CSS Gradient is a designstripe project that lets you create free gradient backgrounds for your website. Besides being a css gradient generator, the site is also chock-full of colorful content about gradients from technical articles to real life gradient examples like Stripe and Instagram.

Also, I'm part of a group of makers with a mission to build a better internet, one digital project at a time. One of our recent project launches is Cool Backgrounds another free design tool to generate background wallpaper for websites, blogs and phones.


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What's the foundation for beautiful gradients? Gorgeous shades of color, of course! Our color shades pages curate a selection of popular colors, whether you're looking for that wonderful soft baby blue or hyper lime green, check out the shades pages.

Interested in learing how to use blended colors? Our blog exposes the details of everything gradients and even has some in-depth references for you to look at as you learn how to code these elements yourself. Browse through our references, tutorials, and articles for more information all about gradients.

Gradients are CSS elements of the image data type that show a transition between two or more colors. These transitions are shown as either linear or radial. Because they are of the image data type, gradients can be used anywhere an image might be. The most popular use for gradients would be in a background element.

If you leave the code at its most basic styling, the other elements will be determined automatically by the browser. This includes the direction or angle and color-stop positions. For more customized styling, you can specify these values to create fun gradients with multiple colors or angled directions. Playing with color-stop positions could also leave you with a solid pattern instead of a traditional gradient. The possibilities are endless!

Compared to radial gradients, linear gradients are certainly more popular in design and branding techniques. For example, you may have noticed the popular music-streaming company, Spotify, and their gradient branding recently. Linear gradients are, perhaps, the easiest way to incorporate this trend into your creations, as they seem to blend smoothly with other design elements.

To create a linear gradient you must define at least two color stops. Color stops are the colors you want to render smooth transitions among. You can also set a starting point and a direction (or an angle) along with the gradient effect.

If you want more control over the direction of the gradient, you can define an angle, instead of the predefined directions (to bottom, to top, to right, to left, to bottom right, etc.). A value of 0deg is equivalent to "to top". A value of 90deg is equivalent to "to right". A value of 180deg is equivalent to "to bottom".

The linear-gradient() CSS function creates an image consisting of a progressive transition between two or more colors along a straight line. Its result is an object of the data type, which is a special kind of .

The position of the gradient line's starting point. If specified, it consists of the word to and up to two keywords: one indicates the horizontal side (left or right), and the other the vertical side (top or bottom). The order of the side keywords does not matter. If unspecified, it defaults to to bottom.

An interpolation hint defining how the gradient progresses between adjacent color stops. The length defines at which point between two color stops the gradient color should reach the midpoint of the color transition. If omitted, the midpoint of the color transition is the midpoint between two color stops.

As with any gradient, a linear gradient has no intrinsic dimensions; i.e., it has no natural or preferred size, nor a preferred ratio. Its concrete size will match the size of the element it applies to.

The gradient line is defined by the center of the box containing the gradient image and by an angle. The colors of the gradient are determined by two or more points: the starting point, the ending point, and, in between, optional color-stop points.

The starting point is the location on the gradient line where the first color begins. The ending point is the point where the last color ends. Each of these two points is defined by the intersection of the gradient line with a perpendicular line passing from the box corner which is in the same quadrant. The ending point can be understood as the symmetrical point of the starting point. These somewhat complex definitions lead to an interesting effect sometimes called magic corners: the corners nearest to the starting and ending points have the same color as their respective starting or ending points.

By adding more color-stop points on the gradient line, you can create a highly customized transition between multiple colors. A color-stop's position can be explicitly defined by using a or a . If you don't specify the location of a color, it is placed halfway between the one that precedes it and the one that follows it. The following two gradients are equivalent.

Color-stops should be listed in ascending order. Subsequent color-stops of lower value will override the value of the previous color-stop creating a hard transition. The following changes from red to yellow at the 40% mark, and then transitions from yellow to blue over 25% of the gradient:

I am having issues with using the gradient background options in the advanced area of the section options. Nothing is exactly explained about how these advanced options work, and the documentation is old and refers to the pre version 26 muffin builder and really needs updated.

Now, in the advanced background section, there are TWO areas that both say "Background Type." The first has options for images/solid color, a video, and gradient, with apparent options for changes to the background based on hover over. The second part right below this has just the Background Type options of image/color and gradient. It doesn't matter what combination of background color (or transparent) with gradient info added to one section over the other or both gradient sections with the same info, it does not work. If there is no color background it's transparent. If I add a solid color, the gradient doesn't show up anyway.

I'm sorry I wasn't more clear, I prefer the BeBuilder Blocks, and in using that I coluld not get the gradients to work. In the builder blocks there are two places for color to go, and it seems that both sections need to have the same color settings for it to work; although not the same color location or angle settings for some reason.

This is such a loss of functionality, as it worked in Ax8! In order to apply a gradient to the full width of the window, I now have to add a rectangle and set it to [[window.width]] on both page load and page resize. In previous versions, I would just apply the gradient to the panel, and set it to 100% wide. Axure, please rethink this!!

By default, Tailwind makes the entire default color palette available as gradient colors. You can customize your color palette by editing theme.colors or theme.extend.colors in your tailwind.config.js file.

I have been trying to get a gradient background on one of my landing pages. I am new to the whole coding, CSS, HTML, JS ordeal. I have looked high and low for just a simple walk through on how to do so. The only thing is, it has to have all the steps (minus the extra "notes" in the code) from the beginning to the end. Most of the examples i have seen have multiple steps that need to be done but never go into detail of how to do it... help? ff782bc1db

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