Creating a DIV that uses CSS to draw a triangle to the left. Trying to apply a uniform box-shadow to both parent and the pseudo element (see images) and code.

Is this possible? Or am I better off using border-image for this?

(Top: Before Shadow, Middle: CSS Box-Shadow, Bottom: Desired Result)

Elements Before Box-Shadow is added

Elements with box-shadow added

The desired result

.bubble{
    height: 200px;
    width:  275px;

    opacity: 0;

    margin-top: 41px;

    float: right;

    background-color: #F2F2F2;

    -webkit-border-radius: 5px;
    -webkit-box-shadow: 0px 0px 6px #B2B2B2;
}

.bubble::after {
        height: 0px;
        width:  0px;

        content: "\00a0";

        display: block;

        margin-left: -10px;
        margin-top:   28px;

        border-width: 10px 10px 10px 0;
        border-style: solid;
        border-color: transparent #F2F2F2 transparent transparent;

        -webkit-box-shadow: 0px 0px 6px #B2B2B2;
    }
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2 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

Instead of using a triangle hack, you can just rotate a div using transform and get a real box-shadow. Since you only want the shadow on one side of the div (the visible triangle side), you have to make the blur smaller and lower the opacity.

Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/ThinkingStiff/mek5Z/

HTML:

<div class="bubble"></div>

CSS:

.bubble{
    background-color: #F2F2F2;
    border-radius: 5px;
    box-shadow: 0px 0px 6px #B2B2B2;
    height: 200px;
    margin: 20px;
    width:  275px;
}

.bubble::after {
    background-color: #F2F2F2;
    box-shadow: -2px 2px 2px 0 rgba( 178, 178, 178, .4 );
    content: "\00a0";
    display: block;
    height: 20px;
    left: -10px;
    position: relative;
    top: 20px;
    transform: rotate( 45deg );
    width:  20px;
}

Output:

enter image description here

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1  
Love this "hack"! It worked great. Thanks ThinkingStiff. Definitely adding this to my toolbox. ;-) – Lord Varlin Jan 15 at 5:56
@LordVarlin I recently used it for an iPhone back button so I didn't have to use an image. For even more fun you can use transform: skew(); to change the angle of the triangle. – ThinkingStiff Jan 15 at 6:02
in love, great stuff!! – Lord Varlin Jan 15 at 6:23
3  
Amazing solution. – tuze Jan 15 at 11:42
1  
Really awesome jsfiddle page with our logo and link back here! – Jarrod Dixon Feb 2 at 6:12
feedback

I know It's a little bit tricky but, seems nice to me. Here is the fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/dzfj6/

HTML

<div class="bubble">
    <div class="triangle"></div>
    <div class="border"></div>
    <div class="content">some content</div>
</div>

CSS

.bubble
{
    height: 200px;
    width:  275px;
    float:right;
    margin-top: 41px;
    margin-left:11px;
    background-color: #f2f2f2;
    -webkit-border-radius: 5px;
    -webkit-box-shadow: 0px 0px 5px #b2b2b2;
    position:relative;
    z-index:1;
}

.triangle
{
   position:absolute;
   top:12px;
   width: 0;
   height: 0;
   border-top: 15px solid transparent;
   border-bottom: 15px solid transparent;
   border-right: 10px solid #f2f2f2;
   margin-left:-9px;
   z-index:3;
}
.border
{        
   position:absolute;
   top:12px;
   width: 0;
   height: 0;
   border-top: 15px solid transparent;
   border-bottom: 15px solid transparent;
   border-right: 10px solid #e0e0e0;
   margin-left:-10px;
   z-index:2;
}

.content{
   padding:10px;
}

Instead of box-shadow, you can simply use border for buble.

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