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In this article, http://css-tricks.com/css-sprites/, it talks about how can I crop off a smaller image from 1 bigger image. Can you please tell me if it is possible/how I can crop off a smaller image and then scale the cropped off region before I lay it out?

Here is an example from that article:

A
{
  background-image: url(http://www.jaredhirsch.com/coolrunnings/public_images/3deb155981/spriteme1.png);
  background-position: -10px -56px;
}

I would like to know how can I scale that image after I crop it from from spriteme1.png

Here is the URL of the example: http://css-tricks.com/examples/CSS-Sprites/Example1After/

So I would like to know if I can make the icons next to Item1,2,3,4 smaller?

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As Stephen asked, is there something stopping you from rendering the images at the size you want them in the first place? – Paul D. Waite Mar 18 '10 at 16:44

5 Answers

When you use sprites, you are limited to the dimensions of the image in the sprite. The background-size CSS property, mentioned by Stephen, isn't widely supported yet and might cause problems with browsers like IE8 and below - and given their market share, this isn't a viable option.

Another way to solve the problem is to use two elements and scale the sprite by using it with an img tag, like this:

<div class="sprite-image"
     style="width:20px; height:20px; overflow:hidden; position:relative">
    <!-- set width/height proportionally, to scale the sprite image -->
    <img src="sprite.png" alt="icon"
         width="20" height="80"
         style="position:absolute; top: -20px; left: 0;" />
</div>

This way, the outer element (div.sprite-image) is cropping a 20x20px image from the img tag, which acts like a scaled background-image.

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Try this: http://tobyj.net/responsive-sprites/ (demo & explanation)

This method scales sprites 'responsively' so that the width/height adjust according to your browser window size. It doesn't use background-size as support for this in older browsers is non-existent.

CSS

.stretchy {display:block; float:left; position:relative; overflow:hidden; max-width:160px;}
.stretchy .spacer {width: 100%; height: auto;}
.stretchy .sprite {position:absolute; top:0; left:0; max-width:none; max-height:100%;}
.stretchy .sprite.s2 {left:-100%;}
.stretchy .sprite.s3 {left:-200%;}

HTML

<a class="stretchy" href="#">
  <img class="spacer" alt="" src="spacer.png">
  <img class="sprite" alt="icon" src="sprite_800x160.jpg">
</a>
<a class="stretchy s2" href="#">
  <img class="spacer" alt="" src="spacer.png">
  <img class="sprite" alt="icon" src="sprite_800x160.jpg">
</a>
<a class="stretchy s3" href="#">
  <img class="spacer" alt="" src="spacer.png">
  <img class="sprite" alt="icon" src="sprite_800x160.jpg">
</a>
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The link doesn't really explain the theory here. You are using a div with overflow: hidden as a cropping area/window over top of using a scaled version of the sprite image. Which is why it doesn't use a background image at all. Just one layer over top of another as a mask. – Simon Sep 15 '12 at 11:34

Here's what I did to do this. Keep in mind it won't work on IE8 and below.

#element {
  width:100%;
  height:50px;
  background:url(/path/to/image.png);
  background-position:140.112201963534% 973.333333333333%;
}

The background image's width will scale down as the parent of #element scales down. You can do the same with its height, too, if you convert height to a percentage. The only tricky bit are figuring out the percentages for background-position.

The first percentage is the width of the targeted area of the sprite when at normal width divided by the sprite's total width, and multiplied by 100.

The second percentage is the height of the targeted area of the sprite before being scaled divided by the sprite's total height, and multiplied by 100.

The wording on those two equations is a little sloppy, so let me know if you need me to explain it better.

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try using background size: http://webdesign.about.com/od/styleproperties/p/blspbgsize.htm

is there something stopping you from rendering the images at the size you want them in the first place?

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Can I use JavaScript and CSS in combination to solve this? I tried the background-size; property. I can't get it work. It does not scale the image for some reason. – michael Mar 12 '10 at 23:35
1  
background-size is CSS 3 and not widely supported yet. – janmoesen Mar 14 '10 at 10:22
Its supported by most browser versions now. Check this caniuse.com/#search=background-size – kiranvj Apr 19 at 6:44

You can use a combo of zoom for webkit/ie and -moz-transform:scale for Firefox

[class^="icon-"]{
    display: inline-block;
    background: url('../img/icons/icons.png') no-repeat;
    width: 64px;
    height: 51px;
    overflow: hidden;
    zoom:0.5;
    -moz-transform:scale(0.5);
    -moz-transform-origin: 0 0;
}

.icon-huge{
    zoom:1;
    -moz-transform:scale(1);
    -moz-transform-origin: 0 0;
}

.icon-big{
    zoom:0.60;
    -moz-transform:scale(0.60);
    -moz-transform-origin: 0 0;
}

.icon-small{
    zoom:0.29;
    -moz-transform:scale(0.29);
    -moz-transform-origin: 0 0;
}
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