Recently, we showed you how to style your comments layout and how to style your comment form. One of our users emailed us and asked “how did you make your gravatar images round? Are you storing gravatar images locally to get them to be round?” In this article, we will show you how to display round gravatar images in WordPress. We will use the border-radius property of CSS3 to create circular gravatar images.
First thing you need to do is edit your theme’s style.css file. You can do this by using a FTP program or by going to Appearance » Editor in your WordPress admin. Next, you want to add the following code in your CSS file:
.avatar { border-radius: 50%; -moz-border-radius: 50%; -webkit-border-radius: 50%; }
This should work on most WordPress themes. However, if this does not work on your theme, then there is probably some plugin or your theme function messing with the default classes used for gravatar in WordPress. In order to find out which css class gravatar images are using in your theme, you need to open a blog post that has comments. Scroll down to the comments section, and right click on the gravatar image to select Inspect Element. It will show you the source code for your gravatar, like this:
If the gravatar image has something other than avatar then use that instead of .avatar in the above css code.
We hope that this article helped you display round gravatar images on your WordPress blog. Let us know if you have any questions or feedback by leaving a comment below.
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Rex says
Very timely. Thank you so much.
WPBeginner Support says
You’re welcome
Admin
pujara says
How to add comment image automatically like in your comment system?
Nataly says
hello, It worked, thank you, but, the description appear to high. over the pic, do you know to make it appear at the side of the pic?
Therese says
I can’t make it work.
I can’t figure out where exactly to put it, nothing seams to change. I’ve looked at the source code and it’s got avatar just like the example source code.
WPBeginner Support says
Did you add the CSS in your theme’s stylesheet?
Admin
ERFmama says
Yes I did. I have the Twenty Twelve theme.
Is there a specific place it has to go? In the style.css
Edit: Never mind it suddenly worked now!
Can I ask how to change the size of the avatars please? Or have you already written that down somewhere?
Thank you so much for this!
Daniel says
It worked, thank you
Chrissy says
Fantastic! Exactly what I was looking for! Thanks you guys rock!
Jacky says
THANK YOU so much for this, spent hours trying to accomplish. You provided the most straightforward solution!
Abdul Samad says
Bro Thanks For This Code I’m New In WP and I really Enjoying Your Blog Man Thanks For THis And All Tutorials ….
Richie says
I was going to pass along this tip and of course tried it first on one of my sites.
Worked like a champ I simply changed my CSS from px to % for the border moz and webkit.
Here’s where it got interesting.
I went to another site, did the same tweak and it didn’t work. After a little head scratching I remembered that I had the plugin WP User Avatar installed on the site that it worked on and didn’t have it installed on the site it didn’t work on.
I installed the plugin and whalah, works like a champ.
For both sites I’m using a custom theme built on the Presswork framework.
Bottom line, I got it to work but only with the plugin.
Any ideas?
Editorial Staff says
It is possible that your theme wasn’t using the css class .avatar, and the plugin added that.
Admin
Richie says
I’ll check it out. Thanks
Roselle Celina says
Hi there, thanks for this tutorial! It’s working great on chrome and Firefox, but for Safari, I’m getting this same problem: http://jsfiddle.net/2UT8v/2/
Thanks in advance for your help
Editorial Staff says
It seems that the border width is where the issue seems to be in safari.
Admin
RW says
I agree and I only use IE about 4% of the time but several of my customers are still on 8.
Thanks,
Bob
Martin says
If somebody uses IE8 does not deserve for round image
RW says
Great tip. Please note that IE8 doesn’t natively render round corners (border-radius). You’d need to use javascript, pie, etc… for this but not worth the trouble. Luckily IE9 recognizes current standards…
Thanks.
Jim Burnett says
I remember the days we were trying to keep IE6 support in the loop. Not it’s IE 8 for rounded corners. Lucky us, IE9 is picking up.
Then again, FF 3.0 doesn’t support any HTML 5. *sad face*
Cool CSS trick though!