<p>I'd just try coding it in your fave text editor. It shouldn't take long for you to get lazy. The rest should fall into place. w3schools used to have html tutorials that were great for keepin' it old school.</p>
<p>Sent from mobile.</p>
<div class="gmail_quote">On Aug 29, 2011 4:09 PM, "Claude Felizardo" <<a href="mailto:cafelizardo@gmail.com">cafelizardo@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br type="attribution">> You want a CSS to make it look like browsers before CSS was available?<br>
> That's pretty retro. Can't you just not specify a style sheet and a<br>> gray background? That's just too funny.<br>> <br>> <br>> On Mon, Aug 29, 2011 at 3:43 PM, Braydon <<a href="mailto:ronin@braydon.com">ronin@braydon.com</a>> wrote:<br>
>> I so so wish I could have an image of the first website I ever saw, I swear<br>>> it had a picture of a globe with a search field underneath....<br>>><br>>> On 08/29/2011 02:25 PM, braddock wrote:<br>
>>><br>>>> Hi folks,<br>>>> I'm trying to make a retro-looking web page circa 1995. Does anyone know<br>>>> of a CSS stylesheet which will emulate the old default look of standard<br>
>>> web<br>>>> pages in NCSA Mosaic.<br>>>><br>>>> Gray background (what color?), non-aliased font (anyone know what font was<br>>>> used and if I can command CSS to use a non-aliased font?), etc. I'll have<br>
>>> to of course throw in a few animated gifs...<br>>>><br>>>> Thanks,<br>>>> Braddock<br>>>><br>>>><br>>>><br>>>> !DSPAM:4e5c03c8314661567313517!<br>
>>><br>>><br>>><br>>> --<br>>> Colors of Digital Freedom<br>>> <a href="http://braydon.com/hacker-t-shirt/">http://braydon.com/hacker-t-shirt/</a><br>>><br>>><br></div>