Multi-colored text in CSS
permalinkIn this article, we will be creating a super cool effect where we can have multi-colored text in CSS.
I saw this effect a while ago on Twitter done by Adam Argyle and was blown away by how easy this can be achieved in CSS.
Below is a demo of what we'll be creating today!
See the Pen by Chris Bongers (@rebelchris) on CodePen.
CSS Multi-colored gradient text permalink
To create this effect, let's first start with our HTML structure. This is super easy as we only need one element!
<h1>multi colored text in css</h1>
Then it's off to our CSS file to magic some magic ๐ช.
Let's start by defining our five colors and our starting angle.
:root {
--color-1: #442288;
--color-2: #6ca2ea;
--color-3: #b5d33d;
--color-4: #fed23f;
--color-5: #eb7d5b;
--angle: 0deg;
}
We use the root to define variables as this is valid syntax in basic CSS. No need for SCSS here.
Then let's add some styling to our body. This is used to center our text and make our background black. The effect works better on black but will also work on different colors.
body {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
align-items: center;
background: #000;
}
Then let's start on styling our h1
element.
I'm breaking these up into a couple of steps to give more of an idea of what's happening.
1. Basic heading styling permalink
For our basic styling, we want a relatively big heading.
h1 {
color: #fff;
text-align: center;
font-family: Roboto, 'Helvetica Neue', Arial, sans-serif;
font-size: 6.5vw;
font-weight: 900;
line-height: 6vw;
text-transform: uppercase;
}
This will give us the following output.
2. Each word on its own line permalink
As you can see above, it's just one big line. We can use the following CSS hack to get each word on its own line.
word-spacing: 100vw;
Making each word space on a single line
3. CSS Text Gradient background permalink
Now we can move to add the gradient effect. We'll start by splitting the gradient into five steps, resulting in each word being one color.
background: linear-gradient(
var(--angle),
var(--color-1) 19%,
transparent 19%,
transparent 20%,
var(--color-2) 20%,
var(--color-2) 39%,
transparent 39%,
transparent 40%,
var(--color-3) 40%,
var(--color-3) 59%,
transparent 59%,
transparent 60%,
var(--color-4) 60%,
var(--color-4) 79%,
transparent 79%,
transparent 80%,
var(--color-5) 80%
);
background-clip: text;
-webkit-background-clip: text;
color: transparent;
Here, we define the colors we have in our :root
element definition. As well as the basic angle of 0. We add a transparent border between each color for our animation later on. As well as set the clipping mode to text.
Animating a linear background gradient in CSS permalink
To animate the gradient is quite tricky. We are applying the main hack by defining the --angle
variable.
Then we can add an animation to our h1
element.
animation: 10s rotate linear infinite;
This animation looks as follows:
@keyframes rotate {
to {
--angle: 360deg;
}
}
However, this doesn't do much yet, because the browser doesn't know 360deg
is a value. We can fix this by defining a @property
for the --angle
variable.
@property --angle {
syntax: '<angle>';
initial-value: 0deg;
inherits: false;
}
Note: This idea was taken from this cool CSS-Tricks article
And there we go! A super cool CSS text animation effect. I hope you enjoyed this article.
Thank you for reading, and let's connect! permalink
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