About Naeolia

Presently

Version: 03
Details: featuring Liv Tyler, quote from KDb.
Credits: Liv Tyler photos, Liv Tyler photo, brushes, background pattern, my own texture.
Tested in: Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Browsershots.
Special Thanks: Souly

History

Naeolia is young. She was born on October 22, 2007 in Geocities. It was not an easy labor for Nicole, the webmiss. However, Naeolia was not the first child Nicole mothered. A couple years ago, from the time Nicole was 9 to her early 13th year, she owned a website called Arwen Turwaithiel. It was a LotR fansite. This is a link to the full history of AT as written by Nicole while she still owned the website. [Old History]. After a while, Nicole (then Arwen) changed hosts to Fractured-Sanity.org. Things started to fall apart later into the year, what with school and life. So Arwen terminated the F-S.org website. But the Geocities' antiquated version still lived. And when Nicole salvaged the remains in 2007, want for another website came back to her strongly. And hence, Naeolia was brought into the World Wide Web.

Previous Versions

VERSION 02


A drastic change from v01. The dotted hearts pattern was created by me (not that hard) and I used my own crack texture, which was the first texture I made for Naeolia's resources. There is a slight interruption of the pattern in the big screencap because I used two screencaps, one of the top, and one of the bottom area to adjoin and show the entire home page. Still, I liked this layout, because it was my first "professional" layout for Naeolia. Up from November 2007-early February 2008.

VERSION 01


The very first layout. Good thing I have a record. The screencap was cropped to minimalize all the extra whiteness. I was happy with it at first, for it was some extensive HTML, but I tired of it quickly. Too simple. But simplicity is good in the beginning In the way beginning, it was hosted here.

Name

'Naeolia' is a combination of two things: my first initial and the musical term, Aeolian. Aeolian is the same as a natural minor scale, and I thought the name was very intriguing. When I Googled the term (ha!), apparently it had a link with Greek mythology, which I absolutely love. So I was in luck. But otherwise, there's no other reason for the strange name.