I'm trying to replicate a button style in a Photoshop mock-up that has two shadows on it. The first shadow is an inner lighter box shadow (2px), and the second is a drop shadow outside the button (5px) itself.

http://i.stack.imgur.com/1i0Fe.png

In Photoshop this is easy - Inner Shadow and Drop Shadow. In CSS I can apparently have one or the other, but not both at the same time.

If you try the code below in a browser, you'll see that the box-shadow overrides the inset box-shadow.

Here's the inset box shadow:

box-shadow: inset 0 2px 0px #dcffa6;

And this is what I would like for the drop shadow on the button:

box-shadow: 0 2px 5px #000;

For context, here's my full button code (with gradients and all):

button {
outline: none;
position: relative;
width: 160px;
height: 40px;
font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif;
color: #fff;
font-weight: 800;
font-size: 12px;
text-shadow: 0px 1px 3px black; 
border-radius: 3px;
background-color: #669900;
background: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, from(#97cb52), to(#669900));
background: -moz-linear-gradient(top,  #97cb52,  #669900);
filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(startColorstr='#97cb52', endColorstr='#669900');
box-shadow: inset 0 2px 0px #dcffa6;
box-shadow: 0 2px 5px #000;
border: 1px solid #222;
cursor: pointer;

}

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2 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

You can comma-separate shadows:

box-shadow: inset 0 2px 0px #dcffa6,  0 2px 5px #000;
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Legend, thankyou! That was nice and easy. – Benjamin Humphrey Dec 19 '11 at 2:47
You're welcome; glad to have helped! =) – David Thomas Dec 19 '11 at 2:50
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Box shadows can use commas to have multiple effects, just like with background images (in CSS3).

EDIT: doh, skimmed that to fast. Giving a second answer soon (or deleting this one).

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What did you miss, that requires an edit? O.o – David Thomas Dec 19 '11 at 2:48
While you can apply multiple shadows, applying inset shadows, I've found, is a special case. (But then that case only applied to images, I guess). – JayC Dec 19 '11 at 3:00
Really? I'm on mobile at the moment so I can't check; but I'd not heard that reported before...I'll look into that, tomorrow, after work. =/ – David Thomas Dec 19 '11 at 3:04
If you want an inset shadow on an image you have to set an element or pseudoelement on top. It can be tricky. – JayC Dec 19 '11 at 3:21
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