Last tutorial, I showed you how to design a watercolor effect menu in Photoshop. This tutorial I will show you how to slice up the menu design (step by step) and put them together with CSS. Most of you probably know how to code a horizontal or vertical CSS list menu. Now let's take it to the next level — code an advanced (un-typical) list menu utilizing the CSS position property.
Overview
Here are the required graphics to assembe the menu (you can download from the zip).

1. Main background
Open the Photoshop file. Turn off the menu text Layer Group and save the main background as menu-bg.jpg.

2. Button graphics
Turn off the background Layer Group and leave only the menu text layers visible. Make a rectangle selection cover the "home" item, go to menu Edit > Copy Merged (Cmd + Shift + C).

Create a new file and take note of the file dimension (w x h), in my case the "home" graphic is 144 x 58px. Paste the "home" graphic in the new file. Go to menu Image > Canvas Size, adjust the image height x 2 (58 + 58 = 116px). Duplicate the home graphic layer and align it to the bottom. Erase the highlight strokes in the upper layer.

Here is how the hover effect will work. We will set the link button to 144 x 58px, when mouseover, we will shift the background image from top to bottom.

Repeat this step for the other buttons. You should have the follow graphics:

3. HTML source
When you are done with the graphics, let's start coding. Start with an un-ordered list <ul>.
- note there is an id="menu" assigned to the
<ul>tag - an unique class name assigned to each link
<a> - an empty
<span>tag (the purpose of this is to make the mouseover effect)
<ul id="menu">
<li><a href="#" class="home">Home <span></span></a></li>
<li><a href="#" class="about">About <span></span></a></li>
<li><a href="#" class="rss">RSS <span></span></a></li>
</ul>
#menu
Reset the menu to no padding, no margin, and no list-style. Specify the width and height same dimension as the menu-bg.jpg. Then attach the menu background image. The key point to remember here is set the position property to relative.
#menu {
list-style: none;
padding: 0;
margin: 0;
width: 774px;
height: 210px;
background: url(images/menu-bg.jpg) no-repeat;
position: relative;
}
#menu span
Specify the span element to display:none (so they will be invisible by default). Specify position:absolute, so we can place the mouseover GIF image on exact position.
#menu span {
display: none;
position: absolute;
}
#menu a
The key point here is the text-indent property. We specify the text-indent property with a negative value (-900%), so the text will be hidden.
#menu a {
display: block;
text-indent: -900%;
position: absolute;
outline: none;
}
#menu a:hover
When mouseover the link, we want to shift the background image from top to bottom.
#menu a:hover {
background-position: left bottom;
}
#menu a:hover span
When mouseover the link, we want the span element to display:block.
#menu a:hover span {
display: block;
}
#menu .home
Specify the width, height, and background image. Since we already specified all <a> element postition:absolute in previous step, now just say where the .home button should be by specifying the left and top property.
#menu .home {
width: 144px;
height: 58px;
background: url(images/home.gif) no-repeat;
left: 96px;
top: 73px;
}
#menu .home span
Here we are specifying the width, height, background, and position of the span element of .home (mouseover GIF image)
#menu .home span {
width: 86px;
height: 14px;
background: url(images/home-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 28px;
top: -20px;
}
#menu .about
Copy the .home rules and rename them to .about. Now just change the width, height, background, left, and top property.
#menu .about {
width: 131px;
height: 51px;
background: url(images/about.gif) no-repeat;
left: 338px;
top: 97px;
}
#menu .about span {
width: 40px;
height: 12px;
background: url(images/about-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 44px;
top: 54px;
}
#menu .rss
Repeat this step for .rss
#menu .rss {
width: 112px;
height: 47px;
background: url(images/rss.gif) no-repeat;
left: 588px;
top: 94px;
}
#menu .rss span {
width: 92px;
height: 20px;
background: url(images/rss-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 26px;
top: -20px;
}
All in one:
#menu {
list-style: none;
padding: 0;
margin: 0;
width: 774px;
height: 210px;
background: url(images/menu-bg.jpg) no-repeat;
position: relative;
}
#menu span {
display: none;
position: absolute;
}
#menu a {
display: block;
text-indent: -900%;
position: absolute;
outline: none;
}
#menu a:hover {
background-position: left bottom;
}
#menu a:hover span {
display: block;
}
#menu .home {
width: 144px;
height: 58px;
background: url(images/home.gif) no-repeat;
left: 96px;
top: 73px;
}
#menu .home span {
width: 86px;
height: 14px;
background: url(images/home-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 28px;
top: -20px;
}
#menu .about {
width: 131px;
height: 51px;
background: url(images/about.gif) no-repeat;
left: 338px;
top: 97px;
}
#menu .about span {
width: 40px;
height: 12px;
background: url(images/about-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 44px;
top: 54px;
}
#menu .rss {
width: 112px;
height: 47px;
background: url(images/rss.gif) no-repeat;
left: 588px;
top: 94px;
}
#menu .rss span {
width: 92px;
height: 20px;
background: url(images/rss-over.gif) no-repeat;
left: 26px;
top: -20px;
}
Done
That's it. You can preview my CSS menu.
Note: there is an IE6 bug where the <span> hover effect doesn't display properly. To fix that, you can use Javascript to specify the <span> to display block on mouseover.
Thanks for the detailed instructions. I wonder how it will hold up in Opera, IE 5.5, etc… Will have to try I guess. Your site is an inspiration. I am gonna try these flowers etc. as background soon
Absolutely great guide and wonderful website! Love the design
You’re such an inspiration. Thanks! :D
that nice and i want to implemented on my website…
padrisimo este tapiz
Fantastic tutorial. Really easy to follow and use. I’ll definitely be using some of these techniques on future sites. Thanks!
I love this tutorial, and the techniques you use are superb.
Just wondering as to why you use two images – one for the circling and one for the supplementary text (like “home” and “who”)? Surely you could of just placed them into a single image that is css-positioned?
huckle
Sorry, I’ve just read the previous comments!
I have been contemplating on writing a similar article as a “tutorial” for one of my newly hired web developers. This article fits the bill nicely. You just saved me a lot of time :)
thanks .perfect
Absolutely great blog
This is great! These tutorials are clear and really help!
COOL!
that give me inspiration on my coming design. you’ll have a new reader! XD
thanks a million. lookin forwward to read your future tutorials.
Cool!!! Really Awesome!! the best menu I’ve ever seen!!
Güzel tasarım.. tebrikler..
Nice article, i use your tutorial for create menu on my personal blog.
this is good tutorial but not useful it is also unique. but we can not keep such menu in website.
sorry for writing this now i have decided to keep colon in my site :)
so nice, I used the technique already… all in all nice job and excellent.
There is a problem with having position: absolute for the main div, and position: relative for everything else. In Firefox, Opera and Safari, if you want the div to be flush against the top of the page, it adds a space. The only way to fix this is to make everything the same attribute.
I just found this out the hard way. If you know a workaround, that would be wonderful.