Search Options In Avada

Search Options In Avada

We search for information on a daily basis on the Internet, and our websites should be able to be searched as well. Avada offers a range of search features and functionality, which we will go over in this document, and new features are regularly being added. In Avada 5.9, we added new functionality to search, including a whole new tab in the Avada Global Options, and in Avada 6.2, we added the Search Element. We have also added options for filtering what content is searchable, a range of ways of displaying that content, and a 『live search』 feature. Try it below, and watch the video for a visual overview.

Search for:,How To Enable SearchTo enable search on your Avada website, there are several options.

Add an Avada Special Menu Search Item To The Menu Element – When using a Header Layout, you can add an Avada Special Menu Search Item to your WordPress menu, which then displays via the Menu Element.

Add a Search Element – You can place a Search Bar anywhere in your content by placing the Search Element into your page content (as in the example search bar above) or in a Layout Section, such as a Header, Page Title Bar etc.

Add A Search Widget – You can add a Search Widget to any Avada Widget Ready area (like a sidebar or footer) or anywhere in your content using the Widget Element.

Enable the Search Icon on the Main Menu (Legacy method) – In the Global Options, at Avada > Options > Main Menu, there is an option to enable a Main Menu Search Icon. This places a search icon at the far right of your existing main menu. This is only availble when not using Avada Layouts.

Use the Search Bar Option in a Page Title Bar (Legacy method) – If you use a Page Title Bar, you can replace the Breadcrumbs with a Search Bar, either globally at Avada > Options > Page Title Bar > Breadcrumbs / Search Bar, or on a page by page basis in the Page Title Bar tab of the Avada Page Options. Again, this is only availble when not using Avada Layouts.,Avada Special Menu Item – SearchWhen using Avada Layouts, and the Menu Element, you can add an Avada Special Search Menu Item to your WordPress menu, and it will display via the Menu Element.,Search ElementThe Search Element is perhaps the most versatile way to add search functionality to your website. See the Search Element documentation for more details.,Search WidgetYou can also add search functionality to your site through the use of widgets. The Search Widget can be added to any Widget Ready Area in Avada, such as sidebars or footers, or indeed anywhere in your content with the Widget Element. There is also a Product Search Widget if you have WooCommerce installed.,Live SearchThe settings for Live Search can be found in the Search Element, and in the Global Options at Options > Search > Search Form tab. If you turn it on, you will see many options underneath it to control its appearance and functionality. You can set a minimal Character count for it to kick in, limit the number of posts the live search will suggest, control the height of the Live Search Results Container, and control whether the featured image and post type are displayed in the results.
Results show as soon as the minimum number of characters is reached (see image below). However, if the user hits Enter after they type, the search page will load instead.,Global OptionsThese are found in the Global Options, at Avada > Options > Search.
Search Form Options
Limit Search Results Post Type – Turn on to limit the search results to specific post types you can choose.

Search Results Content – Controls the type of content that displays in search results. This is a multi-select option. Choices are Pages, Posts, Portfolio Items, FAQ Items, WooCommerce Products, and Event Calendar Posts.

Limit Search to Post Titles – Turn on to limit the search to post titles only.

Search Form Design – Controls the design of the search forms. Choose from Classic or  Clean.

Enable Live Search – Turn on to enable live search results on the menu search field and other search forms.

Live Search Minimal Character Count – Set the minimal character count to trigger the live search.

Live Search Number of Posts – Controls the number of posts that should be displayed as search result suggestions.

Live Search Results Container Height – Controls the height of the container in which the search results will be listed. In pixels.

Live Search Display Featured Image – Turn on to display the featured image of each live search result. Choose from Yes or No.

Live Search Display Post Type – Turn on to display the post type of each live search result. Choose from Yes or No.
See The Search Form OptionsSearch Page Options
Search Results Layout – Controls the layout for the search results page. Choose from Large, Medium, Large Alternate, Medium Alternate, Grid, or Timeline.  

Number of Search Results Per Page – Controls the number of search results per page.

Search Pagination Type – Controls the pagination type for the search results page.

Number of Columns – Controls the number of columns for grid and masonry layouts. IMPORTANT: Masonry layout does not work with 1 column. 

Column Spacing – Controls the column spacing for search results. In pixels.

Search Content Display – Controls if the search results contents display as an excerpt or full content or are completely disabled. Choose from Excerpt, Full Content, or No Text.

Search Excerpt Length – Controls the number of words (or characters) in the search results excerpts. 

Search Strip HTML from Excerpt – Turn on to strip HTML content from the excerpt for the search results page. 

Featured Images for Search Results – Turn on to display featured images for search results.

Search Results Meta – Select the post metadata you want to be displayed in the individual search results. Possible metadata options are Author, Date, Categories, Comments, Read More Link, Tags, and Post Type.

Search Field Position – Controls the position of the search bar on the search results page. Choose from Above Results, Below Results, or Hide.
See The Search Page Options

Page Top & Bottom Padding

Page Top & Bottom Padding

Each page you create with Avada will have default top and bottom padding applied. The page top padding starts directly below the header, and the page bottom padding directly above the footer area as illustrated below. Aside from the main header, there are also some elements on your page that may sit above the top padding, such as the Page Title Bar, and Sliders in some cases.
IMPORTANT NOTE: If your page does not have a Page Title Bar, the top padding will start directly under the main header.Page Padding OptionsFusion Theme OptionsYou can set a global top and bottom padding for the page content in Avada > Theme Options > Layout tab under the Layout section. This can be overridden on individual pages via the Fusion Page Options.
Fusion Page OptionsYou can choose to set the top and bottom padding for individual pages in the Page tab in the Fusion Page Options box. This will override the global option set in the Fusion Theme Options.
Pages With SlidersSliders Added Via Fusion Page OptionsIf you add a Fusion, Revolution or Layer slider using the Fusion Page Options, then the slider will sit above the top padding. This means that setting a Top Page Padding will not affect the slider.
Sliders Added Via Builder ElementsIf you add a Fusion, Revolution or Layer Slider using one of the slider elements in the Fusion Builder, then the slider will sit below the top padding. This means that setting a Top Page Padding will affect the slider.

Typography Options In Avada

Typography Options In Avada

To give you full control over the fonts used on your website, there are quite a number of typography options in Avada. You can use standard font families, choose from the huge range of Google Fonts, or even upload your own Custom Fonts. From Global Typography options, through to specific area options, like Main Menu Typography Options, Responsive Typography options, and even on-the-fly typography options in the Inline Editor, you will find typography options throughout Avada.
Read on to discover more about these Typography options in Avada, and watch the video below for a quick overview.
Overview
Global Typography Options
Typography Options SettingsFeature Specific Typography OptionsResponsive Heading Typography
Inline Editing Typography Options
Typography Performance Options
Google & Font Awesome Fonts Mode
Heading Font SizesFeature Font SizesFont Line HeightsFont WeightsFont Letter Spacing,Global Typography OptionsThe initial Global Typography options are located in Avada > Options > Typography, and relate to the global use of the site』s Body Typography, Header Typography (H1-H6), and any Custom Fonts.
Body Typography Options – To customize the Body Font, navigate to the Avada > Options > Typography > Body Typography, where all the Body Typography options such as font family, weight, size, etc. are found. This is also where you can set the Link Color for all text links throughout the site. This can be overridden on a Container by Container basis, at Container > Design > Container Link Color.Headers Typography Options : H1-H6 – To customize the Headers, Post Titles including Single Post Title Extras such as 「Comments」, 「Related Posts or Projects」 and 「Author Titles」, navigate to the Avada > Options > Typography > Headers Typography where all the Headers and Post Titles Typography options are found.Custom Fonts – Along with the new Typography options, you can also upload as many custom fonts as you want. You can upload custom fonts by navigating to the Avada > Options > Typography > Custom Fonts tab. If you』d like to learn how to upload custom fonts, please read our 『Custom Fonts』 article.,Typography Option SettingsWhen setting global Headers or Body typography options, there are several settings to fully control the display of the font, including weight, size, color, and even backup font family. Headers Typography, as seen below, has the additional options of setting top and bottom margins. These options are especially useful if you』d like to manually tweak your headings to fit your website better. Take note, that these options accept em units instead of pixel units.
Font Family – Illustrated as A. Controls the font family to be used.
Backup Font Family – Illustrated as B. Controls the backup font family to be used in case the primary font doesn』t load correctly.
Font Weight and Style – Illustrated as C. Controls the font weight and style to be used.
Font Subsets – Illustrated as D. Controls the font subset to be used.
Font Size – Illustrated as E. Controls the size of the text on display.
Line Height – Illustrated as F. Controls the spacing between lines.
Letter Spacing – Illustrated as G. Controls the spacing between letters.
Margin Top – Illustrated as H. (Only in Headers Typography). Controls the top margin of the title.
Margin Bottom – Illustrated as I. (Only in Headers Typography). Controls the bottom margin of the title.
Font Color – Illustrated as J. Controls the color of the text.
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Get Avada,Feature Specific Typography OptionsTo customize specific typography options, such as the Menu, Page Title bar, Sliding Bar, Footer, and the like, navigate to their specific panels to access their different typography options such as font family, weight, size, etc.
Main Menu Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Menu > Main Menu panel, then go to the Main Menu Typography section. View here.Flyout Menu Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Menu > Flyout Menu panel. View here.Secondary Top Menu Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Menu > Secondary Top Menu panel. View here.Mobile Menu Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Menu > Main Menu panel, then go to the Mobile Menu Typography section. View here.Page Title Bar Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Page Title Bar panel, then go to the Page Title Bar Styling section. View here.Breadcrumbs Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Page Title Bar > Breadcrumbs panel. View here.Sliding Bar Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Sliding Bar panel, then go to the Sliding Bar Styling section. View here.Footer Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Footer > Footer Styling panel, then go to the Footer Typography section. View here.Sidebars Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Sideabrs > Sidebar Styling panel. View here.Button Element Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Fusion Builder Elements panel, then go to the Button Element section. View here.Content Box Element Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Fusion Builder Elements panel, then go to the Content Box Element section. View here.Counter Boxes Element Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Fusion Builder Elements panel, then go to the Counter Boxes Element section. View here.Blog Meta Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Blog > Blog Meta panel. View here.Elastic Slider Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Elastic Slider panel. View here.Pagination Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Extra > Pagination panel. View here.Form Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Extra > Form Styling panel. View here.bbPress Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > bbPress panel. View here.WooCommerce Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > WooCommerce > WooCommerce Styling panel. View here.Events Calendar Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Events Calendar > General Events Calendar panel. View here.Events Single Post Typography Options – Navigate to the Avada > Options > Events Calendar > Events Single Posts panel. View here.,Responsive Heading TypographyThe Responsive Typography options allow you to control responsiveness for all headings and fonts. This helps your layout look more proportionate on smaller sizes.
Step 1 – Adjust the Responsive Typography Sensitivity by dragging the slider to fit your needs. 0 will disable responsive typography, and 1 is maximum responsiveness.
Step 2 – Adjust the Minimum Font Size Factor by dragging the slider left or right to control the multiplying value of the minimum font size. For example, if set to 0, then there is no minimum font-size. If set to 1 then the minimum font-size will be the same as the font-size of the element. If set to 2 then the minimum font-size will be double the initial font-size of the element.,Inline Editing Typography OptionsThere are also typography options found in Avada Live, when using the Inline Editor.
When you select any text in the front end builder, the Inline Editor appears above or below it. The very first option on the menu is Typography. On the Settings tab, you can adjust the settings of that particular paragraph of text, or you can also head to the Family tab, where you can change the font family and variant, for just that particular text selection.,Typography Performance OptionsFont Face RenderingBack in Avada 6.1, we improved the font performance feature for Font Face Rendering. Located at Avada > Options > Performance, you will find the Font Face Rendering option. Here you can now chose 「Swap All」 for faster font rendering with possible flash of unstyled text (FOUT), 「Block」 for clean rendering but a longer wait time until first paint, or 「Swap Non-Icon Fonts」, which will use a mix of the first two methods (「swap」 for text fonts and 「block」 for icon-fonts).
Preload Key FontsThere is also an option to make a selection to prioritize fetching resources that will be requested later in the page load. This improves page load time, as the browser caches preloaded resources so they are available immediately when needed. You can choose from All, Google Fonts, Icon Fonts, or None.
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Get Avada,Google & Font Awesome Fonts ModeAs part of the Privacy Settings, located at Avada > Options > Privacy, you will find the Google & Font Awesome Fonts Mode option. To allow you to be fully compliant with the GDPR, you can choose to download Google and Font Awesome Fonts locally on to your server, or you can set the option to CDN to use the Google and Font Awesome CDNs.,Heading Font SizesHeading Font Size for H1Page Title Bar – Affects the font size of titles inside all Page Title Bars. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H1 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Size for H2Tagline Box Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Tagline Box Elements. View a sample here.Content Box Element – Affects the font size of the titles inside all Content Box Elements. View a sample here.Flip Box Element – Affects the font size of the Frontside Heading inside all Flip Box Elements. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H2 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Size for H3Pricing Table Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Pricing Table Elements. View a sample here.Modal Popup – Affects the font size of titles inside all Modal Popup windows. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H3 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Size for H4Flip Box Element – Affects the font size of the Backside Heading inside all Flip Box Elements. View a sample here.Person Element – Affects the font size of the Name Option inside all Person Elements. View a sample here.Person Element – Affects the font size of the Title Option inside all Person Elements. View a sample here.Popover Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Popover Elements. View a sample here.Recent Posts Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Recent Posts Elements. View a sample here.Tabs Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Tabs Elements. View a sample here.Toggles Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Toggles Elements. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H4 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Image Rollover – Affects the font size of titles on all Image Rollovers. View a sample here.FAQ Titles – Affects the font size of titles on all FAQ items. View a sample here.Heading Font Size for H5Sharing Box Element – Affects the font size of titles inside all Sharing Box Elements. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H5 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Size for H6Title Element – Affects the font size of text set to H6 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.,Feature Font SizesBody Font Size – Affects the font size of all text within your website that does not have a special, custom option. View a sample here.Main Menu Font Size – Affects the font size of all navigation or menu items on your website. This does not include submenu items. View a sample here.Main Menu Dropdown Font Size – Affects the font size of all submenus of menu items on your website. This includes mega menus. View a sample here.Secondary Menu & Top Contact Info Font Size – Affects the font size of all text in the top bar when using Header designs #2 – #5. View a sample here and here.Side Menu Font Size – Affects the font size of all sidebar navigation items on your website. View a sample here.Mobile Menu Font Size – Affects the font size of menu items in mobile devices.Breadcrumbs Font Size – Affects the font size of breadcrumbs inside all Page Title Bars. View a sample here.Sidebar Widget Heading Font Size – Affects the font size of all sidebar widget headings on your website. View a sample here.Sliding Bar Widget Heading Font Size – Affects the font size of all Sliding Bar widget headings in your sliding bar. View a sample here.Footer Widget Heading Font Size – Affects the font size of all footer widgets in your footer. View a sample here.Copyright Font Size – Affects the font size of copyright text on the very bottom of your website. View a sample here.Post Titles Font Size – Affects the font size of titles inside all Blog and Portfolio Posts. View a sample here and here.Post Titles Extras Font Size – Affects the Comment, Related Posts, Related Projects and Author Titles inside all Blog Posts. View a sample here, here and here.Header Tagline Font Size – Affects the font size of headlines in the top menus found in Header design #3. View a sample here.Meta Data Font Size – Affects the font size of all meta data on your website. View a sample here.Page Title Font Size – Affects the font size of titles inside all Page Title Bars. View a sample here.Page Title Subheader Font Size – Affects the font size of subheaders inside all Page Title Bars. View a sample here.Pagination Font Size – Affects the font size of all paginations on your website. View a sample here.WooCommerce Icon Font Size – Affects the font size of the add to cart and details on your shop page. View a sample here and here.,Font Line HeightsHeading Font Line Height for H1Page Title Bar – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Page Title Bars. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H1 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Line Height for H2Tagline Box Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Tagline Box Elements. View a sample here.Blog Post – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Blog Posts. View a sample here.Portfolio Post – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Portfolio Posts. View a sample here.Content Box Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Content Box Elements. View a sample here.Flip Box Element – Affects the font line height of the Frontside Heading inside all Flip Box Elements. View a sample here.Author Title – Affects the font line height of the Author Title Heading inside all Blog Posts. View a sample here.Related Posts – Affects the font line height of the Related Posts Heading inside all Blog Posts. View a sample here.Leave A Comment – Affects the font line height of the Leave A Comment Heading inside all Blog Posts. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H2 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Line Height for H3Pricing Table Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Pricing Table Elements. View a sample here.Modal Popup – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Modal Popup windows. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H3 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Line Height for H4Flip Box Element – Affects the font line height of the Backside Heading inside all Flip Box Elements. View a sample here.
Person Element – Affects the font line height of the Name Option inside all Person Elements. View a sample here.
Person Element – Affects the font line height of the Title Option inside all Person Elements. View a sample here.Popover Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Popover Elements. View a sample here.Recent Posts Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Recent Work Elements. View a sample here.Tabs Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Tabs Elements. View a sample here.Toggles Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Toggles Elements. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H4 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Image Rollover – Affects the font line height of titles on all Image Rollovers. View a sample here.Heading Font Line Height for H5Sharing Box Element – Affects the font line height of titles inside all Sharing Box Elements. View a sample here.Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H5 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Heading Font Line Height for H6Title Element – Affects the font line height of text set to H6 inside all Title Elements. View a sample here.Body Font Line HeightDefault Body Content – Affects the font line height of all text within your website that does not have a special, custom option. View a sample here.Secondary Menu Line Height
Top Menu Headline – Affects the font line height of headlines in the top menus found in Header design #3. View a sample here.,Font WeightsSelect Body Font Weight – Affects the font weight of all text within your website that does not have a special, custom option. View a sample here.Select Menu Font Weight – Affects the font weight of all navigation or menu items on your website. This does not include submenu items. View a sample here.Select Headings Font Weight – Affects the font weight of all headings on your website. View a sample here.Select Footer Headings Font Weight – Affects the font weight of all footer headings on your website. View a sample here.Select Button Font Weight – Affects the font weight of all button texts on your website. View a sample here.,Font Letter Spacing
Heading H1 – H6 Letter Spacing – Affects the letter spacing of all H1 – H6 Headings on your website.
Menu Letter Spacing – Affects the letter spacing of all navigation or menu items on your website. This does not include submenu items. View a sample here.Button Letter Spacing – Affects the letter spacing of all button texts on your website. View a sample here.

Single Post Title

Single Post Title

Single Post Title using H1 or H2For Avada 5.5 we have enhanced the single post header typography management. The post header for single posts, single FAQ, single portfolio, and WooCommerce single product pages will automatically default to H1 tag if for example, Theme Options > Page Title Bar > Page Title Bar Text is set to Hide.
If Theme Options > Page Title Bar > Page Title Bar Text is set to Show, then the post header will default automatically to H2. Below are the different scenarios when H1 and H2 tags will be used in a single post title:
The single post title will automatically change from H2 to H1 when the page title bar is disabled is totally disabled.The single post title will automatically default to H1 when page title bar is enabled and the Page Title Bar Text is set to > Show.The single post title will automatically change from H1 to H2 when the page title bar is enabled and the page title bar text is set to > Hide.
Single post extra section headings will automatically change to an H2 tag, when page title bar is disabled.
IMPORTANT NOTE
The automatic H1|H2 change for the post header is applicable to single posts, single FAQ, single portfolio, and WooCommerce single product pages. It does not apply to a Title Element added to post/page content manually and Events Calendar single post headers.Post Title Typography OptionsPost Title options are now updated and made into full sets in Avada 5.5 compared to fewer options in older versions. Post Title Typography settings controls the typography of all post titles including archive and single posts. Post Title Extras Typography settings controls the typography of single post title extras such as 「Comments」, 「Related Posts or Projects」 and 「Author Titles」. Please see below the options located in Avada > Theme Options > Typography > Headers Typography section.
Font Family – Illustrated as A. Controls the font family to be used.
Backup Font Family – Illustrated as B. Controls the backup font family to be used in case the primary font doesn』t load correctly.
Font Weight & Style – Illustrated as C. Controls the font weight and style to be used.
Font Subsets – Illustrated as D. Controls the font subset to be used.
Font Size – Illustrated as E. Controls the size of the text on display.
Line Height – Illustrated as F. Controls the spacing between lines.
Letter Spacing – Illustrated as G. Controls the spacing between letters.
Font Color – Illustrated as H. Controls the color of the text.

Parallax Scrolling Options

Parallax Scrolling Options

Parallax scrolling is when the background of the web page is moving at a different rate compared to the foreground, creating a 3D effect as you scroll. Directly below is an example of parallax behaviour, where we have a container with a background image and a parallax effect in place. As you can see when you scroll, the image moves up in the container.,Avada offers a range of options relating to Parallax scrolling for the different sctions of the page. There are settings for the header, the footer, the Page Title Bar, and container backgrounds. See below for links to each section.

Footer Parallax Options

Header Background Parallax Options

Page Title Bar Background Parallax Options

Container Background Parallax Options

Mobile Parallax Options

Avada Optimization Guide

Avada Optimization Guide

Optimization for page load speed is a very complex area, as so many things affect how fast a page loads. This is from the speed of the server, to the options and settings selected, right through to the type of content and the size of the images added to the page.
We have specific content on How To Use The Performance Wizard, and How To Optimize Above The Fold Content For Performance, but in this document, we offer you more general information, in the form of a wide range of optimzation tips to help when building your content.,Building The Content
Less is more. The more elements/content the page contains, the higher the node count, and therefore the more that needs to be rendered. This is the excessive DOM count that is referenced in tests. Do you really need all that content on the homepage or can some be moved to subpages?

Avoid an above the fold slider, unless it』s important to the design. If you want a large hero image, it』s better to use a static image. When using a slider, the slide is JS driven and needs to wait for the rest of the document to be ready before fully rendering. This will decrease page load scores. If you want the slider on desktop but not mobile, you can use conditional rendering to display the slider only on desktop. Then add separate content for mobile.

Avoid very large images (large in dimensions and large in file size). Obviously images are important to a website, but ensure the choices make sense and that the images are optimized. See our Image Size Guide document for detailed information on this.

Set your largest above the fold image to skip lazy loading. This option is available for container background images and image elements and only available if lazy loading in the globals is set to Avada (recommended). By setting to skip the lazy load the image will be faster to load – important for LCP measurements in Google core web vitals. If you generate critical CSS this will also be used as a flag to preload the image – further improving load time.

Clever use of background colors, gradients and lightweight SVGs can often make a big impact. They give the visual impact without the loading time.

Avoid animations above the fold, for the same reason as using a slider. Using them further down the page is fine, but you want the viewport (the initially viewable area) to be quick and stable (no movement) when loading.

If you have a choice between a column background image or an image element (to accomplish the same thing) – use an image element. Responsive capability is superior and loading will be quicker.

Use Layout Sections for each area. When Layout Sections are used for each aspect of the site (header, page title bar, footer, content) Avada has more knowledge about what needs to render, and therefore assets can be made more efficient. The builder elements are also maintained and updated, legacy features are not. This is especially important for the header in order to avoid CLS.

Avoid embeds unless necessary. For example, embedding a third party form or multiple twitter feeds on your homepage. Not only do you have to wait for them to load, they often bring with them extra assets which might not even be required. For forms for example, it』s best to use Avada Forms where possible.

Use the Facade global option for the YouTube and Vimeo Elements. This will cause the video to only load when clicked, thereby reducing overall page load content.

Be selective about any extra plugins. More plugins will mean more assets being loaded and more memory usage. If there is the option of using a feature in Avada instead of a plugin, then we definitely recommend that. Avada assets are combined together to be more efficient than a plugin.

Create your own custom icon set and disable Font Awesome. If you only plan to use a select number of icons, then try out the Avada icons feature and create your own lightweight icon set. See the How To Replace Font Awesome Icons With A Custom Icon Set doc, for more information on this process. Alternatively, if you do still want to use Font Awesome, disable the subsets you aren』t using in Global Options – Theme Features.

If you are adding custom CSS in a child theme, chances are you would actually be better to add it to the global options custom CSS. This will vary, but usually the child theme CSS is loaded separately as part of another request, whereas the global options custom CSS is compiled into the main file with the rest.

Generate Critical CSS for above the fold content. This option can be enabled in the performance Wizard, or in the Global Options > Performance tab. You can then generate critical CSS for specific pages to assist the above the fold content loading faster.

Avoid parallax on mobile. If you are using parallax on containers, set to off for mobile. It should not have a big impact on the design of the page and the parallax will make the page less responsive on mobile. Especially important for the time to interactive measurement in Google core web vitals.

Avoid automatic popups. Popups to get newsletter subscriptions may look nice, but will be treated negatively by Google page speed insights as having a negative impact on user experience.,Configuring The Performance TabPerformance Tab – find the ideal option combination (it』s impossible to be prescriptive here, as this is not the same for everybody)

Lazy Loading – Avada. Do not use lazy loading from a plugin and Avada. This will almost certainly break image loading on the front-end and will not be beneficial. Avada lazy loading ensures carousels and dynamic content work properly, it is also tied together with critical CSS. So we definitely recommend sticking with Avada lazy loading.

Font Face Rendering – Swap All

Preload Key Fonts – None (or if your LCP is a heading, then the font weight used for the heading)
Emojis Script – Disable, unless you need it (comment area)
jQuery Migrate Script – Disable, unless you need it for a plugin. Even still we would recommend disabling and finding a more update option instead of the plugin.

Load jQuery In Footer – On. This will vary depending on content and plugins. Best approach is to turn it on and then check your website. If you notice issues then disable it, if you don』t then leave it on and the page load should be faster.

Load Stylesheets In Footer – Off. Having it on will result in page shift which will contribute to a high CLS score. If you want to defer the styles the better option is to use the critical CSS option. When the page has critical CSS it will automatically move the rest of the styles to the footer.

Enable Gzip Compression – Off. This one depends on your host, but having some form of compression is important. Most modern hosts will automatically use compression – in which case you can leave off. If you are unsure you can test by turning on and then testing your website performance.

Enable Video Facade – On. If you are using a lot of Vimeo or YouTube videos then turn on. If you are not using videos then leave it off.
CSS Compiling Method – File. Only use database if you must, only use disabled if you are actively working on the site and debugging.
Load Media-Queries Files Asynchronously – Off. In most situations the load times will be worse when enabled.
Enable CSS Variables – Either, but On will be fine as default.
Enable Critical CSS – Set to on. On your page content ensure you have set your page above the fold image to skip lazy load. Then visit the critical CSS page and generate critical CSS for your page. This will add critical CSS to the head of the page and move the rest of the styles to the footer. It will also preload the image set to skip lazy load. Both of these should contribute to an improvement in the LCP metric in Google core web vitals, but it depends on hosting and the content.

Enable JS Compiler – On.
Enable Progressive Web App – Either. Its unlikely to improve first page load, therefore speed tests wont pick up on why its good. However, for page loads after the first the PWA should improve speed a lot. So it can be nice to enable767,657 Businesses Trust Avada
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Get Avada,Avada OptimizationTurn off Elastic Slider unless you need it (unlikely)
Turn off post types you aren』t using (slider, portfolio, FAQ).

Turn off the Font Awesome subsets you don』t need, and consider switching to a custom icon set only.

Font Awesome v4 Compatibility – Off. If you do have version 4 icons, edit the pages and select a new icon (will be version 5 by default)
Load Frontend Block Styles – Off (unless needed)
Legacy Button Presets – Off. These are the color presets – green, blue etc. A fairly substantial amount of CSS can be saved by having this disabled and setting the desired colors to the button instead.

API scripts (YouTube, Google) Turn these off unless you are using them.

Disable elements you don』t use in Avada – Builder Options. This will save some CSS from being loaded and speed up PHP page building. JS is already conditional based on element usage on the page.

Disable any plugins you are not using. Plugins recommended by Avada are only for a specific purpose – they are not mandatory. If you are not using any sliders ensure you have all slider plugins disabled. Same goes for any other plugins you no longer need.,Extra Optimization
Get good quality hosting that is suited to WordPress. This will improve server response time. We use WPEngine.
Ensure you are up to date with PHP. If your host isn』t providing recent versions of PHP you may way to consider switching elsewhere. Newer PHP versions are more performant and will improve server response.
Cache. There are so many options here and different setups. You can have a cache plugin like WP Rocket, super cache etc. Also there is cache offered by hosts. There is loads of information out there on the subject. Just remember, the more cache the more you need to clear and check at update time. Also, always avoid using two options for the same thing (cache, minification, lazy load etc).

Minification. You can use a plugin to improve minification. However beware, you will not always get positive results and like caching you can end up causing problems. In most cases, you are better served leaving off and improving the content.

Image CDN. There are various image optimization and serving platforms. It』s best to try these out and find a combination which works for you. Popular plugin options are Smush plugin and EWWW image optimization. For CDN, we recommend CloudFlare. Finally, also bear in mind some hosts provide this as standard. For example Siteground offers WebP image generation in their optimization plugin.

Experimentation. Especially with performance plugins, its good to give them a test and find the winning formula for your setup. Just remember to clear caches between testing.,Testing
Load the page yourself before testing for load time. This is important if you are changing global options and then testing straight away to find the best score. For example, say you enable a cache plugin and then visit GTmetrix to test the URL straight away. The page will not be cached by the plugin yet and therefore you won』t actually be seeing a representative result. Best to visit the page yourself first (just a simple page load in your browse) then test. Additionally on first page load the CSS and JS files are compiled, which means more processing time than subsequent page loads.

Google Page Speed. Faster to do than using the website, you can use the Lighthouse feature in Chrome developer tools. https://developers.google.com/web/tools/lighthouse. Just ensure you are performing this in an incognito window where you are not logged in. Otherwise the scores will be worse, due to admin asset loading.,Useful ResourcesWhat Are Google Core Web Vitals, And Why They MatterHow To Use The Performance WizardHow To Optimize Above The Fold Content For PerformanceAvada Optimization Guide
Image Size Guide

Is Your Site Running Slow?

How To Speed Up Your Site Using Plugins

Comprehensive Guide To WordPress Image Optimization

Site Width Options

Site Width Options

Avada includes various options that control the overall Site Width, Content and Sidebar Width. You can also choose between a boxed or wide layout for your pages. All these options are located under Appearance > Theme Options > Layout. To learn more about these various options, keep reading below.
Layout OptionsThe Global Options Layout section at Avada > Options > Layout, makes it easy for you to manage your site』s layout type, width, padding and sidebar layouts. Choose between Boxed and Wide layouts, set page content padding, 100% width pages』 left and right padding, and adjust the top and bottom margins for all column sizes and single and dual sidebar layouts.
Layout – Choose between Boxed or Wide for your site. These are global Theme Options and can be overridden by individual page Fusion Options on a page by page basis. The Boxed option will restrict your site』s width to the value set in the site width option, using any valid CSS unit for example: 1170px – In the boxed mode, it is possible to set a background image, background pattern or a background color for your site. The Wide option will display your site at the width set in the site width option, using any valid CSS unit for example: 1170px or 100% width of the browser window.
Site Width – This option allows you to set the overall site width in the boxed or wide layout. You can use a pixel value (px), or a percentage (%). If you』d like your site to span the full browser width enter 100% as a value. If you』d prefer a set size, you can enter something like 1170px. To further customize your site』s layout, we also have left and right padding options for the Header, Footer and Main Content Area found in Theme Options.
Boxed Mode Top/Bottom Offset – This option controls the top/bottom offset of the box in which the entire page is in boxed mode
Boxed Mode Offset Scroll Mode – Choose between Framed scrolling or Full scrolling. Framed scrolling will always make the top/bottom offset of the box visible when scrolling. Full scrolling will also scroll the offset along with the page
Boxed Mode Shadow Type – This option controls the type of the shadow the boxed mode will show.
Page Content Padding – These options control the top and bottom padding for all your page content. To learn more about this option, please read our 『Page Content Padding』 article.
100% Width Left/Right Padding – This option controls the left and right padding for page content when using 100% site width or 100% width page template. Enter value including any valid CSS unit, for example: 30px
Single and Dual Sidebar Layout OptionsHere you can control single and dual sidebar layouts for your site.
Single Sidebar Width – This option controls the width of a single sidebar on all pages. Enter value including any valid CSS unit, for example: 23% – Click here to see a demo example of a single sidebar layout.
Single Sidebar Gutter – This option Controls the space between the main content and a single sidebar.
Dual Sidebar Width 1 – This option controls the width of sidebar 1 when dual sidebars are present. Enter value including any valid CSS unit, for example: 21% – Click here to see a demo example of a dual sidebar layout.
Dual Sidebar Width 2 – This option controls the width of sidebar 2 when dual sidebars are present. Enter value including any valid CSS unit, for example: 21% – Click here to see a demo example of a dual sidebar layout.
Dual Sidebar Gutter – This option Controls the space between the main content and dual sidebars.

Privacy Tool Options

Privacy Tool Options

What needs to be compliant is the end user website, it is not the software/framework a website is built on. The Avada WordPress theme as an entity does not violate GDPR criteria because it does not collect any data. What we as a team has done is give our Avada userbase existing and new, the tools necessary to ensure that their websites are GDPR compliant. These new privacy tools and options were introduced in Avada 5.5.2, released May 22nd, 2018.
OverviewPrivacy Theme OptionsGoogle Map Embed Overlay ExampleWordPress Privacy Page DesignationPrivacy Element Usage ExampleResourcesPrivacy Theme OptionsThe Privacy Elements options in the Avada Theme Options are located in Avada > Theme Options > Privacy section. These are global options options that will affect all your Privacy element instances unless otherwise specified within the individual element options.
Google Fonts Mode – Choose between Local or CDN. When set to Local, the Google fonts set in Theme Options will be downloaded to your server. When set to CDN, it will use the Google CDN.
Privacy Consent – Allows you to prevent embeds and scripts from loading until user consent is given.
Privacy Consent Cookie Expiration – Allows you to set how long the consent cookie should be stored in days.
Privacy Consent Types – Allows you to set the types of embeds you would like to require consent. Choose between Tracking Cookies, Google Maps, Twitter, Flickr, Facebook, SoundCloud, Vimeo, or YouTube.
Privacy Selected Consent Types – Allows you to set the types of embeds which you would like to be checked by default. This applies to both the privacy bar and the privacy element.
Privacy Placeholder Background Color – Allows you to set the background color for the privacy placeholders.
Privacy Placeholder Text Color – Allows you to set the text color for the embed placeholders.
Privacy Bar – Allows you to enable a privacy bar at the bottom of the page.
Privacy Bar Padding – Allows you to set the top/right/bottom/left paddings of the privacy bar area.
Privacy Bar Background Color – Allows you to set the background color for the privacy bar.
Privacy Bar Font Size – Allows you to set the font size for the privacy bar content.
Privacy Bar Text Color – Allows you to set the text color for the privacy bar content.
Privacy Bar Link Color – Allows you to set the link color for the privacy bar.
Privacy Bar Link Hover Color – Allows you to set the link hover color for the privacy bar.
Privacy Bar Text – Allows you to set the text which you want to appear on the privacy bar.
Privacy Bar Button Text – Allows you to set the button text for the privacy bar acceptance.
Privacy Bar Button Save On Click – If enabled, when the button is clicked it will save the default consent selection. If disabled, the button will only save the preferences after a checkbox has been changed (the bar will be hidden, however).
Privacy Bar Settings – If enabled, a settings section will be added to show more information and to provide checkboxes for tracking and third-party embeds.
Privacy Bar Settings Text – Allows you to set the link text for the privacy bar settings.
Privacy Bar Update Button Text – Allows you to set the button text for the privacy bar after a checkbox has changed.
Privacy Bar Heading Font Size – Allows you to set the font size for the privacy bar heading text.
Privacy Bar Headings Color – Allows you to set the text color of the privacy bar heading font.
Privacy Bar Content – This uses a repeater field to select the content for each column. Click the 「Add」 button to add additional columns. Choose between Custom, Tracking Cookies, or Third Party Embeds, and add a Title and Description for the content.
Google Map Embed Overlay ExampleAvada 5.5.2 gives you new Theme Options to prevent embeds from loading until user consent is granted to ensure GDP compliance. For any of the third party services, which you can freely choose from, you add to the consent list, the embeds will stop to be loaded on page load. Instead your users will see a placeholder graphic, with custom text on it and a button to accept this third party service. The background color and text color for that placeholder can be set in Theme Options.
Below is an example of the Google Map overlay on a contact form page, requiring consent:
In the above example you will see the following text:
Main Text – 「For privacy reasons Google Maps needs your permission to be loaded. For more details, please see our」 can be changed by editing the Avada .po file. See this help file on how to edit the language file.Page Link – 「Privacy Policy」 or whatever you choose to name that page is a link to a page on your site, detailing any privacy info for your customers. This page link is automatically enabled when you designate the page inside of the WordPress Privacy Settings panel. More info provided below.The WordPress 4.9.6 release comes with a series of Privacy Options for you to manage customer data and the option to designate a dedicated privacy policy page for your website. For the Avada embed overlay text to include this dedicated page, you need to enable this in the WordPress Dashboard >> Settings >> Privacy section
Privacy Element Usage ExampleThe whole setup is cookie driven and below is an example of what you will see on your site with a set of custom expiration dates for the cookies. Once it is expired your users will have to set their consents newly according to their preferences.
ResourcesPrivacy Element
Privacy Bar
GDPR and Avada Privacy Tools

Avada Speed & Performance

Avada Speed & Performance

Avada is created with both speed and performance in mind. Avada is highly optimized and provides you with the ability to get good speed test scores on most tools like Google PageSpeed Insights, GTMetrix, Pingdom, and Web Page Speed Test.
Of course, the final result will depend heavily on your site』s content. But Avada also offers a range of options to help you further tweak performance and load times. Let』s have a look at an overview of what』s on offer, and where you can tweak your settings.,Overview
Performance Wizard

Performance Tab
Advanced Options
Avada Builder Elements

Site Optimization

Useful Resources,Performance WizardThe Performance Wizard was released with Avada 7.4. This Wizard is meant to be used after your website has been completed, and it takes you through several steps to help you decide what features to turn off to help optimize the loading speed of your website. Please see the Performance Wizard documentation for more information on how to use this feature. This process allows you to tweak options from most of the sections listed below, in a semi-automated fashion. But for most control, you can also adjust the settings in the various sections individually.,Performance TabTowards the bottom of the Avada Global Options, you will find the Performance tab. This tab has a range of options to help tweak load times, depending on your preferences. These are split into three categories, Performance, Dynamic CSS & JS, and Progressive Web App.
View the Performance Tab Options!Performance
WordPress jpeg Quality – Controls the quality of the generated image sizes for every uploaded image. Ranges between 0 and 100 percent. Higher values lead to better image qualities but also higher file sizes. NOTE: After changing this value, please install and run the Regenerate Thumbnails plugin once.

WordPress Big Image Size Threshold – Sets the threshold for image height and width, above which WordPress will scale down newly uploaded images to this values as max-width or max-height. Set to 「0」 to disable the threshold completely. In pixels.

Image Lazy Loading – Choose your preferred lazy loading method for your website』s images to improve performance. Choose from Avada, WordPress, or None. IMPORTANT: The WordPress native method can cause issues with dynamically loaded elements like image carousels.

Iframe Lazy Loading – Choose your preferred lazy loading method for your website』s iframe to improve performance. Choose from Avada, WordPress, or None.

Font Face Rendering – Choose 「Swap All」 for faster rendering with possible flash of unstyled text (FOUT) or 「Block」 for clean rendering but longer wait time until first paint. 「Swap Non-Icon Fonts」 will use a mix of the first 2 methods (「swap」 for text fonts and 「block」 for icon-fonts).

Preload Key Fonts – Make a selection to prioritize fetching resources that will be requested later in page load. This improves page load time as the browser caches preloaded resources so they are available immediately when needed. Choose from All, Google Fonts, Icon Fonts, or None.

Preload Google Font Variants – Select the variants of Google fonts that should get preloaded. Leave empty to preload all variants. If, for example, you find that some text is the Largest Contentful Paint, then selecting the variants to preload can help with that metric.

Preload Google Font Subsets – Select the subsets of Google fonts that should get preloaded. Leave empty to preload all subsets.

Emojis Script – If you don』t use emojis you can improve performance by removing WordPress』 emojis script.

jQuery Migrate Script – If you are not using any deprecated jQuery code, you can disable this script to improve performance.

Load jQuery In Footer – Set to 『on』 to defer loading of jQuery to the footer of the page. This will only take effect if no other jQuery dependent scripts are added to the head. Turning this on can cause JS scripts to break, use with caution.

Load Stylesheets In Footer – Set to 『on』 to defer loading of the stylesheets to the footer of the page. This improves page load time by making the styles non-render-blocking. Depending on the connection speed, a flash of unstyled content (FOUC) might occur.

Enable Gzip Compression – Set to 『on』 to add Gzip Compression rules to the .htaccess file. IMPORTANT: This option works only on Apache web servers with mod_gzip and mod_deflate enabled.

Enable Video Facade – Use video facade in order to load video player only when video is played. IMPORTANT: This option is only applied to YouTube and Vimeo elements.
Dynamic CSS & JS
CSS Compiling method – Select 「File」 mode to compile the dynamic CSS to files (a separate file will be created for each of your pages & posts inside of the uploads/fusion-styles folder), 「Database」 mode to cache the CSS in your database, or select 「Disabled」 to disable.
Combine Third Party CSS Files – When enabled, third-party CSS files will be combined into Avada』s main stylesheet. Plugins affected are WooCommerce, The Events Calendar, Slider Revolution, ConvertPlus, Contact Form 7 and bbPress. IMPORTANT: When this option is changed, Avada Caches have to be reset for changes to apply.
Load Media-Queries Files Asynchronously – When enabled, the CSS media-queries will be enqueued separately and then loaded asynchronously, improving performance on mobile and desktop.
Enable Critical CSS – Set to 『on』 to enable the generation of critical CSS. Once turned on your can manage from the Critical CSS page.
Cache Server IP – For unique cases where you are using cloud flare and a cache server, ex: varnish cache. Enter your cache server IP to clear the theme options dynamic CSS cache. Consult with your server admin for help.

Enable JS Compiler – By default all the javascript files are combined. Disabling the JS compiler will load non-combined javascript files. This will have an impact on the performance of your site.

Reset Fusion Caches – Resets all Dynamic CSS & Dynamic JS, cleans-up the database and deletes the uploads/fusion-styles and uploads/fusion-scripts folders. When resetting the caches on the main site of a multisite installation, caches for all sub-sites will be reset. IMPORTANT NOTE: On large multisite installations with a low PHP timeout setting, bulk-resetting the caches may timeout.
Progressive Web App
Enable Progressive Web App – Enable this option if you want to enable the Progressive Web App feature and options on your website. This is primarily a caching app, under development at Google. For more information on this, please refer to this document.

Cache-First strategy file types – File types added in this list will be cached in the browser. Subsequent page requests will use the cached assets. Use this for static assets that don』t change like images and fonts.

Network-First strategy file types – File types added in this list will be cached in the browser. Subsequent page requests will first try to get a more recent version of these files from the network, and fallback to the cached files in case the network is unreachable. If your site』s content gets updated often we recommend you can use this for your content.

Stale-While-Revalidating strategy file types – Any file types added here will be served with a cache-first strategy, and after the page has been loaded the caches will be updated with more recent versions of the selected file types from the network. Use this for assets that may get updated but having their latest version is not critical.

App Splash Screen Logo – Logo displayed for your website at 512px x 512px when installing as an app. Logo image must be in PNG format.
App Display Mode – If the user installs your site as an app, select how the app will behave.
App Theme Color – Select a color that will be used for the header of your app, as well as the browser toolbar-color on mobile devices.
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Get Avada,Advanced OptionsFeaturesIn the Avada Global Options, you will find Features under Advanced > Features. This tab has a large range of options to enable or disable various Avada features, such as Mega Menus, YouTube and Vimeo API Scripts, Google Map Scripts and many more. If you are sure you won』t be using them, turning these features off will help improve load times, as the features will not be loaded.
To help decided which features to disable, you can now use the Performance Wizard to get recommendations your your install.
View the Features Options!,Post TypesUnder Advanced > Post Types, you will find options to completely disable various post types within Avada. These include Avada SLider, Avada Forms, Avada Portfolio and Avada FAQ. Disabling these will reduce the overall footprint of the theme, offering a modest improvement.
View the Post Types Options!,Avada Builder ElementsYou can also disable any of the Avada Builder Elements you are not using, including Layout Elements and Form Elements. You can find these at Options > Builder Options > Avada Builder Elements, from the Avada Dashboard. Disabling unused Elements can lead to a small increase in performance, but use with caution. Disabling an element will remove it from all pages/posts, old and new. If it was on a previous page/post, it will render as regular element markup on the front end.
From Avada 7.3 and up, you will also find the Run Element Scan button, which will scan your site and deselect all unused Elements for you. All you have to do is then save the options. See the Avada Builder Options doc for more info.,Site OptimizationDespite all the performance options we provide, when it comes to site optimization, Avada plays a much smaller part than you might imagine. Avada is optimized so that it』s fast on its own, and can be tweaked to be faster as shown above, but ultimately, user content will primarily dictate how fast your site will perform. Images play a huge factor in speed results, as well as hosting, extra plugins, content, and more.
Just as an example, if you have a site that』s 1100px wide and upload a 2000px image on a page, your page speed score will drop heavily. This is because sites like Google or GTMetrix will see a 1100px container that unnecessarily has an image in it that is almost twice its size.
There is a wealth of external tools you can use to analyze your site』s loading times, and to find the bottlenecks and non-optimized content that will affect the load speed of your pages. For more information on these tools, please see the following docs:

Performance Testing Using GTMetrix

Performance Testing Using Google Page Speed Insights

Performance Testing Using Pingdom

Performance Testing Using WebPageTest,Useful ResourcesWhat Are Google Core Web Vitals, And Why They MatterHow To Use The Performance WizardHow To Optimize Above The Fold Content For PerformanceAvada Optimization Guide
Image Size Guide

Is Your Site Running Slow?

How To Speed Up Your Site Using Plugins

Comprehensive Guide To WordPress Image Optimization

The 100% Width Page Template

The 100% Width Page Template

Of all the page templates in Avada, the 100% Width page template is is the most flexible. Let』s just look at how this template works and what options there are with full width content.
This template might seem counter intuitive at first. If you add a Container with a full width Column, and then add some content inside the Column, like a Title or Text etc, you might be surprised to see that it is limited to the Site Width. But the template is designed with full flexibility in mind, so it』s possible to have just parts of your content going full width, or all of it if you prefer.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Sidebars are not supported on the 100% width template. If you require sidebars, then you can use the 『default』 template, or you can insert the Widget Area Element if you need to show a sidebar or widget section on the 100% width template.Container BackgroundThe key is the Container. If you add a color or background image to a Container when using this page template, the color or image will stretch full width. This is automatic with this template.
In the image below, you also can see the padding indicators. The Left/Right padding is global – coming from the 100% Width Padding setting on the Layout tab of the Fusion Theme Options. Note that the height of a Container is determined by either the internal content or padding. Here, there is no internal content as yet, and the Top/Bottom padding has been set to 80px on this specific Container.
Internal ContentThe internal content of the Container though is entirely up to you. By default, it stays limited to Site Width, as this is the default behavior for Containers, but there is an option in the Container Options for the Interior Content Width to be set to 100% Width. This will allow the interior content added to any Columns inside this Container to spread out to the edges of the browser, limited only by the 100% Width Padding value set in Theme Options > Layout, and/or any manual left/right padding you apply to the Column.
In the image below, the Interior Content Width has been set to 100% Width, and the Left/Right padding adjusted on this specific Container to 100px, while the Top/Bottom padding has been adjusted to 180px. See the Adjusting Margins & Padding in Avada Live doc for more info on how to do this.
SummaryThese two aspects of the 100% Width page template are all you need to control the Full Width Elements on your page.
By default, remember the Internal Content of Containers is limited to Site Width, even when using the 100% Width page template. What is automatic is that Containers that have background colors or images, display these at the full 100% width.
Internally, to get your content to go full width, all you need to do is enable the setting in the individual Container Options for the Interior Content Width to be 100% Width. Then you can fine tune your layout with your global or local padding options.
With this template, you can achieve a great 100% page layout, with full control over all elements.