Filters

Say you need to build an element that's got a slightly opaque, frosted glass effect that sits over the top of an image. The text needs to be live text and not an image. How do you do that?

A combination of CSS filters and the backdrop-filter allow us to apply effects and blur what's needed in real time. Blur and opacity are two of many available filters, so let's have a quick run through what they all do and how to use them.

The filter property

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 53.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 9.1.

Source

You can apply one or many of the following filters as a value for filter. If you incorrectly apply a filter, the rest of the filters defined for filter will not work.

blur

This applies a gaussian blur and the only argument you can pass is a radius, which is how much blur is applied. This needs to be a length unit, like 10px. Percentages are not accepted.

.my-element {
    filter: blur(0.2em);
}

brightness

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

To increase or decrease the brightness of an element, use the brightness function. The brightness value is expressed as a percentage with the unchanged image being expressed as a value of 100%. A value of 0% turns the image completely black, therefore values between 0% and 100% make the image less bright. Use values over 100% to increase the brightness.

.my-element {
    filter: brightness(80%);
}

contrast

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

Set a value between 0% and 100% to decrease or increase the contrast, respectively.

.my-element {
    filter: contrast(160%);
}

grayscale

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

You can apply a completely grayscale effect by using 1 as a value for grayscale(), or 0 to have a completely saturated element. You can also use percentage or decimal values to only apply a partial grayscale effect. If you pass no arguments, the element will be completely grayscale. If you pass a value greater than 100%, it will be capped at 100%.

.my-element {
    filter: grayscale(80%);
}

invert

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

Just like grayscale, you can pass 1 or 0 to the invert() function to turn it on or off. When it is on, the element's colors are completely inverted. You can also use percentage or decimal values to only apply a partial inversion of colors. If you don't pass any arguments into the invert() function, the element will be completely inverted.

.my-element {
    filter: invert(1);
}

opacity

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

The opacity() filter works just like the opacity property, where you can pass a number or percentage to increase or reduce opacity. If you pass no arguments, the element is fully visible.

.my-element {
    filter: opacity(0.3);
}

saturate

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

The saturate filter is very similar to the brightness filter and accepts the same argument: number or percentage. Instead of increasing or decreasing the brightness effect, saturate increases or decreases color saturation.

.my-element {
    filter: saturate(155%);
}

sepia

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

You can add a sepia tone effect with this filter that works like grayscale(). The sepia tone is a photographic printing technique that converts black tones to brown tones to warm them up. You can pass a number or percentage as the argument for sepia() which increases or decreases the effect. Passing no arguments adds a full sepia effect (equivalent to sepia(100%)).

.my-element {
    filter: sepia(70%);
}

hue-rotate

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

You learned about how the hue in hsl references a rotation of the color wheel in the colors lesson and this filter works in a similar way. If you pass an angle, such as degrees or turns, it shifts the hue of all the element's colors, changing the part of the color wheel it references. If you pass no argument, it does nothing.

.my-element {
    filter: hue-rotate(120deg);
}

drop-shadow

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 18.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 35.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

You can apply a curve-hugging drop shadow like you would in a design tool, such as Photoshop with drop-shadow. This shadow is applied to an alpha mask which makes it very useful for adding a shadow to a cutout image. The drop-shadow filter takes a shadow parameter which contains space separated offset-x, offset-y, blur and color values. It is almost identical to box-shadow, but the inset keyword and spread value are not supported.

.my-element {
    filter: drop-shadow(5px 5px 10px orange);
}

Learn more about the different types of shadows in the shadows module.

url

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 5.
  • Edge: 12.
  • Firefox: 3.
  • Safari: 6.

Source

The url filter allows you to apply an SVG filter from a linked SVG element or file. You can read more about SVG filters here

Backdrop filter

Browser Support

  • Chrome: 76.
  • Edge: 79.
  • Firefox: 103.
  • Safari: 18.

Source

The backdrop-filter property accepts all of the same filter function values as filter. The difference between backdrop-filter and filter is that the backdrop-filter property only applies the filters to the background, where the filter property applies it to the whole element.

The example right at the start of this lesson is the perfect example, because you don't want the text to be blurred and ideally you don't want to have to add extra HTML elements. Being able to apply filters only to the backdrop enables that.

Check your understanding

Test your knowledge of filters

Which of following are CSS filter functions?

multiply()
grayscale()
invert()
brightness()
flip()
blur()

Can CSS use SVG filters?

Yes
No