I'm using context-blender to apply a multiply effect on the first 192 pixels of the html background-image with a fixed color to achieve a transparency effect on the header of the page.
On the html I have 2 canvas. One for the part of the image to apply the multiply effect and one for the color.
On the javascript, after setting the color of the color-canvas and the width of both canvas to the window.innerWidth I'm getting the background image with:
imageObj.src = $('html').css('background-image').replace(/^url|[\(\)]/g, '');
Now comes the problem. I want to draw a cropped image to the image to the image-canvas so I can apply the multiply effect. I'm trying to do the following:
imageObj.onload = function(){
// getting the background-image height
var imageHeight = window.innerWidth * imageObj.height / imageObj.width;
// get the corresponding pixels of the source image that correspond to the first 192 pixels of the background-image
var croppedHeight = 192 * imageObj.height / imageHeight;
// draw the image to the canvas
imageCanvas.drawImage(imageObj, 0, 0, imageObj.width, croppedHeight, 0, 0, window.innerWidth, 192);
// apply the multiply effect
colorCanvas.blendOnto( imageCanvas, 'multiply');
}
But I'm doing something wrong getting the cropped height.
Ex: For an 1536x1152 image and a 1293x679 browser container, the value I'm getting for the source cropped height is 230 but to get the correct crop I need to use something around 296.
Edit:
I'm using background-size: cover on the css to create the background-image
Edit2:
I created a fiddle to illustrate the problem. If you uncomment the line //cHeight *= magicConstant; the cropped image looks a lot better but things stop making sense. I removed the multiply effect on the fiddler but that's not required to reproduce the problem. I also noticed that the behavior changed if I remove the second canvas from the URL.
Btw, this behavior happened with google chrome, but I think the same thing happens on safari and firefox.
