Back

CSS-Native Parallax Effect

90 points6 hoursdan-webnotes.com
baliex6 hours ago

That sounds interesting but it would be a whole lot more interesting if the page was itself an example of said effect!

jonahx2 hours ago

Or even linked to one!

dsmurrell4 hours ago

I was also looking for examples.

yashD184 hours ago

i was waiting for the effect to show up

mpeg6 hours ago

How does this compare to the classic css-native parallax effect? Before the scroll timeline APIs you'd use the "perspective" css property to create a container where the z plane is n pixels away from the screen, and then position each layer within it at a different z distance using transform: translateZ

That method is GPU accelerated too, so it is performant compared to some js solutions, and has worked well in every browser for around a decade

I like the idea of the scroll-timeline though, just keen to understand what the advantage is for this

semolino52 minutes ago

This method should still support GPU acceleration, as `transform` (or rotate/scale/etc.) is the only property being animated. The benefit of animation-timeline seems to be that it's much easier to set up than a CSS perspective context.

dandep4 hours ago

OP here, thanks for asking. While the `perspective` technique works too, it has the downside of needing a careful combination of scroller elements and properties.

This approach adds a single class to the image container and that's it. Plus you can control many aspects of the animation such as entry/exit ranges, and make it control other properties like opacity or color, for example.

I know browser support is still lacking, but it will get there eventually. I'm not using this in production code yet, but I think it's useful to experiment with these new CSS APIs.

som5 hours ago

No doubt quite a few folk with the same question. Keen to understand performance tradeoffs.

Obvious comparison note would be that the "new" method currently enjoys somewhat limited browser support (no Firefox without a flag, and only since Safari 26)

iainmerrick5 hours ago

I was wondering the same thing. That translateZ is a bit fiddly to get right, so I could believe this is a bit easier to use, maybe? And presumably this could be used for other properties besides position, like colors, opacity or blurs.

frereubu6 hours ago

There's me scrolling up and down and thinking "hey, it's not working!" But it's behind a flag on Firefox: https://caniuse.com/?search=view-timeline-name

frereubu3 hours ago

For people saying it's not working in any browser - do you have some kind of reduced motion preference setting turned on? I can imagine that would have an effect on something like this and it's definitely working in Chrome for me.

cj3 hours ago

Yes... there's a media query in the codepen disabling animation for people with reduced motion enabled.

werdnapk5 hours ago

It's been behind a flag for ages. Maybe because of performance issues?

goodmythical1 hour ago

Enabling (layout.css.scroll-driven-animations.enabled) and refreshing the codepen gives a "we crashed this to prevent a crash from an infinite loop" clicking to allow the infinite loops allowed me to see the animation.

Fedora 44 Kernel: x86_64 Linux 7.0.10-201.fc44.x86_64 Firefox 151.0.2

anssip6 hours ago

Noticed the same thing. In Mac Safari it works without setting any flags.

wnevets5 hours ago

Doesnt work on any browser for me

WithinReason5 hours ago

tried 4 browsers, didn't work in any of them

alpinisme5 hours ago

FWIW it works on iPhone safari

deckar011 hour ago

But it jumps around and flickers pretty bad. Chrome’s own demos in the docs don’t work at all.

https://developer.chrome.com/docs/css-ui/scroll-driven-anima...

Edit: Their reference works and has some really nice demos. Must be an iframe problem. https://scroll-driven-animations.style/#demos

layer84 hours ago

Only on iOS 26.

abejfehr4 hours ago

I don’t think it did for me. Are you on iOS 26?

Mashimo5 hours ago

Only worked for me on mobile (vivaldi android) not on vivaldi / chrome / edge on Desktop.

account425 hours ago

What an age where we need a pile of javascript as well as a bot check to demo a simple CSS trick.

zamadatix5 hours ago

The JS and bot check are for making additional functionality, beyond just showing the example, work easily. I.e. editing and sharing edits from a browser. If all you want is a static example, feel free to make it without these things.

sheept57 minutes ago

A parallax effect has also long been possible with CSS 3D transforms. Here's a demo,[0][1] from the same person who made that CSS 3D FPS a while ago.[2]

[0]: https://www.keithclark.co.uk/articles/pure-css-parallax-webs...

[1]: blog: https://www.keithclark.co.uk/articles/pure-css-parallax-webs...

[2]: https://www.keithclark.co.uk/labs/css-fps/

thomasikzelf5 hours ago

You can make some really cool stuff with css scroll animations. I used SVG paths with a scroll animated dash offset to draw an image while scrolling. Zero javascript, it feels so smooth. https://thomaswelter.nl (the background)

rsyring4 hours ago

Android Firefox: there is no background image.

thomasikzelf4 hours ago

firefox android does not support CSS animation-timeline, and firefox desktop needs layout.css.scroll-driven-animations.enabled. This probably should not be used for any critical features.

Semaphor3 hours ago

This [0] seems to be the main meta bug, with [1] being for CSS and [2] for JS, for FF to ship it without the flag. There seems to be slow work towards it, kinda funny that FF was the first browser to have it (flag-gated, according to CIU) and now is the only one without it in stable ;)

[0]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1676779

[1]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1676780

[2]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1676781

geuis45 minutes ago

Using css perspective for parallax has been around for years and is much simpler code.

hit8run28 minutes ago

I get motion sickness from this specific effect. Especially on high refresh rate screens.

Onplana49 minutes ago

I was expecting a demo on the linked page itself. Interesting to let Codex or Claude Code do it :)

mrcsmcln4 hours ago

I played around with this API some time ago. It’s simple and high-performance, but one feature I wish existed is damping. Scroll-driven animations are tied directly to the scroll timeline, so there’s no concept of the parallax object “catching up” to the scroll progress over, say, one second. From what I remember, `animation-timing-function` feels weird when you scroll, so it’s not the right solution. GSAP offers this, but it’s JS-only.

sillyboi5 hours ago

It would be awesome to put an interactive example right in the article.

thecaio1 hour ago

there is a special place in hell for pages like these that don't show examples

rohitsriram5 hours ago

Love the one-variable design where scale and translate stay in sync automatically, just wish Firefox would get off the flag already.

dandep4 hours ago

Thanks!

duskdozer5 hours ago

In a world where it's increasingly overlooked, I'm glad the author mentions disabling it respecting user settings. I do think it should be reversed and only enabled with the `@media (prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference)`, but that is the opinion of someone who gets negative value from animations and is bemused by how much dev and compute time is spent on them.

tantalor2 hours ago

Hey, where's the demo?

albert_e3 hours ago

could this be combined with a sprite like image that shows a slightly different angle of the image with each step

i_am_a_peasant4 hours ago

Idk about anyone here but I find the effect disorienting.

amon_spek4 hours ago

Yes. I'm a little more sensitive than average, but not enough to turn off animations, and this is uncomfortable.

Theodores3 hours ago

Great. I tried the Google examples a while ago and got nowhere with it, time for another go, within the netherworld of SVG, to map to several different layers.

xuzhenpeng5 hours ago

[flagged]

swordlucky6663 hours ago

[dead]