
The Spaces Toolbar gives you fast access to your Mail, Address Books, Calendars, Tasks, Chat, and more! But did you know it can be customized? Learn how in our new Thunderbird Tip video! Thunderbird Tip: Customize Colors In The Spaces Toolbar Keep yourself up to date with recent announcements and releases by following the official Thunderbird Blog! With Add-ons (Extensions & Themes) and many more features you can change the look and feel of Thunderbird in an instant. Multiple features, such as built-in Do Not Track and remote content blocking, work together to ensure your safety and privacy, so you can have peace of mind. Focus on what matters and forget about complexity.

Thunderbird makes email better for you, bringing together speed, privacy and the latest technologies. Get the beta and be a part of the future of Thunderbird! And template can contain a lot of CSS, as well as some standard message parts (greeting, signature, disclaimers, etc).Īlso Stationery sanitize CSS in replied messages, so replied email CSS should not affect Your own content. It allows You to loadsHTML template for every mail, including replies and forwards. Specifically for this purpose I designed my Stationery extension. Is there any way, or any tool, that enables me to include some CSS at the top of the body by default, so I can style my messages the way I please? by using bullet lists, numbered lists, tables, indented text, headings - almost anything besides plain line breaks. But the font settings there are easily discontinued, e.g. Theoretically, Thunderbird is able to provide this functionality via Tools > Options > Composition > General > HTML (font, size, text color, background color). without resorting to explicit styling every time you send out an e-mail). Gutza wrote:I'm wondering if there is any way (including add-ons) to actually control the way an outgoing message looks by default (i.e. How can a major MUA miss such basic functionality after twelve years in this business? It can't be that hard after all, since Outlook does it.

I never investigated this thoroughly, but I always thought there was an option, or an add-on that I missed and everybody else knew about. To be honest, I am quite amazed this actually proves to be a problem. Your suggestion on using templates is fine, but it only goes so far - it would be good (if somewhat cumbersome) for new messages, but what about replies? Or when I forward an e-mail, and add a few words? Of course, that's just academic, and I never tested it. Having said that, I suspect most major e-mail applications should be able to understand attached CSS styles (as long as they can understand attached images included in the body, I see no reason why they wouldn't understand an identical reference to a CSS file). I don't need an external CSS file in an attachment - an internal CSS block at the top of the HTML message would do the work just fine.
