I like to think of CSS as a love language. If written well, it can be as lovely as poetry. There are rules, semantics and, like love itself, it can be communicated in many ways. Consider the variety of options we have to write black
in CSS:
#000000
#000
rgb(0, 0, 0)
hsla(360, 100%, 0%, 1)
black
In the spirit of Valentine’s Day, I thought it would be fun to push this concept a little further with the many ways we can make hearts in HTML & CSS.
A Plain ol’ Background Image
We can call an image of a heart and set it as the background of an element.
.heart {
background-image: url("heart.png");
background-size: 100%;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
}
See the Pen I Heart You – Background Image by CSS-Tricks (@css-tricks) on CodePen.
HTML & ASCII Symbols
That’s right. We can let the web do the drawing for us.
.heart {
content: '♥';
}
See the Pen I Heart You – ASCII by CSS-Tricks (@css-tricks) on CodePen.
CSS Shape
Hearts are complicated in real life but they’re just two circles and a rotated square in CSS:
We can draw that with a single element, thanks to the ::before
and ::after
pseudo elements.
.heart {
background-color: red;
display: inline-block;
height: 30px;
margin: 0 10px;
position: relative;
top: 0;
transform: rotate(-45deg);
width: 30px;
}
.heart:before,
.heart:after {
content: "";
background-color: red;
border-radius: 50%;
height: 30px;
position: absolute;
width: 30px;
}
.heart:before {
top: -15px;
left: 0;
}
.heart:after {
left: 15px;
top: 0;
}
See the Pen I Heart You – CSS Shape by CSS-Tricks (@css-tricks) on CodePen.
Icon Font
Icon fonts got pummeled in a cage match with inline SVG, but they still do the trick here. We would need our heart icon in various font file formats and apply it using @font-face
, but we’ll use the We Love Icon Fonts site to generate that for us.
@import url(http://weloveiconfonts.com/api/?family=entypo);
[class*="entypo-"]:before {
font-family: 'entypo', sans-serif;
color: red;
}
See the Pen I Heart You – Icon Font by CSS-Tricks (@css-tricks) on CodePen.
Inline SVG
OK, well, this isn’t exactly CSS but we love SVG around here at CSS-Tricks.
I
<svg class="heart" viewBox="0 0 32 29.6">
<path d="M23.6,0c-3.4,0-6.3,2.7-7.6,5.6C14.7,2.7,11.8,0,8.4,0C3.8,0,0,3.8,0,8.4c0,9.4,9.5,11.9,16,21.2
c6.1-9.3,16-12.1,16-21.2C32,3.8,28.2,0,23.6,0z"/>
</svg>
You
Let’s add a pulse animation just as an excuse to sprinkle in some CSS.
.heart {
fill: red;
position: relative;
top: 5px;
width: 50px;
animation: pulse 1s ease infinite;
}
@keyframes pulse {
0% { transform: scale(1); }
50% { transform: scale(1.3); }
100% { transform: scale(1); }
}
See the Pen I Heart You – SVG by CSS-Tricks (@css-tricks) on CodePen.
Share the Love
There are undoubtedly more ways we can go about this. Share your Pens in the comments and we’ll add them to the collection.
And, of course, happy (slightly late) Valentine’s Day!
Cf. https://archive.google.com/heart/ :)
What, no radial and linear gradient tricks? Come on, it’s hard but feasible
Emojis get stripped in the comments? :( Sad
just surprised at usage of :after n :before here . Thumbs up :)
LOL great V-day article!
If I wanted to make a spinning wheel for http://carssimplified.com/ , is there any gear element that I could rotate on top of a circle to give the effect of a spinning wheel, or would I have to build something really complex with rotating rectangles stacked on a circle?
Hey Kelli, good question. I’d likely start with SVG for something like this and animate the paths that need to spin. Icomoon is a good place to start for basic SVG shapes.
What about dashed border and transform rotate ?
Depending on the needs on the same element or before/after?
So I was talking about gradients and here’s my attempt to use them :)
http://codepen.io/MaxArt2501/pen/yerNRw
Now THIS is impressive.
Heck yeah, that’s awesome!
Just to be clear, this is just a proof of concept. Background gradients are quite terrible when it comes to rounding and aliasing and such, especially in Webkit/Blink where they’re flat-out awful.
You can even spot a missing dot or two in the middle of the heart, or a whole line in the middle, even if the math behind the composition is fine.
Firefox is the client that does gradients the best, but still it’s not perfect.
Some Zelda hearts for the collection: http://codepen.io/edmundojr/pen/raZgdw
Happy Valentine’s Day!
I love inline SVG..thx a lot <3
Hi,
Nice post !
I made my own css heart in December based on the Twitter’s one and wrote this down in a post to explain how : https://medium.com/@OxyDesign/twitter-s-heart-animation-in-full-css-b1c00ca5b774
And the codepen is there http://codepen.io/OxyDesign/pen/avXVbo
Feel free to add it if it’s of interest
Thanks
Nicolas
Nice!
I saw the CSS shape illustration in feedly and ran right out to make my own heart before even reading the article! Lots of fun stuff. I’ll have to play around with some other techniques :)
http://codepen.io/Rykus0/pen/xZejNm
I like your square element with pseudo circle elements to make a heart but i think it could look slightly better using a rectangle with border radius on 2 corners and an ::after element with the same but rotated.
Here’s a code demo:
http://codepen.io/mikeellisnz/pen/QyRNwg
Gives it more of a pronounced heart shape.
Is this sample some possibility of read as “I you”?
this is wrong -> animation: pulse 1s ease infinite,
It should end with ; NOT a comma
John Gietze wrote in with some keyframes to make the Sinus rhythm in CSS!