Is it possible to have the shadow surround the entire DIV?
-moz-box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #ccc;
-webkit-box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #ccc;
box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #ccc;
I know the order of attributes goes:
Horizontal offset
Vertical offset
Blur radius
Color
But I wonder if it's possible to make the shadow go all around it instead of showing up only on one edge or side.
You're offsetting the shadow, so to get it to uniformly surround the box, don't offset it:
-moz-box-shadow: 0 0 3px #ccc;
-webkit-box-shadow: 0 0 3px #ccc;
box-shadow: 0 0 3px #ccc;
Yes, don't offset vertically or horizontally, and use a relatively large blur radius: fiddle
Also, you can use multiple box-shadows if you separate them with a comma. This will allow you to fine-tune where they blur and how much they extend. The example I provide is indistinguishable from a large outline, but it can be fine-tuned significantly more: fiddle
You missed the last and most relevant property of box-shadow, which is spread-distance. You can specify a value for how much the shadow expands or contracts (makes my second example obsolete): fiddle
The full property list is:
box-shadow: [horizontal-offset] [vertical-offset] [blur-radius] [spread-distance] [color] inset?
But even better, read through the spec.
Just use the below code. It will shadow surround the entire DIV
-webkit-box-shadow: -1px 1px 5px 9px rgba(0,0,0,0.75);
-moz-box-shadow: -1px 1px 5px 9px rgba(0,0,0,0.75);
box-shadow: -1px 1px 5px 9px rgba(0,0,0,0.75);
Hope this will work
The CSS code would be:
box-shadow: 0 0 10px 5px white;
That will shadow the entire DIV no matter its shape!
Use this below code
border:2px soild #eee;
margin: 15px 15px;
-webkit-box-shadow: 2px 3px 8px #eee;
-moz-box-shadow: 2px 3px 8px #eee;
box-shadow: 2px 3px 8px #eee;
Explanation:-
box-shadow requires you to set the horizontal & vertical offsets, you can then optionally set the blur and colour, you can also choose to have the shadow inset instead of the default outset. Colour can be defined as hex or rgba.
box-shadow : inset/outset h-offset v-offset blur spread color;
Explanation of the values...
inset/outset -- whether the shadow is inside or outside the box. If not specified it will default to outset.
h-offset -- the horizontal offset of the shadow (required value)
v-offset -- the vertical offset of the shadow (required value)
blur -- as it says, the blur of the shadow
spread -- moves the shadow away from the box equally on all sides. A positive value causes the shadow to expand, negative causes it to contract. Though this value isn't often used, it is useful with multiple shadows.
color -- as it says, the color of the shadow
Usage
box-shadow:2px 3px 8px #eee; a gray shadow with a horizontal outset of 2px, vertical of 3px and a blur of 8px
Related
Got a problem with the css shadows.
I can't figure out how to get rid of the top shadow here: http://i.imgur.com/5FX62Fx.png
What I got:
box-shadow: 0 -3px 4px -6px #777, 0 3px 4px 6px #ccc;
How do I do that? I want it to be on the left, right and bottom side.
try this is:
div
{
width:300px;
height:100px;
background-color:white;
box-shadow:0px 0px 5px #888888;
}
try like so:
box-shadow: 3px 3px 3px #777, -3px 3px 3px #777;
(adjust hex colours to match your needs)
Example - http://jsbin.com/ebemol/1
Looks like you need to position the vertical shadow property:
box-shadow: 0 5px 4px -6px #777
-3px would indicates that the shadow starts -3px from where the shadow would start normally, I have changed it to an arbitrary value, 5px so it starts further down.
http://jsfiddle.net/9Dgtj/
You can see from the JS Fiddle I have provided that adjusting the vertical shadow (5px) moves the shadow down.
How can I make both inner shadow (top) and outer shadow on an element in CSS?
The button Facebook uses in their mobile application, has both:
Slight white line at the top of the button,
And a slight white line at the bottom of the button.
With a solid border
You can use css3 box-shadow to get the effect you want. a simple example
box-shadow: 0 0 3px #666;
-moz-box-shadow: 0 0 3px #666;
-webkit-box-shadow: 0 0 3px #666;
furthermore you can specify inset property in order to get inner glow.
box-shadow: inset 0 0 3px #666;
There is a comprehensive reference on this in Mozilla
I am using CSS3 property
box-shadow: 2px 2px 2px 2px #CCCCCC;
Its giving this wierd effect on the right hand side and the bottom.
How to make the shadow to be equal on all the sides ?
Use
box-shadow: 0 0 2px 2px #CCCCCC;
instead
See this jsFiddle
The first two numeric values specify the relative x and y offset of the shadow. Hence your shadow was displaced/offset by a vector of (2px , 2px), or 2px right, and 2px down.
The third numeric value specifies the blur, and the fourth the shadow size/spread, and the fifth the colour (in HEX)
Use this:
box-shadow: 0px 0px 2px 2px #CCCCCC; /* Horizontal Length: px, Vertical Length: px, Blur Radius: px, Spread: px, Color */
You can test CSS3 here: http://css3generator.com/
box-shadow is defined as: horizontal offset - vertical offset - shadow spread - blur size - color
You could just do: box-shadow: 0 0 2px 2px #ccc;
You can do this by setting the first 2 values to 0px:
box-shadow: 0px 0px 2px 2px #CCCCCC;
See more: w3schools
So I've been using a shadow box inset to make a inner glow kind of making the edges blurry and shadowy like for a edge burn look. I'm trying to use it for the top and bottom only and not for the left/right sides. But it's not working. I'm using it on a overflow: auto <div> so that it can scroll and have a nice effect.
Here's my css:
#content {
font: 14px "Lucida Grande", "Lucida Sans Unicode", sans-serif;
line-height:1.2em;
height: 400px;
width: 500px;
overflow: auto;
float: right;
padding: 0 10px;
-moz-box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #000, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #000;
-webkit-box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #000, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #000;
box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #000, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #000;
}
You have a black shadow on a black background so naturally, you're not going to see anything. Turning off your black background, we can see the shadows just fine...
http://jsfiddle.net/sparky672/p3Mgn/1/show
So you just need to select different shadow colors. Here are your shadows changed to white #fff...
Full Size Demo
http://jsfiddle.net/sparky672/p3Mgn/3/
-moz-box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #fff, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #fff;
-webkit-box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #fff, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #fff;
box-shadow: inset 0 8px 8px -8px #fff, inset 0 -8px 8px -8px #fff;
EDIT in response to OP's comments:
The browser is only given two colors to use in order to render a shadow.
1) The background image's color (or just background color in this case)
2) The shadow color
Wherever they're both the same, the shadow will be invisible.
To have a blurry effect using a black background, perhaps try #444 for the shadow... it looks pretty good I think...
http://jsfiddle.net/sparky672/p3Mgn/5/show/
Do you want to have shadow above content to blur top and bottom? If yes then the problem is that you shadow is shown below content. You can make it above it if you set "position: relative; z-index: -1;" to content block, but then you will not be able to click or scroll it.
Easier way to achive this effect is to use :before and :after pseudoclasses and css-gradients.
Example here: http://jsfiddle.net/V96wx/2/
In my example above you will need 2 containers — one for overflow and one for fades (to make it more bulletproof). But theoretically you can do it with only 1 container, I'll write how...
First of all — how :before and :after works. Simplest way to think about them is as about 2 more elements that will be added inside parent container before and after actual content. For example: .about:before will be added inside .about container, but before actual content.
:before and :after have one required property content if you didn't add it, element will not be created. conent may have one of the following values: htmldog.com/reference/cssproperties/content. In my example it was left blank. After element is inserted you can style it as you wish by the same rules you style every other element.
To make fade in my examples I used gradient with trasparency. You can read about gradients here davidwalsh.name/css-gradients. Transparecy is done by using colors in rgba (4th digit is transparency level).
The reason why I used 2 containers in my example is because it is harder to accurately position :before and :after elements above main container without it — if you try to use realtive coordinates for them they will position rightly, but will scroll with content and if you not use position: relative on base container you will need to know this container coordinates to make positioning. It is not a problem if container height is fixed but may be tricky if it is not.
BTW: Theoretically there is an even easier way to do fade — by using css masks with gradients ( webkit.org/blog/181/css-masks ) but right now it's working only in Safari and Chrome.
Is it possible to create both an outer shadow for a 3D effect and an inner inset glow? I have a div with a lime green background that's on top of a blue div. So far, I have the following:
.greendiv{
background:darkgreen;
box-shadow: box-shadow: 10px -7px 15px darkgray;
box-shadow: lightgreen 0px 0px 3px inset;
}
The actual colors are in #ffffff format. It seems that the second declaration cancels the first one. Is there a way around this?
You simply declare box-shadow once, and use both versions inside, separated with a comma:
http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-background/#the-box-shadow
The ‘box-shadow’ property attaches one or more drop-shadows to the box. The property is a comma-separated list of shadows, each specified by 2-4 length values, an optional color, and an optional ‘inset’ keyword.
So, for you:
.greendiv {
background: darkgreen;
box-shadow: 10px -7px 15px darkgray, lightgreen 0px 0px 3px inset;
}
See: http://jsfiddle.net/JzsAh/