Goal
My goal to use the CSS3 border-radius and box-shadow feature to make the image element look like the screenshot below.
Problem
The problem is none of the modern browsers display rounded corners image the way I want it. Webkit does display the rounded corners, but the inset box shadow is not supported. In Firefox, the border-radius doesn’t even display at all.
The CSS Trick
The trick is very simple: wrap a span tag around the image element. Specify the original image as background-image. To hide the original image, specify opacity:0 or display:none. I find using the opacity method is a better approach because the image will remain available for copy or download.
Final Solution With jQuery
To make things easier, we can use jQuery to automatically wrap a span tag around the image.
The jQuery code below will find any element with ".rounded-img" or "rounded-img2" (in my case, it is the image element) and wrap it with a span tag. The script finds the src, width, height, and CSS class attribute of the original image and apply them as inline styling in the span tag. Then it specifies the opacity of the image to 0 to hide it.
It works with any image dimension (with or without the width and height attribute). It can also be combined with other CSS classes. No additional markup is required.
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.4.2.min.js">script> <script type="text/javascript"> $(document).ready(function(){ $(".rounded-img, .rounded-img2").load(function() { $(this).wrap(function(){ return '<span class="' + $(this).attr('class') + '" style="background:url(' + $(this).attr('src') + ') no-repeat center center; width: ' + $(this).width() + 'px; height: ' + $(this).height() + 'px;" />'; }); $(this).css("opacity","0"); }); }); script>
Sample Usage
I hope you will find this trick useful. For example, you can use it to style your blog’s avatar or profile photos.
No comments:
Post a Comment