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If I use this code, the image isn't clipped by the div's rounded corners (resulting in the image's square corners covering up the div's rounded ones):

<div style="border-radius: 1em; -moz-border-radius: 1em; -webkit-border-radius: 1em; overflow:hidden;">
    <img src="big-image.jpg" />
</div>

Does anyone know how to get a rounded corder div to prevent a child image from overflowing?

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4 Answers

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This may or may not work in your situation, but consider making the image a CSS background. In FF3, the following works just fine:

<div style="
  background-image:   url(big-image.jpg);
  border-radius:      1em;
  height:             100px;
  -moz-border-radius: 1em;
  width:              100px;"
></div>

I'm not sure there's another workaround — if you apply a border to the image itself (say, 1em deep), you get the same problem of square corners.

Edit: although, in the "adding a border to the image" case, the image inset is correct, it's just that the image isn't flush with the div element. To check out the results, add style="border:1em solid black;border-radius:1em;-moz-border-radius:1em;" to the img tag (with width and height set appropriately, if necessary).

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Yes, it seems like this works. It's unfortunate overflow doesn't work as it does with non-border-radius-styled divs. – AlexWalker Feb 26 at 14:02
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If you make the image a background image instead of contents, the image won't clip the rounded corners (at least in FF3).

You could also add a padding to the div, or margin for the image to add extra padding between the rounded border and the image.

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You need to specify an exact width and heigth with overflow:hidden, if you want your div to clip your image

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Even when overflow is set to hidden, border-radius does not clip it's content. This is by design.

One solution would be to set border-radius on the image as well as its container.

<div style="border-radius: 16px; ...">
    <img src="big-image.jpg" style="border-radius: 16px; ..." />
</div>

Another way would be to set the image as the background of the container using background-image; but there are issues with this method in Firefox before version 3 (see this bug) - not that that need bother you too much.

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I don't believe that border-radius has an effect on images in FF3 or Safari 4 (using -moz and -webkit prefixes). – AlexWalker Feb 26 at 13:48

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