Black post background 
This  is a mistake and a massive one, at that. I was guilty of it myself when  I first started blogging. I had a black posting background and fuschia  text. I thought it was fabulous! It certainly looked vibrant and  gorgeous! Trouble was, no one could read my posts without developing a  migraine. Myself included. If no one can read your posts, no one is  going to visit your blog. And while you may think this rule only applies  to black/fuschia combinations, it also applies to black/white  combinations. It's just not easy to read anything that's been written on  a black background. If you absolutely insist on having a black  background, gray is probably the best color choice for your text.
Narrow posting columns
If  you only post 200 or 300 words at a time, a narrow posting column is  ok. If you write 2000 word posts, this is going to make for lots of  scrolling and few people have the patience for such things unless your  writing is utterly captivating. When I create a blog template for  someone I never use less than 500px for the post column width; anything  else is just too narrow and will not make the text easy to read.
Centered photos
A  centered photo at the top of your blog post followed by a space and  then a paragraph of text below it is not professional looking. Nor is it  easy on the eyes as it creates a break in the overall view. Your photos  should be floating left or right and your blog post text should be  wrapped around them. This is easy to do in Blogger, just select which  side you want it to float on when you upload your pic. Unless you've got  a panoramic photo, obviously, in which case it will look fine at the  top.
Too many widgets
Just because there are 5 million  blogger widgets out there doesn't mean you need 4.5 million of them on  your blog. The more widgets you've got, the longer it takes your blog to  load and the more cluttered your blog looks. Both of these things annoy  readers, even if only on a subconscious level. It's fine to have a few  widgets, but don't overdo it. 
Too many ads / badly placed ads
If  you want to monetize your blog that's cool, but you don't need to have 5  types of ads all over the place - if you do that makes readers feel  like all you care about is showing them your ads. A few well placed ads  are fine and unobtrusive, but if you've got ads in every section you are  going to put people off. Also, be sure to align them properly as ads  that sit out of the border of your sidebar make it look like you don't  know how to use them.
Unreadable fonts
Yes, there are many  fonts available but no, that doesn't mean they're all going to be  easily read. Arial is the font I tend to use most often when making blog  designs for people, but Tahoma and other simple sans serif fonts are  just as good. You don't want something hard on readers eyes, you want  something they can read quickly. Occasionally I have used Georgia but  that's as serify as I'd get in terms of blog fonts.
 
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