173

I have some CSS that on hover, a CSS transition effect will moves a div.

The problem, as you can see in the example, is that the translate transition has the horrible side effect of making the image in the div move by 1px down/right (and possibly resize ever so slightly?) so that it appears out of place and out of focus...

The glitch seems to apply the whole time the hover effect is applied, and from a process of trial and error I can safely say only seems to occur when the translate transition moves the div (box shadow and opacity are also applied but make no difference to the error when removed).

The problem only seems to happen when the page has scrollbars. So the example with just one instance of the div is fine, but once more identical divs are added and the page therefore requires a scrollbar the problem strikes again...

7
  • 1
    I'm on Chrome 27 on OSX, and it's fine. I believe that when the content gets put into a layer it gets turned into a bitmap during the animation, and that on older versions/older graphics cards this doesn't look great. Try a newer version and see if it's fixed. Mar 17, 2013 at 17:52
  • Everything fine on Chrome 25 OS X. BTW: I'd suggest a different approach for the background gradient texture than a 300KB image!
    – Paolo
    Mar 17, 2013 at 17:54
  • And thanks @Paolo - the background image was for the demonstration only, it's not the image in use on the actual site!
    – Lewis
    Mar 17, 2013 at 18:13
  • 2
    The problem arise when the animation is handled by the GPU, looks like the bitmap roundings are a little bit off. Is reproduced in Canary, but it works ok if you turn off GPU acceleration
    – vals
    Mar 17, 2013 at 22:34
  • You can try this solution each frame... stackoverflow.com/a/42256897/1834212
    – Miguel
    Feb 15, 2017 at 18:04

14 Answers 14

276

2020 update

  • If you have issues with blurry images, be sure to check answers from below as well, especially the image-rendering CSS property.
  • For best practice accessibility and SEO wise you could replace the background image with an <img> tag using object-fit CSS property.

Original answer

Try this in your CSS:

.your-class-name {
    /* ... */
    -webkit-backface-visibility: hidden;
    -webkit-transform: translateZ(0) scale(1, 1);
}

What this does is it makes the division to behave "more 2D".

  • Backface is drawn as a default to allow flipping things with rotate and such. There's no need to that if you only move left, right, up, down, scale or rotate (counter-)clockwise.
  • Translate Z-axis to always have a zero value.
  • Chrome now handles backface-visibility and transform without the -webkit- prefix. I currently don't know how this affects other browsers rendering (FF, IE), so use the non-prefixed versions with caution.
23
  • 29
    Might not have explained anything but it explained enough to fix this problem for me.
    – McNab
    Mar 28, 2013 at 23:07
  • @Class Stacker - what's to explain? You just copy paste the code to your problematic element. Btw this works very nice!
    – easwee
    Jul 2, 2013 at 12:28
  • 1
    i suggest this solution stackoverflow.com/a/42256897/1834212 im posting the link to avoid duplication
    – Miguel
    Feb 15, 2017 at 18:33
  • 1
    Can someone confirm if this still work, because whenever I add ` -webkit-backface-visibility` and -webkit-transform, I can't really see a change, and when I open chromes developer console. I see those 2 css properties are stroked through, as if they are overwritten, but they are not (empty css and html). It's as if chrome no longer accepts them.
    – Kevin M
    Mar 16, 2017 at 15:55
  • 1
    @KevinM try without the -webkit- prefixes, these are now standard CSS.
    – sampoh
    Mar 30, 2017 at 12:26
99

You need to apply 3d transform to the element, so it will get its own composite layer. For instance:

.element{
    -webkit-transform: translateZ(0);
    transform: translateZ(0);
}

or

.element{
    -webkit-transform: translate3d(0,0,0);
    transform: translate3d(0,0,0);
}

More about layer creation criteria you can read right here: Accelerated Rendering in Chrome


An explanation:

Examples (hover green box):

When you use any transition on your element it cause browser to recalculate styles, then re-layout your content even if transition property is visual (in my examples it is an opacity) and finaly paint an element:

screenshot

The issue here is re-layout of the content that can make an effect of "dancing" or "blinking" elements on the page while transition happens. If you will go to settings, check "Show composite layers" checkbox and then apply 3d transform to an element, you will see that it gets it's own layer which outlined with orange border.

screenshot

After element gets its own layer, browser just needs to composite layers on transition without re-layout or even paint operations so problem have to be solved:

screenshot

4
  • nice stuff! got a point cause of how detailed your answer was! which software you using for screen capturing / arrowing ?
    – kroe
    Dec 3, 2013 at 18:21
  • Spot on mate!! Saved me a lot of hassle there.
    – user1017882
    Mar 10, 2014 at 11:02
  • This did the trick for me. At first I was using translateZ on the parent that I was animating, but the background-image sprites within were still blurry. I am using Velocity.js to scale yet another container within it and applied something like translateZ: 0.000001 (some infinitesimal #) and voila! Sharp background-images once again!
    – notacouch
    Nov 6, 2015 at 16:27
  • Thanks mate. This worked on my problem. by the way, my problem is I have an element that is rotated 90degrees and has a fade-in transition using opacity. when triggering the transition the content of the element is moving 1px from left. Sep 12, 2016 at 16:11
49

Had the same problem with embeded youtube iframe (Translations were used for centering iframe element). None of the solutions above worked until tried reset css filters and magic happened.

Structure:

<div class="translate">
     <iframe/>
</div>

Style [before]

.translate {
  transform: translateX(-50%);
  -webkit-transform: translateX(-50%);
}

Style [after]

.translate {
  transform: translateX(-50%);
  -webkit-transform: translateX(-50%);
  filter: blur(0);
  -webkit-filter: blur(0);
}
4
  • 12
    filter: blur(0) did it for me!
    – Nick
    Sep 8, 2015 at 7:06
  • 3
    Unbelievable O_o WTF with the blur ? Why's it on by default? Jan 29, 2016 at 18:44
  • This was the solution for me too. The accepted answer could work for people that aren't using other "translate" functions in their transform properties, but it wasn't working for me. Feb 18, 2016 at 20:52
  • Shouldn't the -webkit- prefix come before? More Info Jan 12, 2017 at 17:28
36

I recommended an experimental new attribute CSS I tested on latest browser and it's good:

image-rendering: optimizeSpeed;             /*                     */
image-rendering: -moz-crisp-edges;          /* Firefox             */
image-rendering: -o-crisp-edges;            /* Opera               */
image-rendering: -webkit-optimize-contrast; /* Chrome (and Safari) */
image-rendering: optimize-contrast;         /* CSS3 Proposed       */
-ms-interpolation-mode: nearest-neighbor;   /* IE8+                */

With this the browser will know the algorithm for rendering

5
  • This fixed my blurry rotated images while backface-visibility, blur(0), translateZ did not work for me. Thank you. Sep 11, 2015 at 9:52
  • Fixed images in some use cases, made it horribly worse in some others :-) Interesting in any case! Nov 2, 2015 at 23:40
  • Digged in deeper: image-rendering: -webkit-optimize-contrast; solves the issue on Chrome. However, images on other browsers, e.g. Firefox, get rendered much, much worse with the rendering option set. Therefore, I only use the WebKit directive, which also works on the Blink engine. Thanks! Nov 2, 2015 at 23:51
  • In some cases it causes the images to be noticeably jaggy. Can't seem to find a sweet-spot in between the blurrier result and this one ~sigh~ Jan 8, 2016 at 22:26
  • It isn't optimizeSpeed anymore, but pixalated -> see on the mozilla website Feb 9, 2021 at 7:55
6

Just found another reason why an element goes blurry when being transformed. I was using transform: translate3d(-5.5px, -18px, 0); to re-position an element once it had been loaded in, however that element became blurry.

I tried all the suggestions above but it turned out that it was due to me using a decimal value for one of the translate values. Whole numbers don't cause the blur, and the further away I went from the whole number the worse the blur became.

i.e. 5.5px blurs the element the most, 5.1px the least.

Just thought I'd chuck this here in case it helps anybody.

1
  • Thanks, this was the issue in my case - I was using translateY(-50%) which must have been evaluating to a decimal pixel value.
    – b4tch
    Feb 14, 2018 at 17:33
5

I cheated problem using transition by steps, not smoothly

transition-timing-function: steps(10, end);

It is not a solving, it is a cheating and can not be applied everywhere.

I can't explain it, but it works for me. None of another answers helps me (OSX, Chrome 63, Non-Retina display).

https://jsfiddle.net/tuzae6a9/6/

1
  • 1
    In your fiddle is shaking like Parkinson's, but in my case worked. Feb 3, 2018 at 13:05
2

Scaling to double and bringing down to half with zoom worked for me.

transform: scale(2);
zoom: 0.5;
1
  • this does seem to work in chrome for images. unfortunately it also modifies any html you put it around too. May 2, 2019 at 18:36
2

Try filter: blur(0);

It worked for me

1
  • Worked for me too, Chrome 63, 64, and Vivaldi 1.13
    – GTCrais
    Jan 27, 2018 at 13:11
2

I've tried around 10 possibly solutions. Mixed them up and they still didn't work correctly. There was always 1px shake at the end.

I find solution by reducing transition time on filter.

This didn't work:

.elem {
  filter: blur(0);
  transition: filter 1.2s ease;
}
.elem:hover {
  filter: blur(7px);
}

Solution:

.elem {
  filter: blur(0);
  transition: filter .7s ease;
}
.elem:hover {
  filter: blur(7px);
}

Try this in fiddle:

.blur {
  border: none;
  outline: none;
  width: 100px; height: 100px;
  background: #f0f;
  margin: 30px;
  -webkit-filter: blur(10px);
  transition: all .7s ease-out;
  /* transition: all .2s ease-out; */
}
.blur:hover {
  -webkit-filter: blur(0);
}

.blur2 {
  border: none;
  outline: none;
  width: 100px; height: 100px;
  background: tomato;
  margin: 30px;
  -webkit-filter: blur(10px);
  transition: all .2s ease-out;
}
.blur2:hover {
  -webkit-filter: blur(0);
}
<div class="blur"></div>

<div class="blur2"></div>

I hope this helps someone.

2

For me, now in 2018. The only thing that fixed my problem (a white glitchy-flicker line running through an image on hover) was applying this to my link element holding the image element that has transform: scale(1.05)

a {
   -webkit-backface-visibility: hidden;
   backface-visibility: hidden;
   -webkit-transform: translateZ(0) scale(1.0, 1.0);
   transform: translateZ(0) scale(1.0, 1.0);
   -webkit-filter: blur(0);
   filter: blur(0);
}
a > .imageElement {
   transition: transform 3s ease-in-out;
}
1
  • Yes! 'blur(0)' fixes it for me in Chrome. Makes the image very slightly blurry on resize though but is less noticeable than the jump / resize
    – 00-BBB
    May 16, 2019 at 13:34
2

None of this worked, what worked for me is scaling image down.

So depending on what size you want the image or what resoultion your image is, you can do something like this:

.ok {
      transform: perspective(100px) rotateY(0deg) scale(0.5);
      transition: transform 1s;
      object-fit:contain;
}
.ok:hover{
      transform: perspective(100px) rotateY(-10deg) scale(0.5);
}

/* Demo Preview Stuff */
.bad {
   max-width: 320px;
   object-fit:contain;
   transform: perspective(100px) rotateY(0deg);
   transition: transform 1s;
}
.bad:hover{
      transform: perspective(100px) rotateY(-10deg);
}

div {
     text-align: center;
     position: relative;
     display: flex;
}
h3{
    position: absolute;
    bottom: 30px;
    left: 0;
    right: 0;
}
     
.b {
    display: flex;
}
<center>
<h2>Hover on images</h2>
<div class="b">
<div>
  <img class="ok" src='https://www.howtogeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/preview-11.png'>
  <h3>Sharp</h3>
</div>

<div>
  <img class="bad" src='https://www.howtogeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/preview-11.png'>
  <h3>Blurry</h3>
</div>

</div>

</center>

The image should be scaled down, make sure you have a big image resoultion

1

I had a similar problem with blurry text but only the succeeding div was affected. For some reason the next div after the one that I was doing the transform in was blurry.

I tried everything that is recommended in this thread but nothing worked. For me rearranging my divs worked. I moved the div that blurres the following div to the end of parents div.

If someone know why just let me know.

#before
<header class="container">
      <div class="transformed div">
          <span class="transform wrapper">
            <span class="transformed"></span>
            <span class="transformed"></span>
          </span>
       </div>
       <div class="affected div">
       </div>
     </header>

#after
<header class="container">
   <div class="affected div">
   </div>
  <div class="transformed div">
      <span class="transform wrapper">
        <span class="transformed"></span>
        <span class="transformed"></span>
      </span>
   </div>

 </header>
0
filter: blur(0)
transition: filter .3s ease-out
transition-timing-function: steps(3, end) // add this string with steps equal duration

I was helped by setting the value of transition duration .3s equal transition timing steps .3s

0

The blurring occurred for me in Chrome only (Windows and Mac) when animating 'transform' in a keyframe animation. For me, the -webkit-optimize-contrast setting only partially helped. For best results I also had to use a "magic value" for scaleX (slightly larger than 1 instead of 1).

Here's the code that worked:

img {
  image-rendering: -webkit-optimize-contrast;
}

@keyframes scale-in-left {
  0% {
    transform: scaleX(0);
    opacity: 0;
  }
  100% {
    transform: scaleX(1.000001);
    opacity: 1;
  }
}

Here's the code that didn't work (caused blurry images in Chrome):

@keyframes scale-in-left {
  0% {
    transform: scaleX(0);
    opacity: 0;
  }
  100% {
    transform: scaleX(1);
    opacity: 1;
  }
}

In the end, the "working" code removed most of the blurring, but not all of it. Safari and Firefox were still clearer without any special settings.

Note also that just resizing the browser window cleared up the unwanted blurring, suggesting perhaps that something is causing Chrome to fail to execute a final render pass (?).

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