Layer-background-image

The CSS   property sets the  for the entire region of the current element. This property behaves in Netscape the way the  property should behave, because this property was invented to create the correct behavior.

The  property only covers the content area of an element's rendering box, and if a border is also used, there is a slight gap (2-3 pixels) between the background-image and the border area, where the surface of the parent element shines through.

The  covers the whole region specified by the element, including the gap area occurring for the   property, and the entire dimension of the element specified by the   and   properties. Since this property is only understood by Netscape, and it fixes other buggy behavior, specifying both this and the  property with the same value is recommended.

Values
HTML example:

 TEXT

CSS example:

div { position:absolute; top:100px; left:300px; width:200px; border:thin solid black; background-image:url("http://www.example.com/bg.gif"); layer-background-image:url("http://www.example.com/bg.gif"); }