Dayana

SITE CREDITS

The people and tools behind this site.

A short note on who built this site, what powers it, and how the quiet, supportive technology behind Dayana’s practice came together.

Design & Development

This website was designed, developed, and is maintained by Website Wannabe, a small Pennsylvania studio building websites and software for practitioners, small businesses, and creators across the United States.

AI & Automation

The intelligent layer running quietly underneath this site — the chat assistant, the pathway quiz scoring, the automated follow-ups — is powered by AI Wannabe, an applied-AI studio that helps small practices weave AI into their everyday work without losing the human warmth that made the work matter to begin with.

Photography & Imagery

Practitioner portraits and session imagery are courtesy of Dayana Pereira. Texture and ambient imagery use a mix of original work and licensed editorial photography. All video content is hosted by Wistia and YouTube and embedded with permission.

Typography

Display and editorial moments are set in Cormorant Garamond, a contemporary garalde drawn by Christian Thalmann. Body and interface type is Inter by Rasmus Andersson. Both are served from Google Fonts under the SIL Open Font License.

Technology

  • Built with Next.js and React
  • Hosted on Netlify with edge caching
  • Database, authentication, and storage by Supabase
  • AI assistant powered by Anthropic Claude
  • Inline styles for portable theming; no CSS framework

Accessibility

Accessibility is a working commitment, not a one-time compliance check. The integrated Accessibility Tools widget in the footer offers controls for text size, contrast, motion, and screen-reader-friendly navigation. Read our full Accessibility Statement for the standards we measure ourselves against.

Questions about this site?

For questions about the practice, please book a session or write to team@dayana.io. For questions about how this website was built, reach out to Website Wannabe.

Quietly built. Supportively run.

The technology should disappear. What stays is the work.