This is actually a very good idea, especially if you have a dark background image. The background color will almost always work (unless the browser doesn't support any colors at all) but the background image may not load properly or may take a long time to load.
If you have light text on a dark background image, the text will not be readable against the default white background until the background image appears. If something goes wrong with the image download, the user may never be able to read the text. It's a good idea to assign a background color that is similar to the background image to prevent this problem.
In most browsers the background image will be shown. If the image has been configured so as not to repeat, and the element is larger than the background image then the area that is not covered by the background image will display the background color. DJL
If for an image: <body background="images/background.jpg"> or if for a color: <body bgcolor="#000000">
The color contrast and effectors depends on other sections of it. There is no/hard way to answer this question definitely.
You have two options. 1. Set the body tag to the specified blue color: <body style='background-color: #0000FF'> (Find the colors and their corresponding codes using a search engine. #0000FF is a bright blue) 2. Create an image 1 pixel by 1 pixel of the blue color you want to use. Set the body tag to display that image: <body style='background-image: url("myBlueImage.gif")'> I have used the inline styles. You could do this using a linked sheet, or the <STYLE> tag in the header or your HTML. 1. BODY { background-color: #0000FF; background-image: url("myBlueImage.gif"); }
Use the attribute BGCOLOR=".." inside the start Body tag using the color you want as the value. It should look like this: this will give you a black background, and at the end of your HTML document you close the Body Of cause if you use a black background you cannot use black font. You won't be able to see it. You can set the value=".." of the background to what ever you like.
In most browsers the background image will be shown. If the image has been configured so as not to repeat, and the element is larger than the background image then the area that is not covered by the background image will display the background color. DJL
To create a colored background in Photoshop, first open your image. Then, select the "Paint Bucket Tool" from the toolbar. Choose a color from the color picker and click on the background area to fill it with the selected color. You can also create a new layer, fill it with the desired color, and position it behind your image layer for a colored background.
To change the color of the background in an image using Photoshop, you can use the "Magic Wand" tool to select the background area, then go to the "Edit" menu and choose "Fill" to fill the selection with a new color. You can also use the "Paint Bucket" tool to manually paint over the background with a new color.
To make a picture a background of a web site using CSS, you will use the different background properties, which are: background-color, background-image, background-repeat, background-attachment, and background-position. The specific property you are looking for is background-image. To use this property you would declare in your style sheet the following: body { background-image: url('paper.jpg'); } This is telling the web browser to use the image paper.jpg and make it the background of the entire page. The other background properties control whether the backgound is repeated along the x and/or y axis, the position on the screen the image begins at, whether the background is fixed or scrolls with the page, and the background color.
If for an image: <body background="images/background.jpg"> or if for a color: <body bgcolor="#000000">
- Open "Edit Profile" - Select "Customize" - At Customize CSS just fill this :body { background-image: url(your image url); background-attachment: fixed; background-position: top center; background-repeat: no-repeat; background-color: transparent; cursor: ; } example :body { background-image: url(http:/www.de-angel.com/Friendster/FS.GIF); background-attachment: fixed; background-position: top center; background-repeat: no-repeat; background-color: transparent; cursor: ; }
The color contrast and effectors depends on other sections of it. There is no/hard way to answer this question definitely.
click on image with eyedroper selected on specific color you want to use, this will place that color as foreground color
You have two options. 1. Set the body tag to the specified blue color: <body style='background-color: #0000FF'> (Find the colors and their corresponding codes using a search engine. #0000FF is a bright blue) 2. Create an image 1 pixel by 1 pixel of the blue color you want to use. Set the body tag to display that image: <body style='background-image: url("myBlueImage.gif")'> I have used the inline styles. You could do this using a linked sheet, or the <STYLE> tag in the header or your HTML. 1. BODY { background-color: #0000FF; background-image: url("myBlueImage.gif"); }
Use the attribute BGCOLOR=".." inside the start Body tag using the color you want as the value. It should look like this: this will give you a black background, and at the end of your HTML document you close the Body Of cause if you use a black background you cannot use black font. You won't be able to see it. You can set the value=".." of the background to what ever you like.
You can either set a colour or choose a background image, you cannot do both.
Well, first you have to make the non-transparent image transparent. go to colors>color to alpha the select the background (you can use the color picker tool by clicking the white bar and then the eye-dropper icon to the right of the HTML notation box) color of the non-transparent image. after you pres OK, the background color will change to transparency and you'll be able to see the layer beneath.