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Website
Backgrounds: 5 Cool Tricks for a Professional Look
Most websites feature white backgrounds.
Or they sit on a navy or gray background -- but most
of the screen is still white, like a page of paper set
against the darker background. Occasionally, you might
run across more interesting colors - reds and purples
and greens and rust – often looking more gaudy than
professional.
But every now and then, there is a website
with a photo or a drawing or a pattern background. This
tutorial will show you not just how to place a background
on your website, but five clever ticks to spice up the
background without resorting to gaudiness.
The basic html code to place a background
on your web page is very simple:
To place a background in a table, perhaps
set against a solid color page background, here is the
basic html code:
The image file called image.jpg now
becomes your background. A typical image would show
up "tiled". In other words, it repeats itself
horizontally and vertically to fill the screen. This
usually does not look very professional, so here are
five tricks to clean it up and spice it up.
1. Use "strip" graphics. Strip
graphics are simply very long images that stretch across
the screen. When they repeat, they repeat one below
the other. To see this in action, view my page at http://www.thehappyguy.com/SEO.html.
The yellow strip along the right side looks like it
is part of the top banner image. But it is a 650 by
20 strip image, mostly white, with a touch of yellow
along the left side. This works well with patterns that
vary only from left to right
2. Hold the background in place. When
a visitor scrolls down, the text rolls over the image.
I used this trick at my personal website: http://www.leonhardtonline.com
(Please forgive the mess – I never seem to find the
time to clean it up.) The html code to do this is:
This works for patterns, but it works
best for photos or drawings, such as a faded image of
your company logo or a faded scenery shot or a faded
photo of people interacting. (Remember that the background
should not stand out at the expense of the foreground
text and images, which is why you want faded images.)
3. Another great background trick is
to place a smaller picture in the background, such as
your company logo or some other image that you do not
want to take up the entire screen. This works best against
a white background. Here is the html code:
If you want the image to show up just
in a table:
I used this function in just one cell
of a table by inserting it in my tag for my navigation
menu at http://www.vitamin-supplements-store.net . Notice
how the faded bottle is in the background behind the
navigation links, but it does not repeat down the page.
4. You can further control the position
of the background image. Consider the following code:
We now have a background that fills
the top right corner of the page. Depending how big
it is, it might cover most of the screen or just the
corner.
5. Another way to use background images
are as navigation buttons. While search engines can
easily follow image links, they don't carry the same
relevancy as keyword-rich text links. A background button
image can make a text link look like a button. Each
navigation link would have to be placed within its own
table or cell, then apply the code used in the previous
example.
Used properly, background images can
greatly enhance the appeal of your website. If you are
looking for a way to spice up your website, these four
tricks can help.
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