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Given an image, I need to create an animation of the image being distorted as though it's a flag waving in the wind, using javascript and an html5 canvas.

Bonus: I also would like to be able to export this animation as a png.

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  • You do realize that only two browsers actually support animated PNGs?
    – Eli Grey
    Dec 6, 2010 at 3:15

1 Answer 1

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I've created a simple example of a flag waving in the wind. It's ugly because I draw the flag to fill the canvas (instead of leaving padding for the flag to wave into) and because I don't make any attempt at anti-aliasing. I also didn't make any attempt to provide 3D shading, which would help the effect.

I can get 64fps with a 320px wide flag in Chrome v8 on my machine. If you want to test the speed yourself, change the fps on line 59 to 1000 and uncomment lines 63 and 82; it will then output fps information every 100 frames to the console.

This won't work in IE8-, even with ExCanvas, because there is no mechanism to access individual pixel data there.

Edit: Just for fun, I've updated the sample to shade the ripples as they go through the image.

Edit2: For more fun, I added padding to the flag drawing (no more clipping) and I added a 'squeeze' factor that lets you make the right side of the flag bigger or smaller than the original (for perspective). Since it slows down the performance a little I've uploaded it as a separate sample.

                      US Flag waving in the wind (static screenshot)

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    Finally, here's one final sample showing how to use this with an image you load yourself (from the same domain) instead of a drawn flag.
    – Phrogz
    Dec 6, 2010 at 22:05
  • +1 for the demo. :) I take back my answer then. (Your first "simple example" doesn't work for some reason, the other two are fine though.)
    – casablanca
    Dec 7, 2010 at 0:35
  • Brilliant! Thank you! I knew a great mind would tackle this problem! Now if only there was a simple way to save this animation, base64 encoded image or something along those lines might do the trick... =)
    – Andres
    Dec 7, 2010 at 4:26
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    @Andres You can save an HTML canvas as a base64 encoded PNG, but that would be one data url per frame, not as an animation.
    – Phrogz
    Dec 7, 2010 at 4:34
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    Well, you could easily use the data URLs as a series of PNGs loaded (locally), one replacing the next using setInterval, to recreate the animation. As Eli noted, support for MNG is (sadly) very sparse, so even if you had created one it probably would not have helped you.
    – Phrogz
    Dec 11, 2010 at 3:59

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