Why I Built 7 Ghost Themes for Specific Businesses
Most Ghost themes try to be everything. A minimal blog that also works for a magazine. A portfolio that doubles as a landing page. I went the other direction - one theme, one job.
Read article →Guides, comparisons, and behind-the-scenes on Ghost CMS.
Most Ghost themes try to be everything. A minimal blog that also works for a magazine. A portfolio that doubles as a landing page. I went the other direction - one theme, one job.
Read article →If you're running technical documentation on Ghost, your theme options are limited. Most docs tools aren't Ghost themes, and most Ghost themes aren't docs tools. Here's what actually works in 2026.
Ghost has built-in memberships, a native newsletter, and none of the plugin dependency hell. For a SaaS company that wants a marketing site and a blog on one platform, Ghost CMS for SaaS is a real option.
The obvious play was one theme with 40 demos. That's what sells on ThemeForest. I didn't do that. Here's why.
A blog theme gives you a feed. A SaaS site needs a pricing page, a changelog, a feature grid, and a conversion path. Ghost can do it - but not with Casper.
Ghost can run a directory - tags as categories, posts as listings, memberships for access tiers. But the default themes aren't designed for it. Here's how to bridge the gap.
Most Ghost themes are light, clean, and built for lifestyle content. If you're publishing AI and tech editorial, you need a dark theme with callout cards, category sections, and membership tiers that look serious.