width to double sidebar pages, we』ll give the browser all information to load the best available image size. And that, for both retina and normal screens.
Lazy LoadIn Avada 5.8, we have also introduced Lazy Load for images. This can be enabled under the Performance tab at Avada > Theme Options > Performance. What this does is to only load the images that are visible in the viewport. As the user scrolls and more images come into view, they are then loaded as well. This provides an instant benefit to page load times, as only the initial images in the viewport are loaded.
Lazy Load is enabled on these areas and elements in Avada:

Blog Element – medium, large, grid and masonry

Blog Archive – medium, large, grid, and masonry

Single Blog Post Featured Image, first and slides

Blog Grid with multiple images

Portfolio Element – grid and masonry

Portfolio Archive

Single Portfolio Post Featured Image, first and slides

Gallery Element

Image Element

Image Before/After Element

Person Element

Testimonial Element

Content Box Element

Flip Box Element

Slider Element

Post Slider Element

Recent Posts Element

Lightbox Element

Container background

Column background
Responsive ImagesApart from uploading a Retina version of your logos and favicons, you don』t need to worry about responsive images in Avada. The most important thing you can do with your images is to make sure they are well optimized. Users of Photoshop can use the Export As function, and use a fair amount of compression, and we have also found that compressor.io does a good job dealing with compression. There re also image plugins like Smush it and Short Pixel that can help. Have a read of our Image Optimisation Guide for more info.