Common answers here seems to suggest this is not needed, for a set of legit reasons.
However, all of these seems to neglect modern apps behavior and build process.
It's not impossible (and actually quite easy) to design a simple process that will walk through a folder images and will generate a single CSS with all the images of this folder.
This css will be fully cached and will dramatically reduce round trips to the server, which is as correctly suggest by @MemeDeveloper one of the biggest performance hits.
Sure, It's hack. no doubt. same as sprites are a hack. In perfect world this will not be needed, until then, it's a possible practice if what you need to fix is:
- Page with multiple images that are not easily "spritable".
- Round trip to servers are an actual bottleneck (think mobile).
- speed (to the milliseconds level) is really that important for your use case.
- You don't care (as you should, if you want the web to go forward) about IE5 and IE6.
my view.