This is a guest post by David Darnes, creator of the Alembic theme. By nature, any well structured site that has easily editable content is ‘themeable’ — a layer, or skin, that presents content in the way the owner or creator intended; Jekyll is no different. Pages, posts and any other form of formatted content can be segregated from the templating files. Themes for Jekyll have been around for a while, but the process of installing a theme was a bit clunky. Content files and templating ...