Welcome to my DIVI 5 testsite
This website primarily exists as a playground where I can experiment with layouts, modules, and ideas while developing plugins for Divi 5. Because of that, you may notice that some page titles, texts, images, or even the logo are placeholders or temporary elements. They are not meant to represent a finished website.
In other words: if something looks a bit random, unfinished, or inconsistent, that is very likely intentional.
However, there is one important exception.
The pages dedicated to my plugins are kept accurate and up to date. Those pages contain the correct information, descriptions, and demonstrations of the plugins I am developing.
It may be a slightly unusual type of website, but for now it serves as my development lab and showcase in one place.
Thanks for visiting, and feel free to explore!
The challenge:
The current animation zooms in… then snaps back. It doesn’t flow. It doesn’t "breathe".
Can you create a soft, “breathing” pulse effect on this button using only Divi 5’s default controls?
No CSS tricks.
No custom classes.
Only what Divi 5 gives you.
Is it possible to make it feel smooth and natural?
(and if so, there might be more than one way to approach it.)
Join the Lab... A Safe Place for Dangerous Ideas.
I’m always open to new plugin ideas, feature suggestions, or even completely crazy concepts that somehow popped into your head at 2 AM.
If there’s a tool, effect, module, or functionality you’ve always wished existed for Divi 5, feel free to tell me about it. Who knows — your idea might become the next plugin I build.
I’m also looking for… victims… uh, sorry… volunteers who would enjoy testing plugins (or parts of them) during development. No technical expertise is required at all. You don’t need to be a developer, designer, or “professional tester.” Curiosity, enthusiasm, and the willingness to click suspiciously large buttons are already excellent qualifications.
The goal is simply to gather feedback from real people with real opinions before plugins are released into the wild.
So if you enjoy experimenting, breaking things accidentally, or saying things like “this button feels weird,” you are more than welcome.
There are no obligations, no pressure, and no need to commit to anything long-term.
If you’d like to share an idea, help test something, or just say hello, you can always contact me through the contact page.
And yes, bug reports are appreciated. Emotional support during debugging sessions is appreciated even more.

