Use these options to display widget sidebars on all your blog's pages and single-post pages.
If you turn on widget sidebars for single-post pages, you may also choose to center the post navigation links
at the top of the page.
Select this option to left-align the widget titles in the sidebars with the content of the widgets.
The change is purely cosmetic, and which looks better is up to you.
This option turns a sticky post into a single-line headline at the top of the blog's home page.
This can be useful for alerting readers to important news or information without cluttering
up the top of your home page with a full post.
Only the first (topmost) sticky post will be converted into a headline.
To make a post sticky:
Go to the Posts admin page
Find the post you want to use and click Quick Edit
Select the option Make this post sticky
Click the Update button
Any text you specify (e.g. "News Alert!") will be placed in front of the post's title.
if you want add text after the title, or both before and after it, you can use the text string
#title# to indicate where you want the title to be displayed.
For example, if the sticky post title is 'Open For Business' and you want the headline to read:
News Alert! *** Open For Business ***
Then you should enter the following text for this option:
News Alert! *** %title% ***
This option lets you to change the height of the header image for your blog. It allows you to
specify the height for future header images that you upload on the Header
configuration page.
Please note that this option does not change the height for the existing images. If you want to
use an existing image with the new height, set the height on this page first, then download the image
to your computer and re-upload it using the Header page.
You can also opt to have all existing header images displayed at the new height, but this will
stretched or compressed header images that are not the currently specified height, which may not look very good.
Selecting this option turns on some additional color settings on the Theme Options page.
The colors are initially set to the default values for the current color scheme (also set on the Theme Options page)
and any changes you make will immediately be seen on your blog pages as soon as you click the Save Changes button.
Only the most commonly used text and background colors can be changed this way. If you want to change other color values in the theme,
use the Custom CSS option on this page, or create a child theme for your changes.
This option gives you a convenient and safe place for making tweaks to the theme's CSS styles.
The CSS styles will be embedded after the theme's stylesheet, so you can use this option to override styles
used in the theme. For example, if you want to make all the post titles to yellow, you can add the
following CSS style:
.entry-title, .entry-title a {
color: yellow;
}
Please note that this option is really only intended for making fairly minor tweaks and adjustments.
If you want to completely overhaul the CSS for the Twenty Eleven theme, then you should probably replace or make
changes to the theme's stylesheet itself.