Splash WordPress Theme
by StylemixThemes
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Setup · Customization · Bug fixes · WooCommerce integration
About Splash WP Theme
Splash is a WordPress theme by StylemixThemes built for creative agencies, portfolio sites, and digital product showcases. It ships with a drag-and-drop page builder, pre-built demo pages, and a clean visual style that works out of the box without heavy configuration.
The theme supports WooCommerce, Contact Form 7, and most popular plugins. It includes multiple header layouts, sticky navigation, and a responsive grid that holds up across devices. StylemixThemes maintains the theme actively, which means compatibility updates come regularly for new WordPress core releases.
Where Splash stands out is its focus on visual presentation over content density. It suits sites that lead with visuals and want a polished result without writing custom CSS from scratch. That said, unlocking its full potential often requires someone who knows how StylemixThemes builds its options panels and custom post types.
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Pros
- Clean visual design that works well for agency and portfolio sites without heavy styling effort
- Active maintenance from StylemixThemes means regular WordPress core compatibility updates
- WooCommerce support is built in, not bolted on as an afterthought
- Multiple pre-built demo layouts that can be imported with one click to speed up setup
- Slider Revolution bundled at no extra cost, saving the standalone plugin license fee
Cons
- The options panel has a steep learning curve for non-technical users unfamiliar with StylemixThemes products
- Slider Revolution and other bundled plugins add significant page weight if not configured properly
- Page builder templates are not easily portable if you ever switch to a different theme
- Limited documentation for advanced customization scenarios beyond the demo content
- Some layout options conflict with popular caching plugins and require manual exclusions to work correctly
Who is Splash for?
Creative Agency
Splash suits creative agencies that need to present services, case studies, and team pages in a visually strong format. The pre-built agency demo gives a working starting point, and a Splash developer can adapt the layout to match the agency’s specific branding without starting from scratch.
Freelance Portfolio
Freelancers building a portfolio get a clean grid layout, animated project reveals, and contact form integration out of the box. A Splash expert can add custom filtering to the portfolio grid and connect it to a lead capture form, turning the portfolio into an active client acquisition tool.
Digital Product Launch
Product launch pages need fast load times, clear CTAs, and smooth scroll sections. Splash handles all three when configured correctly. A developer can strip unused demo assets, set up a countdown timer, and integrate with an email marketing platform to support a launch sequence properly.
Photography Studio
Photography studios need large image support without slow page loads. Splash’s fullscreen gallery sections work well for this, and a Splash specialist can implement lazy loading, WebP conversion, and a custom gallery post type that organizes shoots by category without using a heavy plugin stack.
Software SaaS Landing Page
SaaS companies use Splash for feature highlight sections, pricing tables, and trial signup flows. A Splash developer can connect the pricing section to a payment gateway, add a custom onboarding flow, and configure the header CTA to track conversions through Google Tag Manager.
Customizing Splash
Splash gives you a Theme Options panel built on a customizer framework, with controls for typography, colors, layout widths, and header styles. Most visual changes are manageable without code, but the theme has enough moving parts that non-technical users can quickly hit walls.
Custom work typically involves modifying the page builder templates, overriding section backgrounds, adding custom CSS for hover states, and wiring up WooCommerce to match the site’s visual identity. A Splash expert will know which child theme hooks to use without breaking future updates.
If you need custom post type archives, unique landing page layouts, or third-party plugin integration beyond what the demo provides, you need a developer familiar with how StylemixThemes structures its templates. Getting that wrong means messy overrides that break on the next theme update.
Recommended plugins for Splash
Splash integrates with WooCommerce for product pages, Slider Revolution for hero sections, and MailChimp for lead capture forms. These add capability but also add page weight if they are not configured carefully.
If you are running a performance audit, a developer can strip unused scripts, defer non-critical assets, and set up proper caching to bring load times down significantly. For sites focused on organic traffic, pairing Splash with structured on-page work can improve rankings noticeably. See our WordPress performance service and WordPress SEO optimisation service for details on what that work involves.
Not sure which plugins to use? This WordPress plugins directory covers the most popular options with reviews and setup guides.
Splash common issues
Splash theme page builder not loading after WordPress update
This usually happens when a WordPress core update changes how scripts are enqueued and the page builder’s JavaScript breaks silently. Start by clearing all caches and checking the browser console for JS errors. If the error points to a minified builder asset, disable script minification in your caching plugin. If the issue persists, the theme likely needs a compatibility update. Check the StylemixThemes changelog and update the theme. If you are on a customized version, a WordPress bug fixing specialist can patch it without losing your customizations.
Splash theme header logo not showing on mobile
Mobile logo issues in Splash usually trace back to a separate mobile header setting in the Theme Options panel. Navigate to Header settings and check whether a different logo is specified for mobile or whether the mobile header type is set to a layout that does not inherit the desktop logo. If the logo is uploaded but still not showing, check whether a CSS rule from a plugin or child theme is hiding the element. Inspect the logo wrapper in browser dev tools to find the conflict quickly.
Splash theme WooCommerce shop page layout broken
WooCommerce layout breaks in Splash typically happen when the WooCommerce template files in the theme are outdated after a WooCommerce version update. Go to WooCommerce, Status, and check for outdated templates. If the theme’s WooCommerce templates are flagged, you need to update them manually or through a child theme override. Do not overwrite the parent theme files directly. If the shop page is missing sidebars or the grid columns are wrong, check the WooCommerce page template setting in the page editor.
Splash theme Slider Revolution not displaying on homepage
Slider Revolution not displaying usually means the slider is set to the wrong shortcode on the homepage template, or a JavaScript conflict is stopping it from initializing. First, check the slider shortcode in the Slider Revolution plugin and confirm it matches what is entered in the Splash homepage settings. Then disable other plugins temporarily to isolate a JS conflict. If the slider shows in preview but not on the live page, a caching layer is likely serving an old version of the page without the slider output.
Splash theme fonts not loading correctly
Font loading issues in Splash can come from two places: Google Fonts being blocked by a cookie consent plugin, or a font setting in Theme Options not being saved correctly. Check the browser network tab to see whether the Google Fonts request is being made and what response it returns. If fonts are loading but not applying, inspect the CSS font-family on the target element and check whether a plugin is overriding the stylesheet order. If you recently migrated the site, confirm the domain URL is correct in WordPress settings. For persistent issues, a WordPress bug fixing service can trace the exact conflict.
Splash theme contact form not sending emails
Contact form email failures in Splash with Contact Form 7 are almost always a server mail delivery problem, not a theme bug. WordPress uses PHP mail by default, which most hosting providers block or flag as spam. Install an SMTP plugin like WP Mail SMTP, connect it to a transactional email service such as Mailgun or SendGrid, and test the form again. Check the spam folder before assuming delivery is failing. If the form submits but shows no success message, check whether a JS conflict is stopping the AJAX response from rendering.
Splash theme portfolio grid filter not working
Portfolio filter buttons in Splash stop working when a JavaScript library conflict prevents the Isotope or MixItUp filtering script from initializing. Open the browser console and look for errors when clicking a filter. If jQuery is loading twice due to a plugin, that is the most common cause. You can dequeue the duplicate jQuery instance in your child theme’s functions.php. If the filter worked before a recent plugin update, deactivate plugins one at a time to find the conflict. A WordPress bug fixing expert can resolve this quickly.
Splash theme slow loading speed after installing plugins
Splash ships with Slider Revolution, WooCommerce support, and several other script-heavy components. When additional plugins are added, the combined script and style load becomes significant. Use a performance audit tool like GTmetrix to identify the largest assets. Defer non-critical JavaScript, enable lazy loading for images, and configure a caching plugin with CSS and JS minification. Remove Slider Revolution from pages that do not use it by limiting its script loading to relevant pages only through the plugin settings.
Splash theme sticky header overlapping page content
Sticky header overlap in Splash usually means the page content does not have enough top padding to account for the fixed header height. This is a CSS calculation issue. Find the header height value in the browser dev tools, then add a matching padding-top to the first section of your page template in the child theme stylesheet or in the page builder section settings. If the overlap only happens on certain screen sizes, you need responsive CSS breakpoints to match the header’s mobile height separately.
Splash theme demo import failing or incomplete
Splash demo import failures are most often caused by PHP memory limits, execution time limits, or the XML file being too large for the server to process in one request. Increase the PHP memory limit to at least 256MB and the max execution time to 300 seconds in your php.ini or wp-config.php. If the import completes but images are missing, the importer could not fetch them from the remote server. Download the demo content XML manually from StylemixThemes and import it locally. If only partial content imports, run the importer a second time since it is safe to re-run.
Splash FAQ
Yes, Splash is well suited for creative agency sites. It includes service sections, team pages, portfolio grids, and case study layouts in its pre-built demos. The visual style is professional without looking generic. That said, getting it to match a specific brand identity beyond the demo requires a Splash developer who knows the theme’s options panel and template structure.
Yes, Splash includes built-in WooCommerce support with styled product pages, cart, and checkout templates. It handles straightforward online stores well. For heavily customized shop layouts or specific product filter requirements, you will need a Splash specialist to extend the WooCommerce templates without breaking the theme’s styling.
Always use a child theme before making any customizations. If you edited the parent theme files directly, an update will overwrite those changes. If you used a child theme, updating the parent is safe. Before updating, back up the site, check the StylemixThemes changelog for breaking changes, and test on a staging environment first.
Splash is designed around its built-in page builder, so most demo layouts depend on it. You can use standard WordPress blocks for simple pages, but you will lose access to the custom section types, animations, and layout controls the builder provides. Using Elementor alongside Splash is possible but can create styling conflicts that require manual CSS fixes.
Splash is not officially built for Elementor. It has its own page builder. Elementor can be installed and used, but you may encounter styling conflicts between Elementor’s container styles and Splash’s own CSS. A Splash expert can resolve those conflicts with targeted CSS overrides in a child theme, but it adds complexity compared to using the native builder.
Go to Appearance, then the theme’s demo import panel. Select the demo you want, click import, and wait for the process to finish. Make sure your PHP memory limit is at least 256MB and execution time is 300 seconds or more. If images do not load after import, the remote server may have blocked the fetch requests, and you will need to re-import the media manually.
StylemixThemes updates Splash for WordPress core compatibility. Check the theme changelog on the StylemixThemes website or your download portal to confirm the current version has been tested against WordPress 6.x. Running an outdated version of Splash on WordPress 6 can cause block editor conflicts and options panel issues.
Yes. Through Codeable, you can post your Splash customization project and get matched with a vetted WordPress developer who knows StylemixThemes themes. You get a free estimate within 24 hours and only pay if you decide to move forward. Visit our WordPress development services page to learn more about what is available.
Create a new folder in wp-content/themes named splash-child. Add a style.css file with the child theme header including Template: splash, and a functions.php file that enqueues the parent theme stylesheet using wp_enqueue_style with get_template_directory_uri(). Activate the child theme in Appearance, Themes. All customizations go into the child theme files from that point forward.
Splash produces clean HTML output, which is a reasonable starting point for SEO. However, the theme does not handle technical SEO on its own. You still need an SEO plugin for meta tags, schema markup, and sitemap generation. Page speed also matters for search rankings, and Splash can be slow out of the box if bundled plugins like Slider Revolution are not configured carefully.
Hire a Splash Developer or Splash Expert
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