Instagram filter library in Sass and CSS.
Simply put, CSSgram is a library for editing your images with Instagram-like filters directly in CSS. What we're doing here is adding filters to the images as well as applying color and/or gradient overlays via various blending techniques to mimic these effects. This means less manual image processing and more fun filter effects on the web!
We are using pseudo-elements (i.e. :after
) to create the filter effects, so you must apply these filters on a containing element (i.e. not a content-block like <img>
). The recommendation is to wrap your images in a <figure>
tag. More about the tag here.
This library uses CSS Filters and CSS Blend Modes. This features are supported in the following browsers:
43+ ✔ | 38+ ✔ | Nope ✘ | 32+ ✔ | 8+ ✔ |
For more information, check on Can I Use.
There are currently 2 ways to consume this library:
When using CSS classes, you can simply add the class with the filter name to the element containing your image.
- Link to the CSSgram library within your project:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/vendor/cssgram.min.css">
- Add a class to your image element with the name of the filter you would like to use
For example:
<!-- HTML -->
<figure class="aden">
<img src="../img.png">
</figure>
Alternatively, you can just download and link to any individual css file:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/vendor/aden.min.css">
, if you're just using one of the styles.
For use in HTML markup:
- Aden:
class="aden"
- Reyes:
class="reyes"
- Perpetua:
class="perpetua"
- Inkwell:
class="inkwell"
- Toaster:
class="toaster"
- Walden:
class="walden"
- Hudson:
class="hudson"
- Gingham:
class="gingham"
- Mayfair:
class="mayfair"
- Lo-fi:
class="lofi"
- X-Pro II:
class="xpro2"
- 1977:
class="_1977"
- Brooklyn:
class="brooklyn"
If you use custom naming in your CSS architecture, you can add the .scss files for the provided styles within your project and then @extend
the filter effects within your style definitions. If you think extends are stupid, I will fight you 😊.
- Include a link to
scss/cssgram.scss
via an import statement in your Sass manifest file (i.e.main.scss
). It may look like:@import 'vendor/cssgram';
- Extend the silent placeholder selector
@extend %aden;
in your element.
For example:
<!-- HTML -->
<figure class="viz--beautiful">
<img src="../img.png">
</figure>
// Sass
.viz--beautiful {
@extend %aden;
}
Alternatively, you can just download and link any individual .scss file in your Sass manifest:
(i.e. scss/aden.scss
), if you're just using one of the styles.
For use in Sass elements:
- Aden:
@extend %aden;
- Reyes:
@extend %reyes;
- Perpetua:
@extend %perpetua;
- Inkwell:
@extend %inkwell;
- Toaster:
@extend %toaster;
- Walden:
@extend %walden;
- Hudson:
@extend %hudson;
- Gingham:
@extend %gingham;
- Mayfair:
@extend %mayfair;
- Lo-fi:
@extend %lofi;
- X-Pro II:
@extend %xpro2;
- 1977:
@extend %_1977;
- Brooklyn:
@extend %brooklyn;
Create an issueIssues temporarily shut down due to a spam attack- Fork this repo
- Clone the fork onto your system
npm install
dependancies (must have Node installed)- Run
gulp
to compile CSS and the site - Make changes (see file structure outline below)
- Submit a PR referencing the issue with a smile 😄
If you'd like to contribute, the following filters are yet to be added (again, listing them here because issues but are temporarily closed):
- Charmes
- Stinsen
- Kelvin
- Sutro
- Nashville
- Hefe
- Valencia
- Rise
- Sierra
- Amaro
- Crema
Filters are really fun to create! Reference photos created by Miles Croxford can be found here.
source/css/cssgram.css
contains each of the css classes you can apply to your<img>
to give it the filter. You should usesource/css/cssgram.min.css
for production if you want access to all of thesource/scss/
contains the source files for individual classes and placeholder selectors you can use to extend CSS classes in Sass- site is the public facing website
Note: this will also have mixin options and a PostCSS Component.