Sometimes as designers, we'd really like these things to load before you get a chance to see them. There are times when there's a lot going on with a website. They're obviously important, so today, we've decided to showcase a bunch of stellar Adobe Muse widgets. After you create the design of your website, these features in the Library are what add the pizzazz and functionality to your website. Widgets range from contact forms, to light boxes, to menus, to full screen slideshows. The best part about Muse is the Library filled with widgets that you can add to your website. I immediately downloaded Adobe Muse CC and have been playing with it since. He revealed to me it was no big deal because he'd done it in Adobe Muse. My colleague was showing me a wonderful parallax website he made and I asked him if he could teach me how to do it. Since then, I'd just stayed away from it until recently. I must admit, I tried Muse when it was in beta and didn't really get it because it didn't really feel natural enough. How was this possible? What were the limitations? What took them so long? They created this WYSIWYG editor mixed with InDesign that could produce real live websites. You could imagine my excitement as well as other non-coders worldwide. In 2011, Adobe sent shockwaves through the design community by introducing Adobe Muse: design software that made websites.