You can feasibly avoid using your image at all here using CSS border-radius
.
Three of the corners will be dead easy to do using border-radius
.
The fourth corner is more tricky. border-radius
is flexible enough that you should be able to achieve the effect you've designed using it, or at least something close.
Something like the following:
.mybox {
-moz-border-radius: 8px 8px 8px 20px;
border-radius: 8px 8px 8px 20px;
}
Even more complex shapes are possible. However with odd shapes like that it can get a bit tricky to make border-radius
work consistently between various browsers. It also obviously won't do the button you're putting in the corner.
For this reason, I'd suggest using a simple border-radius
style to make all the corners rounded in the same way, and then place a single image layered on top of it in the bottom left corner do to your special corner.
Of course, you can stick with the image you have, in which case others have already suggested workable solutions, so I won't repeat them here. But hopefully you'll consider the border-radius option as an alternative.
Here's a page with a good overview of some border-radius tricks (and some other fun CSS stuff): http://www.the-art-of-web.com/css/border-radius/
One big caveat to all this is that border-radius
doesn't work in Internet Explorer. The good news though is that there is an excellent work-around for this in the shape of CSS3Pie.