13
votes

I just want to skew the parent and skew it back on the child.

Example : HTML

<div class="parent"> <!-- skew(-10deg) -->
    <div class="child">Hello</div> <!-- skew(10deg) (skew back) -->
</div>

Example : CSS

.parent {
    transform: skew(-10deg);
}
.child {
    transform: skew(10deg);
}

Text inside seems ok with Firefox, Safari. But not Chrome and Opera its a bit blurry

I have to use -webkit-backface-visibility: hidden; for reduce box pixelated in Chrome

Firefox :

Firefox

Chrome :

Chrome

Firefox vs Chrome :

FirefoxVSChrome

or zoomed by Photoshop

FirefoxVSChromeZoomed

Live example : http://jsfiddle.net/1tpj1kka/

Any idea ?


NOTE !!! : web-tiki's answer is an another way solution to prevent the problem. But if any answered a real solution to resolved this skew back problem (real fix), I will accept the answer.

3
Why don't you use a pseudo-element for that? It has better browser support , rather then transform.Vucko
@Vucko Does not matter ? jsfiddle.net/uy061t79/2l2aelba
@l2aelba I ment like thisVucko
@Vucko Thanks, But I have to do like I coded in my case.l2aelba
Visually nice question. How did you create the animated gif?redochka

3 Answers

7
votes

The "blurry text" after 2d or 3d transforms with webkit browsers has been discused many times. But in your case, you can apply the transform only on a pseudo element so that your text isn't affected by the skew property.

It will also alow you to use only one tag in your markup :

@import url(https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Oswald);
body{color:#fff;font-weight: bold;font-size:50px;font-family:'Oswald',sans-serif;}

.parent {
    width: 300px;
    overflow: hidden;
    padding-left: 5%;
    position:relative;
}

.parent::before {
    content :'';
    position:absolute;
    top:0;left:0;
    width:100%; height:100%;
    background: rgba(90,190,230,0.9);
    transform-origin:0 0;
    transform:skew(-10deg);
    z-index:-1;
}
<div class="parent">
    Hello
</div>
2
votes

Adding the 'translateZ(0)' before transformations like below forces the gpu to re-render the text and removes blurry-ness on Chrome.

This:

transform:  translateZ(0) skew(-10deg);

Not This:

transform: skew(-10deg);
1
votes

You can try the text-rendering: geometricPrecision CSS property. This will force your text to not be anti-aliased, thus making the blurriness less important.

inp.onchange = function(){
   document.querySelector('.child').classList.toggle('geo');
  }
@import url(https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Oswald);body{color:#fff;font-weight:bold;font-size:50px;font-family:'Oswald',sans-serif;}

.geo{
    text-rendering: geometricPrecision;
  }
.parent {

  transform: skew(-10deg);
  -webkit-backface-visibility: hidden;  
  width:300px;padding-left:15%;margin-left:-15%;overflow:hidden;
}

.child {
  transform: skew(10deg);  
  width:300px;background: rgba(90, 190, 230, 0.9);padding-left: 5%;padding-right: 15%;
}
<div class="parent"> <!-- skew(-10deg) -->
    <div class="child geo">Hello</div> <!-- skew(10deg) (skew back) -->
</div>
<input type="checkbox" id="inp" checked="true"/> geometricPrecision