Change text color based on brightness of the covered background area?

I am looking for a plugin or technique that changes a text's color or switches between predefined images/icons depending on the average brightness of the covered pixels of its parent's background-image or -color.

If the covered area of it's background is rather dark, make the text white or switch the icons.

Additionally, it'd be great if the script would notice if the parent has no defined background-color or -image and then continue to search for the nearest (from parent element to its parent element..).

What do you think, know about this idea? Is there something similar out there already? Examples?


Solution 1:

Interesting resources for this:

  • W3C - Ensure that foreground and background color combinations provide sufficient contrast
  • Calculating the Perceived Brightness of a Color

Here's the W3C algorithm (with JSFiddle demo too):

const rgb = [255, 0, 0];

// Randomly change to showcase updates
setInterval(setContrast, 1000);

function setContrast() {
  // Randomly update colours
  rgb[0] = Math.round(Math.random() * 255);
  rgb[1] = Math.round(Math.random() * 255);
  rgb[2] = Math.round(Math.random() * 255);

  // http://www.w3.org/TR/AERT#color-contrast
  const brightness = Math.round(((parseInt(rgb[0]) * 299) +
                      (parseInt(rgb[1]) * 587) +
                      (parseInt(rgb[2]) * 114)) / 1000);
  const textColour = (brightness > 125) ? 'black' : 'white';
  const backgroundColour = 'rgb(' + rgb[0] + ',' + rgb[1] + ',' + rgb[2] + ')';
  $('#bg').css('color', textColour); 
  $('#bg').css('background-color', backgroundColour);
}
#bg {
  width: 200px;
  height: 50px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

<div id="bg">Text Example</div>

Solution 2:

This article on 24 ways about Calculating Color Contrast might be of interest to you. Ignore the first set of functions because they're wrong, but the YIQ formula will help you determine whether or not to use a light or dark foreground color.

Once you obtain the element's (or ancestor's) background color, you can use this function from the article to determine a suitable foreground color:

function getContrastYIQ(hexcolor){
    hexcolor = hexcolor.replace("#", "");
    var r = parseInt(hexcolor.substr(0,2),16);
    var g = parseInt(hexcolor.substr(2,2),16);
    var b = parseInt(hexcolor.substr(4,2),16);
    var yiq = ((r*299)+(g*587)+(b*114))/1000;
    return (yiq >= 128) ? 'black' : 'white';
}

Solution 3:

mix-blend-mode does the trick:

header {
  overflow: hidden;
  height: 100vh;
  background: url(https://www.w3schools.com/html/pic_mountain.jpg) 50%/cover;
}

h2 {
  color: white;
  font: 900 35vmin/50vh arial;
  text-align: center;
  mix-blend-mode: difference;
  filter: drop-shadow(0.05em 0.05em orange);
}
<header>
  <h2 contentEditable role='textbox' aria-multiline='true' >Edit me here</h2>
</header>

Addition (March 2018): Following, a nice tutorial explaining all different types of modes/implementations: https://css-tricks.com/css-techniques-and-effects-for-knockout-text/