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When you want your images to look good in Markdown on GitHub, you might have to adjust for the UI around them.

GitHub supports dark mode and light mode, and as developers, we can make our README images look great in both themes. Here’s a quick guide to using the <picture> element in your GitHub Markdown files to dynamically switch images based on the user’s color scheme.
When developers switch to GitHub’s dark mode (or vice versa), standard images can look out of place, with bright backgrounds or clashing colors.
Instead of forcing a one-size-fits-all image, you can tailor your visuals to blend seamlessly with the theme. It’s a small change, but it can make your project look much more polished.
Here’s the magic snippet you can copy into your README (or any Markdown file):
Now, we say it’s magic, but let’s take a peek behind the curtain to show how it works:
<picture> tag lets you define multiple image sources for different scenarios.<source media="..."> attribute matches the user’s color scheme.
media="(prefers-color-scheme: dark)", the browser loads the srcset image when GitHub is in dark mode.media="(prefers-color-scheme: light)", the browser loads the srcset image when GitHub is in light mode.<picture> element, or the user’s system doesn’t match any defined media queries, the fallback <img> tag will be used.You can use this approach in your repo README files, documentation hosted on GitHub, and any other Markdown files rendered on GitHub.com!
What’s better than a demo to help you get started? Here’s what this looks like in practice:
https://github.blog/wp-content/uploads/2025/04/Toggle-Dark-and-Light-Mode-on-GitHub-.mp4#t=0.001