Partly for funsies, and partly for a design idea I had, I'm trying to convert an animated gif into pure animated CSS.
It's very nearly working but I've hit a snag and am unsure what is causing my issue, or how I could fix it. I have an unfortunate suspicion that I've simply hit a limitation of the technology.
The gif I've been using for testing is this: https://us.v-cdn.net/5018289/uploads/editor/yj/lcdjneh1yoxv.gif
As for the actual CSS, I've been trying to implement the method here (animated box-shadow properties), as it seemed like the most feasible: https://codepen.io/andrewarchi/pen/OXEEgL
#ash::after {
animation: ash-frames 0.4s steps(1) infinite;
}
@keyframes ash-frames {
0% {box-shadow: 32px 8px #181818, 40px 8px #181818,...}
...
}
The animation seems fairly seamless in the given example, so I figured it was worth a try. Obvious differences: the gif I'm using has more frames and more pixels.
And just as a quick overview, my CSS (I am using vendor tags etc, this is just an example):
.pixel-art-3940::after {
animation: pixel-art-3940-frames 1s steps(5, end) infinite;
}
@keyframes pixel-art-3940-frames {
0% {box-shadow: 112px 68px rgba(77, 69, 64, 1),...}
16.666666666666668% {box-shadow:115px 65px rgba(77, 69, 64, 1),...}
...
}
The animation does seem to be actually working, however there's an intense 'flickering' effect on the animation. See below:
I've tried the usual solutions to 'flickering transitions' in Chrome - such as setting -webkit-backface-visibility
to hidden
- but so far nothing has solved the issue.
As I said, I fear I've simply hit a limitation of the technology itself. Any ideas what the problem might be, and whether I can solve it?
EDIT: The full source code of this particular animation can be found in these two Gists. I opted for Gists because of the size of the CSS file.