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Supposing I'm setting a background image for a web page in CSS like this:

body    {
font-size: 62.5%; /* Resets 1em to 10px */
font-family: Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif;
background-color: #9D5922;
color: #000;
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
margin: 0;
padding: 0; 
background: url(images/desk.gif) repeat bottom left;
}

Is there any way to layer a second image on top of the desk.gif within the body element itself, or is the only way to create a separate class and use the z axis?

Sorry, it's a simpleminded question, but I've been trying to figure this out and though I haven't been able to make it work, I also haven't found a clear slapdown of the idea anywhere online... so, is there a way, or is this just a no can do?

Thanks!

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font-size: 62.5%; /* Resets 1em to 10px */ does no such thing. – Sparr Dec 31 '08 at 3:16
Yeah, sorry - that comment next to the attribute is vestigial. Thanks for pointing it out, you've reminded me to delete it! – BillC Dec 31 '08 at 3:21
"does no such thing" != "only does it about 97% of the time" – Andy Ford Dec 31 '08 at 4:17

6 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Hi Bill,

In short, it's not possible. You can do this, but you need to add a second HTML object to the page to get it to work. So for example, place a div block right below your body, and assign the second background to that object.

Hope this helps!

-Dave

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I figured, but it was a hope! Thanks, I'll do it with a div block. – BillC Dec 31 '08 at 3:19
No problem! Maybe CSS4 will introduce something like this? With the direction CSS & HTML are going, people want to use less and less HTML objects to use for styling the page. One can dream, right? :) – Dave Dec 31 '08 at 3:29
Actually, in CSS3, via border images - see w3.org/TR/2002/… (AFAIK, only Safari and FF3.1 support this though) – Shog9 Dec 31 '08 at 3:57
vote up 1 vote down

Layered backgrounds are part of the CSS3 Working Draft but, as far as I know, support for them is limited to WebKit/KHTML-based browsers such as Safari, Chrome, Konqueror and OmniWeb.

Using your example code, this would look like:

body    {
    font-size: 62.5%; /* Resets 1em to 10px */
    font-family: Verdana, Arial, Sans-Serif;
    background-color: #9D5922;
    color: #000;
    margin-left: auto;
    margin-right: auto;
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0; 
    background: url("images/top.gif") left bottom repeat,
                url("images/desk.gif") left bottom repeat;
}
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vote up 0 vote down

The only way is to use another container. Each element may contain only one background image.

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vote up 0 vote down

Use absolute positioning and a z-index to get the second element on top.

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vote up 0 vote down

Don't forget you can apply styles to the HTML element

html { background: url(images/whatever.gif); }

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vote up 0 vote down

I've already posted the solution in a duplicate question, but for anyone that may require this information I'll post it here as well.

As far as I am aware it is not possible to put it in the same layer, but it is possible to put several images in separate div's on top of one another, and has been implemented by popular usability testing website Silverback (check the background to see how it has been layered). If you look through the source code you can see that the background is made up of several images, placed on top of one another.

Here is the article demonstrating how to do the effect can be found on Vitamin. A similar concept for wrapping these 'onion skin' layers can be found on A List Apart.

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