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I have a markup like this:

<div>
  <img />
</div>

The div is higher than img:

div {
  height: 100px;
}

img {
  height: dynamic-value-smaller-than-100px;
}

I need the image to be in the middle of the div (have same amout of white space above and below it).

I tried this and it does not work:

div {
  vertical-align: middle;
}
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9 Answers

up vote 34 down vote accepted

if your image is purely decorative, then it might be a more semantic solution to use it as a background-image. You can then specify the position of the background

background-position: center center;

If it is not decorative and constitutes valuable information then the img tag is justified. What you need to do in such case is style the containing div with the following properties:

div{
    display: table-cell; vertical-align: middle 
}

Read more about this technique here. Reported to not work on IE6/7 (works on IE8).

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It is not decorative. I am building a list of company logos that work as a link actually, but nice idea anyway. – Josef Sábl Feb 10 '10 at 14:59
i've updated my answer accordingly. – pixeline Feb 10 '10 at 15:02
Great, it works! Please, just add info that this css has to be added to div, not img, it confused me a bit. Thanks a lot. – Josef Sábl Feb 10 '10 at 15:03
3  
Mind that this won't work in IE6 and IE7 (not sure about IE8) – Matteo Riva Feb 10 '10 at 15:04
IE8 works well. – Josef Sábl Feb 10 '10 at 15:11
show 2 more comments

Another way is to set your line-height in the container div, and align your image to that using vertical-align: middle.

html:

<div class="container"><img></div>

css:

.container {
  width: 200px; /* or whatever you want */
  height: 200px; /* or whatever you want */
  line-height: 200px; /* or whatever you want, should match height */
  text-align: center;
}

.container > img {
  vertical-align: middle;
}

It's off the top of my head. But I've used this before - it should do the trick. Works for older browsers as well.

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This is a solution I've used before to accomplish vertical centering in CSS. This works in all the modern browsers.

http://www.jakpsatweb.cz/css/css-vertical-center-solution.html

Excerpt:

  <div style="display: table; height: 400px; #position: relative; overflow: hidden;">
    <div style=" #position: absolute; #top: 50%;display: table-cell; vertical-align: middle;">
      <div style=" #position: relative; #top: -50%">
        any text<br>
        any height<br>
        any content, for example generated from DB<br>
        everything is vertically centered
      </div>
    </div>
  </div>

(Inline styles for demonstration purposes)

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Have you tried setting margin on the div? e.g.

div {
    padding: 25px, 0
}

for top and bottom. You may also be able to use a percentage:

div {
    padding: 25%, 0
}
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this can't be used as I don't know the height of an image. – Josef Sábl Feb 10 '10 at 15:03

I've posted about vertical alignment it in cross-browser way (Vertically center multiple boxes with CSS)

Create one-cell table. Only table has cross-browser vertical-align

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As I too am constantly being let down by cross-browser CSS, I'd like to offer a JQuery solution here. This takes the height of each image's parent div, divide it by two and set it as a top margin between the image and the div:

$('div img').each(function() {
 m = Math.floor(($(this).parent('div').height() - $(this).height())/2);
 mp = m+"px";
 $(this).css("margin-top",mp);
});
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In your example, the div's height is static and the image's height is static. Give the image a margin-top value of ( div_height - image_height ) / 2

If the image is 50px, then

img {
    margin-top: 25px;
}
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No, images height is dynamic. – Josef Sábl Feb 10 '10 at 14:59
<div style="background-color:#006600; width:300px; text-align:center; padding:50px 0px 50px 0px;">
<img src="imges/import.jpg" width="200" height="200"/>
</div>
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Could you give some explanation about what you did ? – Cristiano Fontes Oct 10 '12 at 18:32

Let's say you want to put the image (40px X 40px) on the center (horizontal and vertical) of the div class="box". So you have the following html:

<div class="box"><img /></div>

What you have to do is apply the CSS:

.box img {
    position: absolute;
    top: 50%;
    margin-top: -20px;
    left: 50%;
    margin-left: -20px;
}

Your div can even change it's size, the image will always be on the center of it.

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