A big part of the WordPress theme development process is to asses what each possible HTML element will look like (images, tables, lists, paragraphs, etc). The guys at WPCandy.com have put together a set of posts with all the sample content you may need, so you can be thorough in you CSS formatting:
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TWITTER FAVES
- @zeldman: "Magazines must step away from the "print business" and realize they are in the *content* business. @karenmcgrane #adaptivecontent #aea"
- @lukew: "Hacking Your Users Brains http://t.co/DhQmmlc1 my notes from @uxresearch talk at #aea about getting into customer's heads."
- @marketingwizdom: "Tip: Advertising says to people, 'Here's what we've got. Here's what it will do for you. Here's how to get it.' Leo Burnett"
- @jaffathecake: ".@uxresearch's eye tracking example on page 34 http://t.co/NkQKjaBu is fascinating #aea"
- @knell_belle: "Think of the user as a dog playing catch... try to avoid introducing a squirrel. #aea"
- @meyerweb: "“The web is a series of contextual content encounters.” —@zeldman #AEA"
- @smashingmag: "New on Smashing WP: How To Use Custom Post Types To Organize Online Marketing Campaigns - http://t.co/gStbpfJy"
- @vq20: "RT @leisa: Some rough notes from my @monkigras talk 'Why Most UX is Shite' http://t.co/bez1NfEx #ux #truth"
- @SusanCosmos: ""Your only limitation is how much action you are willing to take." - Carrie @barefoot_exec Wilkerson #quote"
- @lukew: "Incidentally performance optimization is a big reason companies still make separate mobile sites. http://t.co/F4XijCd3"