21

I have a responsive web design with a SVG logo/image which is dynamic with its container. All major browsers seem to support SVG really good.

My SVG is dynamic, so if I scale up my browser window, the SVG does it too. In Chrome and IE9 it works like a charm. In Firefox the SVG is blurry at some sizes. But I can't say its all the time blurry when it's over the initial SVG size. It just seems not to rerender correctly all the time while I'm scaling up my browser window.

That's what it looks like sometimes (have a look at it in fullsize to see the difference): enter image description here

Maybe I'm using the wrong way to embed it. That's what my CSS and HTML look like:

<div id="logo"></div>

CSS:

#logo {
   background-image: url('http://dl.dropbox.com/u/569168/jess.svg');
   height: 22em;
   background-repeat: no-repeat;
   -webkit-background-size: 100%;
   -moz-background-size: 100%;
   -o-background-size: 100%;
   background-size: 100%;
}

Grab the SVG with the link in the CSS if you want to have a look at it. It's made with Adobe Illustrator.

Any idea how to fix that?

6 Answers 6

15

Update 2013-10: Confirmed fixed in v24 which now made it into the release channel


Update 2013-07: Bug is solved! Fix will make it into Firefox 24 which will be released somewhere between September and October


I read about a somewhat simple solution to this problem somewhere that I now use in my projects (will add source when i find it again):

simply set width and height of the svg-container to the maximum values the image is likely going to have and you are fine. Works in all current browsers just fine. only restriction is, that firefox and opera (yes, the same two browsers that caused this mess) dont work well with very big images --> dont use too high values for the dimensions

original file:

<svg width="64px" height="128px"> 

lets say the maxium width will be 3x that big, then your SVG should contain this:

<svg width="192px" height="384px"> 

(yes, the svg node can have more attributes...)

The reason why this works is that Opera and FF render SVGs before resizing them instead of the other way round as it is supposed to be done with vector gfx

UPDATE: credits go to David Bushell who wrote a wonderfull article on Resolution Independence With SVG.

6
  • 1
    Seems like setting width and height attributes both at 100% also fixes the problem. Sep 19, 2012 at 19:37
  • yes, this can help but it failed performance wise in my tests, causing FF to use up way more CPU than normal. besides: the browser will no longer know the correct aspect ratio of your file Oct 29, 2012 at 9:28
  • 1
    +1 because setting the dimensions of the SVG to the maximum size it was likely to be solved the blurry issue I was having. I have notices that this is only a major issue with SVG sprites. If the SVG is something like a logo you can remove the width and height attributes and either don't set the background-size or set it to cover - the SVG will be the size of the node and doesn't seem to be blurry in Firefox or Safari
    – James Long
    Jun 11, 2013 at 10:21
  • The problem still exists when using transform="scale()".
    – Zaz
    May 5, 2015 at 21:03
  • @Josh is there an open bug in mozilla's tracker for that? if not, could you create one? May 7, 2015 at 14:05
9

The problem is that when you use SVG as a background image Firefox chooses what size to render the vectors to, and then scales those image-based-pixels up as necessary. Here's a related bug: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=600207

The simplest fix here is not to use SVG as a background image, but to embed your SVG directly, or reference it via an <img> tag.

If you put up a working test case showing the problem and files then we can help you with actual code and fixes.

6

To make an SVG image scale to the size of its container, make sure your svg tag has a viewBox set:

<svg viewBox="0 0 347 189">

but no width or height attributes, i e not:

<svg width="347px" height="189px" viewBox="0 0 347 189">

This, by default, will retain its aspect ratio by scaling up to the largest width or height that fits, whichever dimension hits the boundary first.

You can change preserveAspectRatio strategy in all sorts of interesting ways, if that particular behaviour isn't the one you seek.

2
  • 1
    Works properly with background-size whereas the marked answer does not.
    – David Wick
    Sep 5, 2013 at 17:36
  • Works as expected in FF36. Mar 2, 2015 at 15:47
1

I've run into the exact same issue, myself. I was able to fix it in Firefox by editing the SVG in a text editor and changing the <svg> element's width attribute value to 100%, but leaving all other attribute values alone. In your particular example, here's the change to be made:

<svg version="1.1" 
    xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" 
    xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" 
    xmlns:a="http://ns.adobe.com/AdobeSVGViewerExtensions/3.0/" 
    x="0px"
    y="0px"
    width="100%"
    height="189px" 
    viewBox="0 0 347 189" 
    enable-background="new 0 0 347 189" 
    xml:space="preserve">

That did the trick for me and should do the same for you; I can't be 100% without a test case to work with, though.

NB: Setting both the width and the height to 100% broke Safari's rendering of the SVG in my particular case. Be sure to only set the width to 100%.

0

The easiest solution is to scale up the SVG in a vector image editor like Illustrator. Scale it to the rendered resolution in the browser (or higher). Since it is a vector, scaling it up won't affect the file size.

0

Another similar "gotcha" I found was when I exported an svg from illustrator the width and heights weren't round numbers - so when I opened the SVG in an editor the width was something like "100.6789px". By carefully editing the image in illustrator first to be round numbers and then using the same width and height for firefox it solved fuzzy images for me.

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