CSS Border Images
With the CSS border-image
property, you can set an image to be used as the border around an element.
CSS border-image Property
The CSS border-image
property allows you to specify an image to be used instead of the normal border around an element.
The property has three parts:
- The image to use as the border
- Where to slice the image
- Define whether the middle sections should be repeated or stretched
The border-image
property takes the image and slices it into nine sections, like a tic-tac-toe board. It then places the corners at the corners, and the middle sections are repeated or stretched as you specify.
Note: For border-image
to work, the element also needs the border
property set!
Example
#borderimg {
border: 10px solid transparent;
padding: 15px;
border-image: url(border.png) 30 round;
}
Example
#borderimg {
border: 10px solid transparent;
padding: 15px;
border-image: url(border.png) 30 stretch;
}
CSS border-image – Different Slice Values
Different slice values completely changes the look of the border:
Example 1:
border-image: url(border.png) 50 round;
Example 2:
border-image: url(border.png) 20% round;
Example 3:
border-image: url(border.png) 30% round;
Here is the code:
Example
#borderimg1 {
border: 10px solid transparent;
padding: 15px;
border-image: url(border.png) 50 round;
}
#borderimg2 {
border: 10px solid transparent;
padding: 15px;
border-image: url(border.png) 20% round;
}
#borderimg3 {
border: 10px solid transparent;
padding: 15px;
border-image: url(border.png) 30% round;
}