The codes are not very user friendly and you need a chart to let you know what code makes what color. I've created a page showing some basic color codes, 104 in all. There are actually over a thousand hex codes producing every imaginable shade of red, or yellow, or whatever. You'll see what I mean. Look over the page--write down a couple of codes--and come on back to finish the tutorial.
Click on the page name to go: Goodies Color Page
Welcome back. No doubt you looked around and saw a couple of colors. Neat, huh? Hopefully you brought back a color code (hex code) you'd like to use - but if not, no matter - I have one; "FFFFFF." That code will produce pure white. (WHY FFFFFF?!?!?) I told you the codes weren't too nice.
Please Note! When you write these codes, write them with a "#" sign in front of the code. Be sure to enclose it all inside of quotation marks!! So now that I know the code of the background I wish to create - I simply insert the code into the command and place the command on the html page just below the <TITLE> command. The code for a white background will look like this:
Yup, but that's a whole different tutorial: So You Want Some Text Color, Huh?. Finish up here, and then head over for some brain-packing fun.
First you need a background. I make most of mine. I'll get to making a background in a second.
Since you need a digitizer to make backgrounds, and I know not everyone has one of these at their fingertips, the best way to use a background is to grab one off the Internet. Here are a couple of places I have found quite helpful. Again, you might want to bookmark the ones you like. Just click on them to go...
Again, all background commands come right after the <TITLE> command. The command is;
All color commands are overridden by the BODY BACKGROUND command. Mainly because the wallpaper goes over the color.
BUT...it will take a bit of time for the background .gif or .jpeg to load. It looks nice to put a color command before the BODY BACKGROUND command. What happens is that your page goes to a certain color and then the wallpaper wipes over that color. Nice effect.
Please Note! The use of two commands, one for BGCOLOR and the other for BACKGROUND, does not work on upper level browsers. You'll need to put them both together in the same command. Something like this:
Easy Wallpapers
1. Find a piece of paper, other than white, that already has text upon
it. That way you know when you use it as a background, your text will show
up.
2. Paper that works well for this - diplomas, citations, stationary,
fancy copy paper from Kinkos
3. Simply scan the paper and crop a perfect square. Make it kind of
small. 1' X 1' works real well.
4. Use it as a background. Most of the wallpapers above were made this
way
-or- If you have access to an image program, try this. It works a lot better than you might think.
1. Scan any picture you want as a background, and crop it kind
of small.
2. Use your image program to do an "offset" of 50%. (This turns the
picture in on itself by half)
3. Use the program to touch up any lines that don't come together at
the midpoint of the graphic.
4. Save it. Doing this guarantees that the graphic you just created
will line up perfectly as a background. It works, trust me. Have I steered
you wrong yet?