The <blend-mode>
CSS data type describes how colors should appear when elements overlap. It is used in the <background-blend-mode>
and <mix-blend-mode>
properties.
Syntax
The <blend-mode>
data type is defined using a keyword value chosen from the list below.
Values
normal
-
The final color is the top color, regardless of what the bottom color is. The effect is like two opaque pieces of paper overlapping.
multiply
-
The final color is the result of multiplying the top and bottom colors. A black layer leads to a black final layer, and a white layer leads to no change. The effect is like two images printed on transparent film overlapping.
screen
-
The final color is the result of inverting the colors, multiplying them, and inverting that value. A black layer leads to no change, and a white layer leads to a white final layer. The effect is like two images shone onto a projection screen.
overlay
-
The final color is the result of
multiply
if the bottom color is darker, orscreen
if the bottom color is lighter. This blend mode is equivalent tohard-light
but with the layers swapped. darken
-
The final color is composed of the darkest values of each color channel.
lighten
-
The final color is composed of the lightest values of each color channel.
color-dodge
-
The final color is the result of dividing the bottom color by the inverse of the top color. A black foreground leads to no change. A foreground with the inverse color of the backdrop leads to a fully lit color. This blend mode is similar to
screen
, but the foreground need only be as light as the inverse of the backdrop to create a fully lit color. color-burn
-
The final color is the result of inverting the bottom color, dividing the value by the top color, and inverting that value. A white foreground leads to no change. A foreground with the inverse color of the backdrop leads to a black final image. This blend mode is similar to
multiply
, but the foreground need only be as dark as the inverse of the backdrop to make the final image black. hard-light
-
The final color is the result of
multiply
if the top color is darker, orscreen
if the top color is lighter. This blend mode is equivalent tooverlay
but with the layers swapped. The effect is similar to shining a harsh spotlight on the backdrop. soft-light
-
The final color is similar to
hard-light
, but softer. This blend mode behaves similar tohard-light
. The effect is similar to shining a diffused spotlight on the backdrop*.* difference
-
The final color is the result of subtracting the darker of the two colors from the lighter one. A black layer has no effect, while a white layer inverts the other layer's color.
exclusion
-
The final color is similar to
difference
, but with less contrast. As withdifference
, a black layer has no effect, while a white layer inverts the other layer's color. hue
-
The final color has the hue of the top color, while using the saturation and luminosity of the bottom color.
saturation
-
The final color has the saturation of the top color, while using the hue and luminosity of the bottom color. A pure gray backdrop, having no saturation, will have no effect.
color
-
The final color has the hue and saturation of the top color, while using the luminosity of the bottom color. The effect preserves gray levels and can be used to colorize the foreground.
luminosity
-
The final color has the luminosity of the top color, while using the hue and saturation of the bottom color. This blend mode is equivalent to
color
, but with the layers swapped.
Description
For each pixel among the layers to which it is applied, a blend mode takes the colors of the foreground and the background, performs a calculation on them, and returns a new color value.
Changes between blend modes are not interpolated. Any change occurs immediately.
Examples
Example using "normal"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: normal; }
Example using "multiply"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: multiply; }
Example using "screen"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: screen; }
Example using "overlay"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: overlay; }
Example using "darken"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: darken; }
Example using "lighten"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: lighten; }
Example using "color-dodge"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: color-dodge; }
Example using "color-burn"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: color-burn; }
Example using "hard-light"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: hard-light; }
Example using "soft-light"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: soft-light; }
Example using "difference"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: difference; }
Example using "exclusion"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: exclusion; }
Example using "hue"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: hue; }
Example using "saturation"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: saturation; }
Example using "color"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: color; }
Example using "luminosity"
#div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url("br.png"), url("tr.png"); background-blend-mode: luminosity; }
Blend mode comparison
In the following example, we have a <div>
with two background images set on it — a Firefox logo on top of a linear gradient. Below it, we have a provided a <select>
menu that allows you to change the background-blend-mode
applied to the <div>
, allowing you to compare the different blend mode effects.
HTML
<div></div> <p>Choose a blend-mode:</p> <select> <option selected>normal</option> <option>multiply</option> <option>screen</option> <option>overlay</option> <option>darken</option> <option>lighten</option> <option>color-dodge</option> <option>color-burn</option> <option>hard-light</option> <option>soft-light</option> <option>difference</option> <option>exclusion</option> <option>hue</option> <option>saturation</option> <option>color</option> <option>luminosity</option> </select>
CSS
div { width: 300px; height: 300px; background: url(https://mdn.dev/archives/media/attachments/2020/07/29/17350/3b4892b7e820122ac6dd7678891d4507/firefox.png) no-repeat center, linear-gradient(to bottom, blue, orange); }
JavaScript
const selectElem = document.querySelector("select"); const divElem = document.querySelector("div"); selectElem.addEventListener("change", () => { divElem.style.backgroundBlendMode = selectElem.value; });
See also
- The CSS compositing and blending module that defines the
<blend-mode>
values. - Properties that use this data type:
<background-blend-mode>
,<mix-blend-mode>
Description to various blend modes on other website:
- Blend modes on Wikipedia
- Blending modes in Adobe Photoshop by Adobe