I need to create a div witch will be filled with another image, in the pocket of the image above:
The image don't have a fixed size, so it needs to be repeated.
Look at CSS3 transforms, specifically rotate (possibly using skew, depending on your use case). You'll probably have to put the picture behind the pants, in order to get it to be the right shape.
You could do it in CSS but I think it would be much easier to use a photo editing software and paste on the images and save it as a new file.
Related
I've an image like the one in the following link
https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/how-to-center-an-image-using-text-align/
I want to cut and move one half of the image close to the other (one building close to the other in the example image share above). In real case, I have a similar image with white space in between. To cut one part of an image I do Object-> Clip -> Set on the selection. This crops the selection alone. But I am not sure how to select and move the selection.
Could someone please help?
Duplicate the image, then clip both images to the two parts that you need. Then use snapping to move them both together exactly.
Or (better), use a raster graphics editing tool of your choice and do the same. While the above-described workflow works, Inkscape, being a vector graphics editor, is not the appropriate tool for this kind of thing.
I'm designing a website which uses a SVG-document as background. I want this image to tile on the X-axis. Which works great, but I wanted to know if it is possible to show one group in the SVG only once, such that in subsequent tiles the group is hidden.
The above image visualizes what I want to achieve. The image having one group (in the image the red circle) that is invisible in the following tiles.
Now I am aware such things can be achieved using additional CSS backgrounds but I am really interested if such thing could be achieved using a single SVG background.
Thanks in advance!
The answer is no. If you are relying on CSS to tile the background - ie. with repeat-x, then no. there isn't any way to do what you want. When an SVG is used as a background like that, it becomes immutable - effectively the same as a PNG or a JPEG.
You will need to use a different method.
Is there a correct procedure to locate certain image locations in an image sprite. Say I wanted to create 10 div images in my header using the image below, how do I find the precise location of each.
Is just a case of trial and error using CSS background position till the image fits?
http://www.argos.co.uk/wcsstore/argos/en_GB/siteAssets/brfp-2014/images/icons-s73f662fc84.png
Now if you are not adverse to uses SCSS/SASS, then I would highly recommend using Compass' method. It converts a folder of images into a sprite map and the creates classes that allows you to access these sprites. This has proven to be the easiest way for me to work with sprites without worrying about all of the messy calculations.
If you can't do that, then what I have personally done, is create multiple small sprite maps. For example, if I have an arrow that has a hover on/off state. It will stack it into one image and just create a class with a shifted background-position.
Is it possible to make an single image change based on where your mouse is positioned on the image?
If so, how I would I accomplish something like this?
Theres a concept of z-index which basically means that how the images are aligned in vertical space..You can stack all the imagesone above the other with only the topmost being visible..Then depending upon where the user is you can change the layering of the images on the fly.. But without any code its a bit difficult to know where are you stuck/what have you tried?
I have a image and I want to extract a particular portion of a whole image.
what can I do for?
I want to extract the taj Mahal from this image.
This image appears to be a JPEG. JPEG images do not contain layers. Your best bet is going to be to start with a better image. Even then, you'll almost certainly need to paint in portions. If this is really the only image you can find at the correct angle then you'll be doing a lot of hand editing to get what you want.
Try: https://www.google.com/search?q=taj+Mahal&tbm=isch