/gnome-osc-themes

Gnome-OSC-themes are GTK-themes for the gnome-desktop

Primary LanguageCSSGNU General Public License v2.0GPL-2.0

gnome-osc-themes

GNOME-OSC-Traditional/ Gnome-OSC-traditional-light-menu and its No Transparency-versions

GNOME-OSC-HS / Gnome-OSC-HS-light-menu and its no transparency versions

GNOME-OSC-Space-grey and its no transparency version

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This is a gnome-desktop-interpretation of a certain Cupertino-based OS. I've tried to implement the feel of it on the gnome-applications, without really copying it (to prevent copyright-issues). In the latest version I've modernized it in every little detail. There is nothing (not a single item) that is not new. Resulting in a completely rewritten GTK.CSS-file four times bigger than the previous one, while the theme feels more responsive. I've also added a new dark theme (Space-grey) , so Terminal, Photo's, and Video's are automatically dark-themed.

Gnome-OSC-Space-Grey is also available seperately. This has the benefit of GTK 2.0- theming also. Added the HS-variant too. New: Traditional and HS come with a variant that uses light background for menu's. Useful for those with bad ( blueish )screens, since menu's tend to be blue instead of grey.

I've spend a great deal of time (3 months) and effort on this theme into fine-tuning it, so I hope you try before you judge !

Main features:

  • Support for dark theme.(Space grey)
  • Use of gradients and shadows to improve readability.
  • Same theming across GTK2 and GTK3. (See screenshots).

Separate download for Shell-themes:

  • New Shell-theme to complement the Space-grey-variant
  • Shell theme with white dock and slighty dark top-bar
  • Shell theme with dark dock and dark top-bar.

This theme is developed on gnome 3.20 and updated to 3.28 This only works on a gnome-desktop, no support for other desktop-environments. It also works on Ubuntu 18.04

When, as such, theming does not look the way it should be: make sure you have installed the necessary theme-"engines":

  • The gnome-themes-standard package,
  • The murrine engine. This has different names depending on your distro. gtk-engine-murrine (Arch Linux) gtk2-engines-murrine (Debian, Ubuntu, elementary OS) gtk-murrine-engine (Fedora) gtk2-engine-murrine (openSUSE) gtk-engines-murrine (Gentoo)

sudo apt-get install gtk2-engines-pixbuf is the terminal command, usually solves the issues with GTK2.

How to install:

First: Download the file; extract it; and you will find two themes. a version with transparency, another with (not-transparent); copy both files to a '.themes'-folder you make in your home directory. Or to your USR/SHARE/THEMES-folder for system-wide use (certainly for theming of SNAP-packages) Then use Tweak-tool to select the GTK and shell theme. LOG OUT AND BACK IN for changes to take effect !

Second: OSX uses titlebuttons on the left-side: To put the buttons to the left open a terminal:

gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences button-layout "close,minimize,maximize:"

To put the buttons back to the right in case you want to revert:

gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.wm.preferences button-layout ":minimize,maximize,close"

In Gnome 3.26+ gnome-tweak has a option to change the position of the titlebuttons, so the above steps are not necessary.