So I have seen quite a few ways to darken images with CSS, including ones with rounded corners, but my problem is different.
Let\'s say I have an .png image that loo
You could always change the opacity of the image, given the difficulty of any alternatives this might be the best approach.
CSS:
.tinted { opacity: 0.8; }
If you're interested in better browser compatability, I suggest reading this:
http://css-tricks.com/css-transparency-settings-for-all-broswers/
If you're determined enough you can get this working as far back as IE7 (who knew!)
Note: As JGonzalezD points out below, this only actually darkens the image if the background colour is generally darker than the image itself. Although this technique may still be useful if you don't specifically want to darken the image, but instead want to highlight it on hover/focus/other state for whatever reason.
if you want only the background-image
to be affected, you can use a linear gradient to do that, just like this:
background: linear-gradient(rgba(0, 0, 0, .5), rgba(0, 0, 0, .5)), url(IMAGE_URL);
If you want it darker, make the alpha value higher, else you want it lighter, make alpha lower
I would make a new image of the dog's silhouette (black) and the rest the same as the original image. In the html, add a wrapper div with this silhouette as as background. Now, make the original image semi-transparent. The dog will become darker and the background of the dog will stay the same. You can do :hover tricks by setting the opacity of the original image to 100% on hover. Then the dog pops out when you mouse over him!
style
.wrapper{background-image:url(silhouette.png);}
.original{opacity:0.7:}
.original:hover{opacity:1}
<div class="wrapper">
<div class="img">
<img src="original.png">
</div>
</div>
Webkit only solution
Quick solution, relies on the -webkit-mask-image property. -webkit-mask-image
sets a mask image for an element.
There are a few gotchas with this method:
:after
psuedo-element (IMG
tags can't have :before
/:after
pseudo elements, grr)attr(…)
CSS function to get the IMG
tag URL, so it's hard-coded into the CSS separately.If you can look past those issues, this might be a possible solution. SVG filters will be even more flexible, and Canvas solutions will be even more flexible and have a wider range of support (SVG doesn't have Android 2.x support).
Easy as
img {
filter: brightness(50%);
}