Case in point is today and what I learned about text shadows. Besides making text look more attractive, shadows can improve contrast and readability when using a text color that doesn't pop as well with the background as you would like.
I was building a web page and wanted the colors of the headings to match the colors in the logo graphic. The colors were blue and gold, and the gold header didn't pop against a egg-shell background. I said "I need a drop shadow here."
In the past, I would have went to the GIMP (my favorite image editor. It's free and very powerful.) and created a graphic with the text shadow. But, I heard of a CSS property, text-shadow, that would do it. I tried it and it worked wonderfully. Well, wonderfully in everything but IE. But, since 54% of the desktop market runs IE, this will not do.
While nobody has ever accused Microsoft of being standards-compliant, they aren't slackers either. There's usually a Microsoft-specific way of doing something when the compliant-specific way doesn't work.
And, of course, there is. I found a really handy filter to use from Heygrady.com . Please note: it's not fast, so if your page is a bandwidth-hog, use the graphics method instead.
The code would be
h1{The great thing about this is that everybody but IE ignores the filter property, and IE ignores the text-shadow property.
text-shadow: 2px 2px 2px #000000;
filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Shadow(direction=135, strength=2,color=000000);}
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