This is a known problem with CSS resizing. Unless all images have the same proportion, you have no way to do this via CSS.
The best approach would be to have a container, and resize one of the dimensions (always the same) of the images. In my example I resized the width.
If the container has a specified dimension (in my example the width), when telling the image to have the width at 100%, it will make it the full width of the container. The auto
at the height will make the image have the height proportional to the new width.
Example:
HTML:
<div class="container"> <img src="something.png" /> </div> <div class="container"> <img src="something2.png" /> </div>
CSS:
.container { width: 200px; height: 120px; } /* Resize images */ .container img { width: 100%; height: auto; }