Cesis WordPress Theme
by tranmautritam
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Setup · Customization · Bug fixes · WooCommerce integration
About Cesis WP Theme
Cesis is a multipurpose WordPress theme built by tranmautritam and sold on ThemeForest. It ships with a drag-and-drop page builder, over 80 pre-built demo sites, and a modular header and footer builder. The theme targets agencies, freelancers, and businesses that need a flexible site without writing custom code.
Under the hood, Cesis generates clean markup and supports WooCommerce, WPML, and most major plugins without conflicts. Options are managed through a dedicated theme panel rather than the WordPress Customizer, which keeps settings organised but adds a learning curve. Performance depends heavily on which modules you enable, so a lean setup is possible if you disable unused components. Overall, Cesis is a capable theme for teams who want design flexibility without switching to a standalone page builder like Elementor.
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Cesis has enough options to build almost any layout, but the settings panel is deep and easy to misconfigure. A Cesis developer who works through Codeable has already solved the common pitfalls: slow load times from unused modules, header builder conflicts after updates, and WooCommerce template overrides that break on version changes. Codeable vets every developer on the platform, so you get a specialist rather than a generalist. Post a project, get a free estimate, and see exactly what the work involves before you commit to anything.
Pros
- 80+ pre-built demo sites that import in one click, including niche layouts for agencies, shops, and portfolios
- Built-in header and footer builder with sticky, transparent, and mobile-specific layout options
- Per-page layout overrides let you change sidebar, header style, and spacing without touching global settings
- WooCommerce support is baked in with dedicated shop, product, and cart layout controls
- WPML and Polylang compatible out of the box, which matters for multilingual projects
Cons
- The theme panel has hundreds of options with no search function, which makes finding specific settings slow
- The built-in page builder is less capable than Elementor or Beaver Builder for complex animations and dynamic content
- Child theme setup is not automatic, so updates can overwrite custom CSS if you edit the parent theme directly
- Demo import can be slow and occasionally fails on shared hosting with low PHP memory limits
- The bundled plugins are tied to the theme license, so they stop receiving updates if the ThemeForest license lapses
Who is Cesis for?
Creative Agency
Cesis suits agencies well because the header builder handles branding precisely and the portfolio post type is ready to use without a plugin. A Cesis specialist can configure case study layouts, set up filterable project grids, and keep the design system consistent across service pages and landing pages. The demo sites for agencies are polished enough to use as a starting point rather than building from scratch.
WooCommerce Store
The theme’s WooCommerce integration covers shop grids, single product pages, cart, and checkout styling without extra plugins. A Cesis developer can customise product card layouts, add upsell sections, and configure category pages with custom filters. If you’re running a store with more than a few product types, having a Cesis expert set up the templates correctly from the start saves significant rework later.
Portfolio Site
The built-in portfolio post type supports categories, filterable grids, and full-width project pages. A Cesis specialist can extend this with custom fields for project details, client names, and results, then wire those fields into the layout. The result is a portfolio that looks custom without requiring a separate plugin or a fully bespoke theme build.
Corporate Business Site
Corporate sites need consistent headers, clear service structures, and contact flows that work. Cesis handles this with its section-based page builder and the global style panel. A Cesis developer can set up department-specific landing pages, configure multi-level navigation, and ensure the site works across browsers and devices without visual regressions after content edits.
Blog or Magazine
Cesis includes multiple blog archive layouts, sticky sidebars, and post format support for video, audio, and galleries. A Cesis specialist can configure category-specific templates, set up a magazine-style homepage with featured post sections, and integrate ad slots without breaking the layout. It works well as a content hub alongside an existing brand presence.
Customizing Cesis
Cesis gives you a visual header builder with sticky, transparent, and split-layout options, a footer builder with widget columns, and a per-page layout system that lets you override global settings on any post or product. The built-in page builder handles sections, columns, and most content blocks without a third-party plugin.
Where it gets complex is custom post types, conditional logic, and design consistency across dozens of templates. A Cesis expert can set up a proper child theme, configure the global style system, and build reusable templates that your team can edit safely. If you need a specific layout that the demo sites don’t cover, a Cesis specialist will extend the builder with custom blocks or PHP templates rather than relying on workarounds. That keeps the codebase clean and the site maintainable long-term.
Recommended plugins for Cesis
Cesis integrates with WooCommerce for shop layouts, WPML and Polylang for multilingual sites, and Contact Form 7 or WPForms for lead capture. The theme’s own plugin bundle adds a portfolio post type, team members, and testimonial sliders.
For third-party tooling, pairing Cesis with a caching plugin and a CDN makes a measurable difference. You can read more on the WordPress performance side. If you’re running an SEO-focused content strategy, combining Cesis with Yoast or Rank Math and dialling in the schema settings is covered in our WordPress SEO optimisation service. Most extensions drop into Cesis without conflicts as long as you keep the theme updated.
Not sure which plugins to use? This WordPress plugins directory covers the most popular options with reviews and setup guides.
Cesis common issues
Cesis page builder not loading in WordPress editor
This is usually a JavaScript conflict with another plugin. Open your browser console and check for JS errors. Common culprits are outdated versions of WooCommerce, slider plugins, or security plugins that block inline scripts. Disable plugins one by one in a staging environment to isolate the conflict. If the builder loads after disabling a specific plugin, contact that plugin’s support or switch to a compatible alternative. Keeping Cesis and all plugins updated reduces this risk significantly.
Cesis header builder changes not saving
Header builder saves use AJAX, and if your server times out or a caching plugin intercepts the request, changes appear to save but revert. Clear all caches immediately after saving, including server-side object cache if you use one. Check your PHP max execution time in wp-config.php or via your host’s panel and raise it to at least 120 seconds. If the problem persists across cache clears, a plugin conflict is likely. Test in a clean environment with only Cesis active.
Cesis demo import failing or stuck at 0%
Demo imports need at least 256MB PHP memory and a 300-second max execution time. On shared hosting these limits are often too low. Raise them via wp-config.php by adding define('WP_MEMORY_LIMIT', '256M'); and ask your host to increase max execution time. If the import still stalls, try importing XML content manually through WordPress Tools > Import, then apply the theme settings file separately. A WordPress bug fixing specialist can walk through this if your host restricts server settings.
Cesis theme update broke site layout
Updates that break layouts are almost always caused by editing the parent theme directly rather than using a child theme. If you added CSS or PHP changes to the Cesis core files, those are overwritten on update. Restore the previous version from your backup, move all customisations into a child theme, then re-run the update. If you don’t have a backup, your host may have server-level snapshots. Going forward, only customise through a child theme or the theme’s custom CSS field.
Cesis WooCommerce product page not displaying correctly
Cesis overrides some WooCommerce templates in its own template folder. When WooCommerce releases an update, those overrides can fall out of sync and produce blank sections or misaligned elements. Go to WooCommerce > Status > System Status and look for outdated template warnings. Update those templates either manually by copying the new WooCommerce file into the Cesis template folder, or have a WordPress bug fixing expert handle the merge so no customisations are lost.
Cesis site loading slowly after adding sections
Cesis loads all its module CSS and JS by default, even for modules you haven’t used. Go to the Cesis theme panel and disable any modules or shortcodes you don’t use on the site. Enable lazy loading for images and install a caching plugin if you haven’t already. Also check whether you have redundant scripts loaded by both Cesis and a third-party plugin doing the same job, such as two sliders or two lightbox scripts. Removing duplicates alone often cuts page weight significantly.
Cesis mobile menu not opening or closing
Mobile menu failures are usually caused by a JavaScript error earlier on the page stopping execution before the menu script runs. Open browser dev tools on a mobile viewport and check the console for errors. Also verify that your jQuery version is not being loaded twice, which happens when a plugin enqueues its own copy. If you use a caching plugin, make sure JavaScript files are not being combined in a way that changes load order and breaks dependencies.
Cesis custom CSS not applying after update
If you added custom CSS directly to the parent theme’s style.css, it will be overwritten on every update. Move all custom CSS to Appearance > Customize > Additional CSS or to your child theme’s stylesheet. If you are using a child theme and CSS still isn’t applying after an update, check that the child theme is still active and that the stylesheet enqueue in functions.php includes the correct version number to bust browser cache. A WordPress bug fix can resolve persistent CSS specificity conflicts quickly.
Cesis contact form not sending emails
Contact form email issues in Cesis are almost always a server mail delivery problem rather than a theme issue. WordPress uses PHP mail by default, which most hosting providers block or deprioritise. Install an SMTP plugin like WP Mail SMTP and connect it to a transactional email service such as SendGrid or Mailgun. Test delivery using the plugin’s built-in send test tool. Also check your spam folder and confirm the form’s recipient email address matches a real inbox.
Cesis blog page showing wrong layout or missing posts
Blog page layout problems usually trace back to a misconfigured reading setting or a template override. In WordPress Settings > Reading, confirm your blog page is set to the correct page and that the page is using the default or blog template in Cesis. If posts are missing, check whether a category is excluded in the theme’s blog settings or whether a query plugin is filtering the main loop. Resetting the Cesis blog settings to defaults and re-applying your preferences often resolves display issues quickly.
Cesis FAQ
Cesis has its own built-in page builder and is not built on Elementor. You can install Elementor alongside Cesis, but the two builders operate independently. Some users run Elementor for page content while using Cesis for headers and footers. Conflicts are uncommon but possible, especially with global style settings. Testing on a staging site before combining both builders on a live project is recommended.
Create a new folder in your themes directory, add a style.css file with the correct Template: cesis header, and enqueue the parent stylesheet in a functions.php file. Activate the child theme from Appearance > Themes. Any CSS or PHP changes go into the child theme, so theme updates don’t overwrite your work. Cesis does not generate a child theme automatically, so this step needs to be done manually before customising.
Yes. Cesis includes dedicated WooCommerce support with custom shop grid layouts, product page templates, cart and checkout styling, and widget areas for sidebars. Most standard WooCommerce features work without additional configuration. Complex setups like subscription products, custom checkout fields, or multi-currency stores may need extra plugins and some developer time to integrate cleanly with the Cesis templates.
Cesis is sold on ThemeForest and has received updates since its initial release. Check the theme’s ThemeForest changelog for the most recent update date. Active update history is a good sign, but any multipurpose theme tied to a single author carries the risk of slower updates or eventual abandonment. Keeping a child theme and avoiding deep parent theme modifications reduces your exposure if update frequency changes.
Yes. Cesis is listed as compatible with both WPML and Polylang, the two most widely used multilingual plugins for WordPress. String translation for theme-specific labels works through WPML’s String Translation module. You will need an active WPML license for full compatibility. Test your specific language combination on staging before going live, as RTL language support requires additional CSS adjustments in some layouts.
Demo imports in Cesis include an option to import only the theme settings without replacing existing posts, pages, or media. Choose the settings-only import option in the demo import panel rather than a full content import. If you need specific page layouts from the demo, export individual pages using a plugin like Export WP Page. Always back up your site before running any demo import, even a partial one.
Common causes include loading unused Cesis modules, unoptimised images, no caching plugin, and slow shared hosting. Start by disabling modules you don’t use in the Cesis settings panel, then add a caching plugin and compress images. If the site is still slow after those changes, check for render-blocking scripts and consider a CDN. Our WordPress performance service covers a full audit if you need one.
Yes. A Cesis developer for hire is available through Codeable, where vetted WordPress specialists take on theme customisation projects. You post a project description, get a scoped estimate within 24 hours, and only pay if you decide to proceed. This works for anything from a single layout fix to a full custom build on top of Cesis. Visit our free estimate page to get started.
Cesis includes portfolio and team member post types through its bundled plugin. For additional custom post types, you need a plugin like Custom Post Type UI or a developer to register them in code. Cesis does not natively create archive or single templates for arbitrary custom post types, so those templates need to be built in a child theme or added through a plugin that handles template mapping.
Cesis uses its own proprietary page builder rather than a standalone tool like Elementor or WPBakery. The builder handles sections, columns, rows, and content blocks through a front-end and back-end editor. It covers most standard layout needs, but it lacks some advanced features like dynamic data, query loops, and complex animation controls that dedicated builders offer. If you need those features, integrating a separate builder alongside Cesis is an option.
Hire a Cesis Expert Developer
If your Cesis site needs a custom layout, a performance audit, or a fix that’s been sitting in the backlog, a vetted Cesis developer can scope the work fast. Post your project and get a free estimate with no obligation to hire. Work is delivered through Codeable, where every developer is screened before they take a project. Get a free estimate and have a clear plan in place within 24 hours.
You'll need a free Codeable account so developers can ask questions and send their quotes.