As someone who makes a living selling layer styles[1], I have to say this is very cool, but also slightly worrying ;) I've been trying to figure out how long the market for Photoshop addons will last, as CSS and other technologies advance to the point where everything can be done in the browser. Clearly, we're getting closer.
You'd be surprised. I know photographers that make a decent living selling PS actions, templates and Lightroom presets. Usually more than they make actually taking pictures.
The glass effects look good. I noticed you are using fastspring which I have been considering as a payment processor, Have you had any issues with them? Also can you tell me how well does it handle digital downloads? The way it releases the download to the paid customer, or is it something you handle yourself? Thanks for any advice.
It took me a little while to see the CSS Code link on the bottom left.. but that's probably because I was so busy messing around with the tool.
Great work! keep it up.
Looks great. I did find a couple little bugs. One annoying, one not so much:
1) The annoying one - When backspacing over values in entry fields (such as opacity, or distance), backspacing over all the characters causes NaN to appear in the field. Sometimes you have to fight with the input field a bit to allow you to re-enter text. (Usually shift+home+the key you want to hit will work)
2) If you enter a ridiculous value such as 500 for percentage then the slider behaves strangely. Not annoying as it pretty quickly snaps back to where it should be.
I love the site, so please do not take these two critiques as a slight against it.
Internet Explorer is not supported. There's a feature detection running at the start page which blocks off browsers who don't support all feature. No released IE supports background gradient's - so they are all blocked. IE 10 will support them, and by the speed browsers iterate nowadays (thanks to Chrome starting that trend) I have hopes that it's release won't take too long.
it has no support for color-stops in gradients, but your right - would be enough for most people. but since the audience are web-designers, for whom 2 color-stops would be a limitation, it's no option.
I visited in Opera, which is not supported. But I was very pleased that the site didn't just block me for not being an approved browser, but actually tested for the existence of a feature. Bravo!
[1] http://photoshoplayerstyles.com/