Maybe one day a web designer will join the guild, but those are even rarer than web developers. And I mean someone that can just edit this file directly for me.
The cascading style sheet? Yes, I know how to edit those directly ... I have
onlywritten them directly in plain text format, in fact, and quite a few of them, too.
(I am not a web developer or designer designer by any means, but I have CSS-styled quite a few UIs (CSSs are used in many more things than just web pages) and a couple of web pages - not really as a part of my job, but mostly for all kinds of side- and hobby-projects and things that have just ended up in my management.)
It would require me to take some time to read the code and figure out what element is what, though, and like almost everyone knows, I've got quite bit of backlog in various things already, so it'd be probably be a while before I would be looking at it... Well, and reinventing the color scheme to something that would work with my entire range of monitors and possibly people with varying types of hue/shade discrimination deficiencies would both a bit of work and possibly be quite drastic.
Yeah, the guild is clearly built by someone that's never looked at it on miscalibrated, color-shifted, or low-range-of-color screens.
My this laptop's screen is light (in the lack of a more accurate term) due to its type, but it is otherwise calibrated. I checked on a PC screen and cell - both of which have black as black, not dark gray, and while the difference is significantly smaller, both my eyes and RGB still insist that it is
slightly faded red rather than
pure red (well, RGB obviously won't change regardless of screen; #ed1c24 is 237,28,36 in RGB as opposed to the 255,0,0 of pure red). It is mostly just a light screen making the difference especially glaring, and while the Guild's red might more or less pass as red of some description on screens that aren't as light, it cannot claim to be anything
but faded-red pink on a light screen.