Learn

The complete blog template — every element, one page

A live reference showing every styled block the editorial team can drop into a post: callouts, key-takeaways, pull-quotes, advocate quotes, products, tables, figures, sources and more.
Pepnerd Editorial Team12 min readDemo

This page exercises every element of the article template at once. Scroll the sticky table of contents on the left (desktop) — it highlights the section you're reading. Below: headings, lists, callouts, quotes, products, tables, media and a sources list, all in the house style.

Headings, text and links

Body copy uses our reading sizes and line-height. You can bold, italicise, and link inline. Inline code is styled too. Here is a third sentence so the paragraph breathes.

A sub-heading (H3)

Sub-sections use H3. The TOC tracks H2s only, so it stays clean.

And a minor heading (H4)

Use H4 sparingly for small labels inside a section.

Lists

Bulleted, numbered and nested all have custom markers:

  • First bullet with a clear marker.
  • Second bullet, which can wrap onto a second line and still align nicely under the text rather than the bullet.
  • Third, with a nested list:
    • Nested item one
    • Nested item two
  1. Reconstitute — add bacteriostatic water down the side of the vial.
  2. Swirl — don't shake; let it dissolve fully.
  3. Store — keep cold and use within the stated window.

Callouts and disclaimers

NoteThis is an informational callout for context the reader should keep in mind.
TipLet the vial reach room temperature before drawing a dose for an accurate read.
CautionResearch use only — not for human or veterinary use.

This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice.

Quotes

A standard blockquote:

The data on tendon and ligament healing is among the most consistent in the peptide literature.— Research review, 2024

A centred pull-quote for emphasis:

Most of the human evidence is still early — promising mechanism, modest data.

And an advocate quote with attribution:

I fetched a tiny bottle of something called 'BPC-157' and proceeded to inject it into various parts of my body.

Ben Greenfield · BenGreenfieldLife.com

Products and links

Auto-rendered product row (filled from live data):

A category link and a "read next" card:

Explore Healing & Repair peptides Read next How to reconstitute peptides — a step-by-step guide

A stat callout:

98%minimum synthesised purity, independently third-party verified

Tables

CompoundClassHalf-life
BPC-157Body-protection peptide~4 hours
TB-500Thymosin β4 fragment~2–3 days
CJC-1295GHRH analog~30 min (no-DAC)

Images and media

Landscape images run full width with a caption and source:

Cold storage keeps reconstituted peptides stable. Source: Pepnerd lab

Portrait images are automatically capped in height and centred:

A tall image, height-limited so it never dominates the column.

Video embeds stay responsive:


Sources

References render as a numbered list at the foot of the article:

Sources

  1. Sikiric P, et al. Stable gastric pentadecapeptide BPC 157. Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2020. Link
  2. Chang CH, et al. The promoting effect of pentadecapeptide BPC 157 on tendon healing. 2011. Link
  3. Huberman A. Benefits & Risks of Peptide Therapeutics. Huberman Lab, 2024. Link

Educational reference only — not medical advice. Pepnerd products are supplied strictly for laboratory research use; not for human or veterinary use.

Pepnerd Editorial Team

Written and reviewed by the Pepnerd research editorial team. Cited claims link to their primary source.

Browse Healing & Repair peptides