The borders of the element are then drawn on top of them, and the background-color is drawn beneath them. How the images are drawn relative to the box and its borders is defined by the background-clip and background-origin CSS properties.

Browsers do not provide any special information on background images to assistive technology. This is important primarily for screen readers, as a screen reader will not announce its presence and therefore convey nothing to its users. If the image contains information critical to understanding the page's overall purpose, it is better to describe it semantically in the document.


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No matter if you want to make a background transparent (PNG), add a white background to a photo, extract or isolate the subject, or get the cutout of a photo - you can do all this and more with remove.bg.

This question was asked before but the solution is not applicable in my case. I want to make sure certain background images are printed because they are integral to the page. (They are not images directly in the page because there are several of them being used as CSS sprites.)

You have very little control over a browser's printing methods. At most you can SUGGEST, but if the browser's print settings have "don't print background images", there's nothing you can do without rewriting your page to turn the background images into floating "foreground" images that happen to be behind other content.

Use psuedo-elements. While many browsers will ignore background images, psuedo-elements with their content set to an image are technically NOT background images. You can then position the background image roughly where the image should have gone (though it's not as easy or precise as the original image).

proposes an elegant solution, using a custom bullet in place of a background image. In this example, the aim is to apply a background image to an a element with class logo. (You should substitute these for the identifier of the element you wish to style.)

This module provides an image formatter that allows you to set an image in background of a tag.

The images are from a field of an entity and not from a configuration page or a custom entity or something else, so it's very easy to setup and manage.

You can use use the module Views to create a block, just like the second screenshot.

You have to select the image field, then, choose the "Background image" formatter.

The output of this block is null, so, it won't be displayed but the block will be executed and will set the background image correctly.

This is great if you need to set a random wallpaper on your site, add a sort criteria, choose "Global: random" and you're done.

Every time the page load, it will execute the View, choose a random node, extract the image field and set it as background.

You can have a more fine grained control of the "Global: Random" criteria by using Views Random Seed.

Unfortunately, these background images and buttons can not be placed on top of other background images, because Outlook doesn't support nested VML elements. In many cases though, you may be able to code the design up successfully by changing the structure.

For instance, if only part of the image needs to be behind text content, you can sometimes slice the image, use a bulletproof background image for only that part of the design, and use bulletproof buttons or inline images (held together by a table structure) for other parts.

This technique can only add repeating background images to your emails. But depending on your design, you may be able to solve this by using a fixed pixel height, width, or both. Or in some cases, adding more space around the image file itself might help.

Full email width backgrounds in Outlook are based on the mso-width-percent property, since percentage based values don't work with the regular width property. Unfortunately there are a few Outlook 2007/2010/2013 bugs that affect this technique.

Outlook forces a minimum body margin on all HTML emails. And if you set a VML element to "mso-width-percent: 1000" (100% width), it bases the rendered width on the full email/viewport width, while still adding 10px margins on each side. So if you center content inside full width background image tables, it can offset that content 10px to the right, and also cause horizontal scrolling.

Unlike most other email clients and browsers, Outlook 2007/2010/2013 uses the DPI of your background image to determine the scale. So to make sure it renders at the right size, set the image's resolution to 96 DPI.

You can place a table inside the background image cell, around your content, and add table rows and columns with height and width equal to the spacing you'd like to add. In some cases, a better option can be to slice the image, and only use a background image for the table cell that will have the content. The surrounding cells can have the rest of the design as inline image tags, text or plain background colors, depending on the design.

To center the content horizontally, you can replace the tag with . Right aligning the content can be done with , but this can result in some unwanted spacing. Another option is to place a one-cell table inside the background image cell, give this cell the same width as the background image, and add .

Unfortunately, background images have to be hard coded into your template or campaign for now. You can however use a tag with multiple s to make different pre-defined background images available in the editor.

Is it possible to have two background images? For instance, I'd like to have one image repeat across the top (repeat-x), and another repeat across the entire page (repeat), where the one across the entire page is behind the one which repeats across the top.

Current version of FF and IE and some other browsers support multiple background images in a single CSS2 declaration. Look here -background-images-with-css2/ and here _backgrounds.html and here -backgrounds-and-borders-with-css2/

Yes, it is possible, and has been implemented by popular usability testing website Silverback. If you look through the source code you can see that the background is made up of several images, placed on top of each other.

You could have a div for the top with one background and another for the main page, and seperate the page content between them or put the content in a floating div on another z-level. The way you are doing it may work but I doubt it will work across every browser you encounter.

I recently updated our header background image with the attached file. I even resized it to the recommended 1500px. No matter what I do, the image is blurry. This is the first time this has happened and wasn't an issue when I updated to the winter photograph in September last year. Any suggestions? It's always been crisp in the past.

The rollout of the new #MicrosoftTeams Client 2.1 is already underway for Microsoft Small Business customers, customers with Microsoft 365 or Office 365 contracts still have a little time until the rollout.


Accordingly, I'm asked more often how to distribute background images for your users with the new client.


Until yesterday the answer was simple: buy Teams Premium Addon, that seems to be the only way so far, and use the Teams Meeting Customization Policy.


Until yesterday ;)

Since today I can say:


Feel free to check out my latest blog post about it :backhand_index_pointing_down:

How to deploy custom background images in Microsoft Teams 2.1 | Office 365 Blog (thorpick.de)


Here you will learn what you need to do with your images to make them available as background images in the new Teams client, and that without Teams Premium Addon.

Your background-image is attached to the class. This is CSS and not WF. To get different background images you could either create a new duplicate class or add a combo-class to the existing one and changing the image. Hope this helps

How can I add additional background images in Teams?


I'm using both apps, one for personal use and one for work. I need to add new background effect to the teams for personal use but there isn't a button for that.

I also tried accessing the images via a folder `%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Teams\Backgrounds` but there are only images from the work version of Teams.


So how should I add new image to the personal one? Where are background images for that version stored?

And they had what looked like a "brand wall" background, like you see at conferences and events like the Grammies or Oscar's. Behind each of their 3 participants. But they were obviously working remotely from home, separately. Not sitting in virtual meeting rooms or green screen theaters.

Background images are images that are applied to the background of, or behind, an element. Instead of being a main focal point of the email, like a hero image, they are more often subtle and complementary to the other content in the campaign.

The major benefit of using background images is they allow you to place additional HTML content on top of them. Unlike other images, where only the image itself can exist in that space, background images provide layering possibilities, so you can have extra images, text, or calls-to-action (CTAs) existing within that same space.

Using live HTML text on top of a background image, instead of including that text as part of the image, means your message is readable when images are turned off, making this a great technique for creating better, more accessible HTML emails. e24fc04721

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