Effective Twitter Backgrounds: Examples and Current Practices
Smashing Magazine has been on Twitter for about a year now (@smashingmag), and it turned out to be a great medium to communicate with our audience, build connections, discuss design-related topics and give away some nice prizes. However, even a year later, we still don’t have a Twitter background page and now is a good time to change that. So because we decided to create our own Twitter page, we wanted to first find out how other designers do it and what tips and techniques they use to create a truly outstanding, beautiful Twitter page.
Your profile page is the only place on Twitter where you get opportunity to showcase your visual brand and possibly communicate additional information that can last longer than a tweet. You can customize your profile page by changing background, text and link colors. It’s as simple as changing the skin, but ability to change background image has allowed designers to create really unique profile pages.
Primary focus of this article is to explore various techniques to create unique, memorable and effective Twitter profile pages. However, before proceeding to the list, it is important to briefly discuss the structure of the Twitter profile page.
Twitter Profile Page
Most important thing to note is that the main content block in the layout of a Twitter profile page has the fixed width of 765 pixels, and it is always centered. This is good, because it makes it possible for you to show your background image using the extra space created on the both sides of the block when displayed at higher resolutions.


Other things that you should keep in mind:
- timeline background is always white
- menu bar background is always white
- footer bar background is always white
- logo is always the Twitter logo
- picture can be changed
- you can change text color, link color, sidebar background color and sidebar border color
- you can change background image and background color
- you can also tile background image
- the background image start position is always top left corner
Note that if you are only interested in designing a nice profile page, you can easily do that by incorporating a stunning background image and customizing text, link and sidebar colors accordingly. But if your intentions are to be unique, incorporate brand identity and communicate additional information, then you will need to be little bit more creative with your background image.
Tips & Techniques
Following is a list of profile pages, illustrating various tips & techniques that you can incorporate in your own backgrounds. Please note that most of these profile pages incorporate more than one technique, and you should also consider mixing multiple techniques according to your own requirements.
Merge Background With Timeline / Sidebar
This is probably the least used technique among all tips and techniques discussed here. By merging your background graphics with timeline and/or sidebar, you can create a unique layout with a very distinctive look and form.
Mix Tiled Pattern With Other Graphics
Twitter allows you to integrate one background image that can be either tiled or not. But you can create unique look for your profile page by creating a background image that has both.
Reveal More With Your Pictures
Your profile picture (it can be an avatar, logo or photo) is your main identity on Twitter; it will be displayed next to every tweet that you send out to your followers. For instance, you can use a background image that is somehow related to your profile picture and thus convey more information about yourself or your brand. In other words, you can use this classic approach of creating design around your logo or brand identity to communicate information in a more effective way.
Reveal More With The Page Peel Effect
If you have an established visual identity, you can use page peel effect to show users who is actualy behind the Twitter profile. This technique provides you with a freedom to design the rest of the background as you wish, because you may no longer need to worry about integrating brand visuals and its colors.
Add Personalized Sidebar To Your Profile
The following profiles illustrate a specific use of the first technique by adding sidebars to the layout. You can add such panels to effectively highlight additional information that you want to communicate.
Show Yourself
In social media world, you are the brand. With Twitter, being one of the major players in social media, showing yourself on the profile page can be very effective way of strengthening your brand and community around your website.
Use Icons and Logos
Following profiles illustrate simple, yet very effective technique to communicate association with or involvement in certain community, service, skill, etc by showcasing relevant icons or logos.
Add a Header Bar
Adding a header bar could be used for creating unique look for your profile page, but it can also be used to separate Twitter logo and top menu (which contain links to user’s profile) from the rest of your page.
Less is More
Andre Gide once said that “Art is a collaboration between God and the artist, and the less the artist does the better”. Here are few illustrations of how minimalism can be used to its full effect:
Accommodate the 1024px Width
If you care how your profile page will appear on 1024px wide screens, you will need to work near the top and left borders of your background image. Here is an example of how a nice visual design can be used properly for various screen resolutions:
Here is another interesting technique to ensure that your profile page has a very similar look on both 1024 and 1280px wide resolutions:
Use Typography
Use of typography in Twitter backgrounds is not very common; however if used creatively, you can create unique, very effective profile pages to communicate additional information.
Put Information In a Memorable Way
Composition is the plan, placement or arrangement of the elements. You can arrange elements on your background in a unique and memorable, showcasing information that is important to you and your readers. This techniques allows you to create an environment, show your personality and provide additional information.
Do Whatever You Want To Do
The more original, creative and distinctive your background image is, the more likely it is to be memorable and strengthen your online presence. Experiment with beautiful, personalized illustrations, background images and typography. Make sure that your background image has a personal voice, doesn’t look generic and has an unusual twist. Your first time visitors will appreciate it.
Gallery
Now that we discussed a couple of techniques for the design of Twitter backgrounds, here is a collection of some well-designed profile pages to tame your appetite for Twitter profile page inspiration.
Tools
- Twitter Background Template: Free Twitter Background template in PSD format from “Fuel Your Creativity”, includes guides that match up with different resolutions from 800×600 to 1900×1200.
- Peekr: A bookmarklet that you can drag to your browser’s toolbar and click on to see a twitter user’s entire background graphic and then click again to get things back to normal.
- Twitter Background Checker: Lets you check how your Twitter profile looks in smaller or higher resolutions.
- ClickableNow: Add Clickable Links to your Twitter background image.
Additional Resources
- Twitter Background Design How-To and Best Practices
- Design a Unique Twitter Background
- 4 Ways to Optimize Your Twitter Background
- Resource Kit To Create, Customize & Find Twitter Backgrounds













































































































Tisbah
September 11th, 2009 6:03 amGreat article. I have to create mine soon. :)
Michael
September 18th, 2009 5:56 amThanks For all the tools, guides, and Inspiration! Maybe my background can make the next list @madesigns
Matt Busse
September 18th, 2009 6:21 amDesigners should also remember that many people use screen resolutions with a height greater than the 900 or so that is standard on a 19″ widescreen. Many use 1024 height (for example, 1280 x 1024) or taller. @adamplitt’s background looks cool but on a 1024-tall window it is cut off at the bottom. The best thing to do is make your background image fade into your background color.
David B
September 18th, 2009 6:23 amI think this eclectic background is cool.
@Jacob_DeGrade
Tobias
September 18th, 2009 6:27 amI still fail to find Twitter fun or usefull or whatever… :/
Bim
September 18th, 2009 6:38 amhelpful. thank you. not many people actually view twitter from the homepage now do they? well its a lot less before.
Art Webb
September 18th, 2009 6:40 amThanks for the mention. @webb_art
Onelargeprawn
September 18th, 2009 6:42 amThanks for the tips. I need to revisit my messy background.
Susan
September 18th, 2009 6:44 amPeople need to remember to create their twitter backgrounds for various screen resolutions. Lots of these backgrounds look great in the screenshots, but they look awful on my monitor (1900×1280).
Aubrey Johnson
September 18th, 2009 6:45 amGreat Article, it’d be great to make the round two of this list.
@aubreyjohnson
TarantinO
September 18th, 2009 6:45 amGreat works =]
h1brd
September 18th, 2009 6:45 amCool post, I like to think mine is also pretty good and at the level of being exposed, check it here: http://twitter.com/h1brd
G-Mo
September 18th, 2009 6:48 amSome nice examples – The first one’s a good idea but it resizes pretty poorly. Us mac kinds don’t normally conform to standard screen sizes.
Sharebrain
September 18th, 2009 6:50 amHey hey … thx for the mention! :)
Jeroen
September 18th, 2009 6:53 amThey should support more background options (CSS)
Centered positioning of the background would be nice to have?!
Ivan
September 18th, 2009 6:54 amCool. I just keep my as simple as possible @IvanBernat
Greg
September 18th, 2009 6:56 amGreat stuff. While I find Twitter too narcissistic to justify a personal page, our news station has one, and we incorporate ti into the show as a way for viewers to interact with stories. The anchors can read responses right from the laptops on their desks.
Mike
September 18th, 2009 6:58 amUnfortunately all this works with a certain screen resolution.
Grant
September 18th, 2009 7:00 amThanks for the mention! I have to agree with an earlier comment though, I hardly ever use my actual Twitter homepage to update, although I still enjoy looking at other peoples’ backgrounds and content through the Twitter site.
@grant_clark
Justin
September 18th, 2009 7:11 amI agree with a lot of the commenters here that you need to take screen resolution as a main factor. while @adamplitts looks good, it only looks good when your screen is at the exact res that it was built for. It would make it a lot better to do one like that if twitter were to give us the option of making our background image centered along with the rest of the site.
While backgrounds won’t necessarily look the same from a netbook to a 24 inch screen with a 1920×1200 screen size, I think it is important that we take them all into consideration when making the designs for this. I am not saying I am perfect at this, but it is all something we need to consider…
@justinruess
Syed Balkhi
September 18th, 2009 7:35 amThis was an excellent roundup. Thanks for including our site @wpbeginner
You did miss out a few other great backgrounds like @bkmacdaddy or my personal one @syedbalkhi , and @realmtnboy
All to all an excellent roundup :)
Amy
September 18th, 2009 7:40 amI like my twitter layout. It’s the jizz. @omgitslittlet
Todd (@CantonDog)
September 18th, 2009 7:43 amGreat list. I’ve always thought my background was good (@CantonDog), but now I’m thinking I should be a bit more creative. This is good inspiration. Thanks.
Jessica
September 18th, 2009 7:50 amGreat list!
I also run a site with a gallery of Twitter backgrounds if others are looking for inspiration. http://www.twitter-gallery.com
Susan
September 18th, 2009 7:50 am@Aaron Besson
@h1brd
Both nice designs but same issues with screen size, they don’t reach the bottom of the screen.
Roisin Markham
September 18th, 2009 7:58 amExcellent. Really useful information all in the one place. Just what I need. thanks
jonharules
September 18th, 2009 8:00 amThey may not have the most followers but they sure have the most effective marketing or branding I can see. Mine is simple but I love the comfortable and cozy feeling I get when I see it @jonharules
Ozh
September 18th, 2009 8:06 amhttp://planetozh.com/blog/2009/03/pixel-perfect-background-photoshop-template-for-twitter/ is a great template for twitter background
Helga Grotewold
September 18th, 2009 8:06 am@helgita89 :)
Hernán Aros
September 18th, 2009 8:15 amWow!!!..What an inspiring post!!…Thanks!
Tricia Cross
September 18th, 2009 8:31 amWhat about @sciencebase His is pretty neat, narrow sidebar, nothing hidden behind the main screens etc…
Bruno Ribeiro
September 18th, 2009 8:34 amGreat article and some wonderfull designs. At Douro Azul, a Portuguese cruising company, we did the study you show at the beginning of the article to creat our twitter profile background. There’s a lot of trial and error untill you get the perfect balance. Also, when you represent a brand you have to guarantee that your twitter profile page is alligned with your overall corporate image. I think our design team did ok. You should check it at twitter.com/DouroAzul
Btw, @adamplitt has, imho, the best and more creative background.
gaksdesigns
September 18th, 2009 8:50 amThank you for the mention @gaksdesigns
Much appreciated!
printedproof
September 18th, 2009 8:51 amgreat collection! those are some amazing backgrounds. I think i need an update… @printedproof
Brad
September 18th, 2009 8:52 amGreat article. Cool to see how limitations and constraints can help creativity really take off. (Oftentimes much easier to get some initial boundaries than hearing from a client “Just do whatever you want”). I really like the fuller, more complicated designs on here, but went with clean and simple for mine – @aptdesign
Mark
September 18th, 2009 8:53 amI thought it was a confusing article. I expected a list of best practices, and then was given a list of a bunch of things to add….followed by “less is more”….followed by “do whatever you want to do”.
Design is about communication. And when ‘best practices’ cause communication to be lost on potential clients and customers, I think there’s a disconnect from best practice. I’ve been struggling with the best way to do this, myself, was excited about seeing this article.
Was a great showcase of art. Could revisit the best practices idea again in the future.
bs.kishore
September 18th, 2009 8:56 amnice and informative post…
ben smithson
September 18th, 2009 8:58 amThank you for not including a whole ton of social media douchebag backgrounds. I cannot stand the people who put way, way, way too much contact info and “fake” (non-clickable) janky non-links in their background graphics.
Yorick Peterse
September 18th, 2009 9:20 amI always wondered when SmashingMagazine would give into the Twitter background crap…
Ipstenu
September 18th, 2009 9:49 amSadly, like many others I see the problem as being the centering.
The variable widths that people keep their browsers really can damn your view. Twitter would be doing a service if we could pick alignments. Like ‘X px from left’, aligned left, or centered.
Then we would REALLY be able to theme.
kilinkis
September 18th, 2009 10:07 amcool! super cool post!
Dawn Farias
September 18th, 2009 10:15 amExcellent! Thank you.
Anibal Blasutti
September 18th, 2009 10:27 amBUUU :(
They doesn’t work in widescreen resolution. Twitter content ALWAYS work based in center alignment.
Most of this examples doesn’t look so good as S.M. is showing.
Smashing Magazine, I’ll continue reading your post, ILOVE YOU. :)
Louis
September 18th, 2009 11:30 amNice to see Tyler Stewart of Barenaked Ladies on the list.
Jim Hanifen
September 18th, 2009 1:28 pmDreamweaver developers will like this one. The height is based on 72px per inch.
Benek Lisefski
September 18th, 2009 2:03 pmThanks for including mine. This is a wonderful and inspiring list.
Anup
September 18th, 2009 2:24 pmI think you the twitter background should match the product / service / person it is trying to depict. Sitepoint was great! . Check our classifieds revolution at
Localads Twitter
Didier LAHELY
September 18th, 2009 3:13 pmWhy, why, why? I’m not in this list? Whyyyy!!! (crying out of load)
I change my Twitter every hour just for Smashing Magazine! BoooOOuuUh!!! They still ignore me even if the CEO is my cousin! http://twitter.com/10dier – Whyyyyyyyyyyy.
Life is so cruel with me!!!
(I know, I should take a rest ; )
Khayyam Wakil
September 18th, 2009 3:20 pmWow. Thanks for the mention! The best part of my background is only visible to a discriminating eye or someone who has a big up massive display.
Here’s a link to see the full meal deal:
http://j.mp/1HDNPc
Once again, thanks for the mention and can’t tell you how important it is to leave Easter Eggs for people. It’s always fun and the only interactive part that you could possibly implement into your background.
And remember, it’s ok to believe… you are beautiful :)
Tamixes
September 18th, 2009 4:19 pmGreat roundup! I love twitter and peekr is sooo cool!
Billy Goat
September 18th, 2009 4:50 pmMan, if I see wood and a coffee cup in a background graphic, i’m going to barf. It’s lame and over.
Johnny Rotten
September 18th, 2009 4:52 pm“HUGE” went really lame and obvious with this background. I would expect more from a large agency like that. The rest are all drivel and totally not original.
Jim
September 18th, 2009 5:09 pmThanks for mentioning me in the list, and for all the other great backgrounds. Some really talented people out there!
Rodolfo Novak
September 18th, 2009 5:11 pmyou are so missing mine, Toronto from the top
cyndy
September 18th, 2009 5:26 pmnice one! gonna design for my twitter too :)
adam plitt
September 18th, 2009 7:09 pmThanks for all the attention…. positive and negative. I wanted to make my idea work on all resolutions but it is simply impossible. Therefore, I chose to maximize the number of viewers with screen resolutions that would correctly display my background. The majority of twitters (and surfers in general) utilize the most common screen resolution, which is 1024 and 1280 in width. I know that there will still be loads of visitors who won’t see it correctly, but the idea, imho, was just too cool to pass.
Change your resolution to 1024 x 768 and you will be viewing the web like the majority of other users… otherwise, you might just miss out on something pretty dedgum awesome. I know, I know… this resolution isn’t visually the best, but it is the most common. I use two monitors and extend my desktop for a more efficient working/relaxing environment. This way I can set each monitor to display different resolutions.
Thanks again…
be unique. be yourself. be a be a.
Rames
September 18th, 2009 7:25 pmThanks alot of adding mine with the rest! Great collections!
Marcel Santilli
September 18th, 2009 7:47 pmGreat post! Just inspired me to redesign my Twitter background.
This is what I did with mine –
Marcel Santilli
September 18th, 2009 7:47 pmGreat post! Just inspired me to redesign my Twitter background.
This is what I did with mine –
kimee
September 18th, 2009 8:35 pmThanks~ it’s really inspiring post~
Frank Whyte
September 18th, 2009 9:11 pmGood info. Yall check out my custom page. @Frank_Whyte
Matt
September 18th, 2009 10:50 pmLove it! Might have to use some of these techniques! Cheers and thanks for a great read.
Matt
Rob
September 18th, 2009 11:35 pmI probably should read through the comments above to see if others are talking about this… but… HOLY CRAP!!! So many of those twitter pages look terrible if your browser isn’t set to maximum width!
Twitter doesn’t center page backgrounds even though content on the page is centered. Here’s a perfect example of bad design:
http://twitter.com/adamplitt
On my screen, I see THREE sets of fingers. One on the left and two on the right. Talk about not paying attention to details.
Romarto
September 19th, 2009 1:08 amHi ! Really inspiring and actual info for background-designers.
How about 1280+ resolution like 1600×1200, 1920×200 and may be even 2560×1600 ?
p.s. Just finished working on @zoknowsgaming background – is it deserve to be in your list ?
@romarto
davidg
September 19th, 2009 1:19 amawesome examples, thanks for including mine!
Mithun P Sreedharan
September 19th, 2009 1:35 amI think you people missed my page ;-) http://twitter.com/mithunp
jing
September 19th, 2009 3:45 amwow, i love this post :P
thanks for your great collections :)
Michal
September 19th, 2009 6:07 amthese design teqnics should / could also be applied to youtube. Im going to do so in a new project.
Shazzz
September 19th, 2009 7:22 amGood article and a great collection of screenshots.
I did my twitter background a while ago, any feedback?
@shazboy
Peterson
September 19th, 2009 10:31 amWow, lots of shameless plugs and spam in the comments ( tubebutler, really?)
Either way, until Twitter supports CSS, centering is next to impossible to do, there will always be a black band around the background. Some of these look good, others look like utter shite on 1920×1200.
mayhemstudios
September 19th, 2009 10:36 amThanks for the mention and including me with some of best awesome designs :)
John Briggs
September 19th, 2009 11:38 amAwesome! Now I don’t have to spend any time being creative!
Gatis
September 19th, 2009 11:55 amGreat and inspirational post. I will remake my twitter page someday, right now it looks kinda simple, but still nice. Go check it out http://twitter.com/gatisstrods
Allen
September 19th, 2009 12:30 pmwhat I still it amazing the amount narcissism that is out there, and how Twitter just fuels so many! Why would I want to follow the every “important thought” you have? Why do you feel the need to tell everyone your every thought… and why do I have to look at your ugly mugs now too! How many of these self-involved idiots out there thought “ooh I gotta setup up a portrait session with someone so I can have some fresh pics for my twitter background”… They say in fashion, each decade comes around again… I’d say the 70′s “Me Decade” is coming back… and in greater numbers!
Jay
September 19th, 2009 3:23 pm@Allen
AMEN to that.
Mark
September 19th, 2009 9:45 pmStop wasting your time tweeting when the end of the world is at hand! Join the fight at !
doubleolee
September 20th, 2009 1:36 amthanks for including me in such a great list of background designs, I’m honored!
Floris Fiedeldij Dop
September 20th, 2009 2:44 amawesome
Sam
September 20th, 2009 3:09 amAnother great article! Love you guys!!
Lucinda
September 20th, 2009 4:33 amand by thanks, I mean, this thingummy here :
Marian Rick
September 20th, 2009 4:44 amI love it! Updated my twitter today!
Patricia
September 20th, 2009 5:13 amthis is amazing! i edited my bg before so it’s aligned axactly in my twitter feed wallbut it doesn’t show the same way in our widescreen pc. so how do i get to have my bg exact;y the way i want it to appear? i don’t know the right measurements.
i had an idea before like the one with the hand gripping the page (but not that one) and i don’t know if i’m wasting my time making it look properly on my laptop when it doesn’t look properly in a desktop pc. help me!
@boyatheart
September 20th, 2009 7:41 amIt’s fairly simple to configure your background to work with most screen resolutions.
Mine is set up, so you can read all the details I want the visitor to see on good ‘ol 1024×768, 1280×1024 and higher.
The trick is in the placement of your important information and graphics.
You need to place your website URLs or whatever important details you want more than once, in different postitions, so that the relevant one will show up on the corresponding screen resolution.
Some of those backgrounds by the way are really boring. Did they make the list more because they’ve got loads of followers?
AL
September 20th, 2009 10:32 amToo many of those are too busy and they only look good on a few or, worse…only one resolution.
dillu
September 20th, 2009 5:30 pmHope u like mine tooo ….
http://twitter.com/dileepiscalling
Jeremy
September 20th, 2009 5:46 pmI created a pattern, if you want to take a look :) http://twitter.com/jeremylv
Aaron
September 20th, 2009 6:01 pmThanks! Check out the BG I made, maybe you’ll include mine next time: @acm55
Greg Daniels
September 20th, 2009 7:37 pmThese are all great! I wish I had seen this before I redid my background. I’m quite pleased with mine though. It could have been a contender for this post. Maybe. I dont know, what do you think?
http://www.twitter.com/g_daniels
SLEO
September 20th, 2009 11:29 pmNice collection ; )
Ok, so my twitter – http://www.twitter.com/brainwarestudio
yo
ingo
September 21st, 2009 1:06 amtwitterism.
made this background some moths ago in an affect of stylism with all my designism i could raise with playism!
http://twitter.com/theimo
RaDe
September 21st, 2009 1:39 amCool article :)
mattia
September 21st, 2009 2:21 amI think mine is good too :) check it out
Martyn Web
September 21st, 2009 5:02 amCheck our out, @morganwebdesign ! what do you think?
JHaas
September 21st, 2009 5:57 amThe belief that one should design a page for maximized wide screen users is a bit, how do I say, exclusive? Absurd? Try looking at these pages in 1024×768 sometime. They look absurd.
Peter
September 21st, 2009 8:10 amSome pretty neat designs!
manu
September 21st, 2009 9:10 amRegarding http://twitter.com/elitistsnob ‘s background : What tool would you use to create that “border” between two parts of the image ?
Tibor opauszki
September 21st, 2009 10:31 amVery cool backgrounds!
BaZookaPL
September 21st, 2009 12:04 pmAwesome selection!!
I wont be original but I’ll showcase some too :P
@BaZookaPL
@fredaudet
@cstyves
Amy
September 21st, 2009 1:50 pmAm I the only person in existence who refuses to let their browser take up their whole screen? I always have other things going on and like to keep it relatively unobtrusive – about 1k pixels wide – even though I have a widescreen monitor.
That’s the thing that bugs me about left-sidebar Twitter backgrounds. The words/images always get cut off to the point that the background ends up looking unprofessional.
And your average client/casual user isn’t going to know that you had no control over that. They’re going to think that you didn’t know what you were doing. Hell, that’s what I think every time I open a Twitter page to see a witty sidebar all cut off and looking stupid.
I personally see no point in creating elaborate left sidebars. In my opinion, current best practice for Twitter backgrounds would be:
- no text
- abstract imagery preferred
- imagery that makes sense whether you see 10 pixels of it or the beautiful 200 pixel creation of your dreams (the one you imagine your viewers are seeing)
Carolyn Wood
September 21st, 2009 2:16 pmThanks so much for the mention! (On Twitter, I’m @carywood.) I must tell you, though, that my background was actually designed by @natalie who sells very reasonably priced backgrounds at http://twitterpatterns.com. The one I use isn’t there; I purchased it ages ago.
One I love that I don’t see here is Grace Smith’s. @gracesmith. Love the chalkboard, the info, what you see if you expand your browser width, etc. Great combination of form and function, in my opinion.