Use the CSS Background Properties:
http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_background.asp
Butthe picturewill not display with CSS
off...
Heine
Fra: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sendt: 2. juli 2005
15:50Til: wsg@webstandardsgroup.orgEmne: digest for
Hello All -
I'm having a mess of a time getting sharp thumbnails of the
site's I've built into a thumbnail format.
Here's what I do:
1. Load the home page of a site into a browser
2. Use a screen capture utility to snap an image of the home
page
3. paste the capture into PhotoShop
4.
Cole Kuryakin - x7m wrote:
What are they doing (or what are YOU doing) that I'm not?
i size my thumbnails from the original.
dwain
--
Dwain Alford
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.alforddesigngroup.com
The artist may use any form which his expression demands;
for his inner impulse must find
Use save for web then use the resize tab
below the output options. Chose jpeg medium from the top. Should be good
quality output.
Chris Dawes
From:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Cole Kuryakin - x7m
Sent: Sunday, 3 July 2005 12:28 PM
To:
The obvious img{float:left} is not good - client dont want the text to be
displayed under the image.
If all images ware the same size - it would be simple - just add margin to
p, but its not like that... :(
And i hate creating classes like that: .img110px .img180px .
I think this is the
You wrote:
3. paste the capture into
PhotoShop
4. Transform/Scale the image from it's
captured size (760 pixels x 550 pixels) down to a165x 115 pixel
thumbnail
First, don't use
transform/scale. Use the Image...Image Size command. It should already be set
correctlyto 72 dpi, constrain
Ok, enough on
that thanks.
This is a
'PhotoShop how to'rather thana Web Standards
discussion.
Peter