Pulsing Heart CSS animation
Solution 1:
You can incorporate the pause into the animation. Like so:
@keyframes heartbeat
{
0%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
20%
{
transform: scale( 1 );
}
40%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
60%
{
transform: scale( 1 );
}
80%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
100%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
}
Working example: https://jsfiddle.net/t7f97kf4/
@keyframes heartbeat
{
0%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
20%
{
transform: scale( 1 );
}
40%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
60%
{
transform: scale( 1 );
}
80%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
100%
{
transform: scale( .75 );
}
}
div
{
background-color: red;
width: 50px;
height: 50px;
animation: heartbeat 1s infinite;
}
<div>
Heart
</div>
Edit:
Working example with pure CSS heart shape: https://jsfiddle.net/qLfg2mrd/
@keyframes heartbeat
{
0%
{
transform: scale( .75);
}
20%
{
transform: scale( 1);
}
40%
{
transform: scale( .75);
}
60%
{
transform: scale( 1);
}
80% {
transform: scale( .75);
}
100%
{
transform: scale( .75);
}
}
#heart
{
position: relative;
width: 100px;
height: 90px;
animation: heartbeat 1s infinite;
}
#heart:before,
#heart:after
{
position: absolute;
content: "";
left: 50px;
top: 0;
width: 50px;
height: 80px;
background: red;
-moz-border-radius: 50px 50px 0 0;
border-radius: 50px 50px 0 0;
-webkit-transform: rotate(-45deg);
-moz-transform: rotate(-45deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(-45deg);
-o-transform: rotate(-45deg);
transform: rotate(-45deg);
-webkit-transform-origin: 0 100%;
-moz-transform-origin: 0 100%;
-ms-transform-origin: 0 100%;
-o-transform-origin: 0 100%;
transform-origin: 0 100%;
}
#heart:after
{
left: 0;
-webkit-transform: rotate(45deg);
-moz-transform: rotate(45deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(45deg);
-o-transform: rotate(45deg);
transform: rotate(45deg);
-webkit-transform-origin: 100% 100%;
-moz-transform-origin: 100% 100%;
-ms-transform-origin: 100% 100%;
-o-transform-origin: 100% 100%;
transform-origin: 100% 100%;
}
<div id="heart"></div>
Solution 2:
Pulse 2 times, take a small break, and then repeat it again
Try this. Going with animation opacity
is a bad choice. transform: scale()
will do the job.
.heart:before {
display: block;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 100%;
font-family: 'icons';
font-size: 21px;
text-indent: 0;
font-variant: normal;
line-height: 21px;
}
.heart {
position: relative;
width: 500px;
overflow: inherit;
margin: 50px auto;
list-style: none;
-webkit-animation: animateHeart 2.5s infinite;
animation: animateHeart 2.5s infinite;
}
.heart:before,
.heart:after {
position: absolute;
content: '';
top: 0;
left: 50%;
width: 120px;
height: 200px;
background: red;
border-radius: 100px 100px 0 0;
-webkit-transform: rotate(-45deg) translateZ(0);
transform: rotate(-45deg) translateZ(0);
-webkit-transform-origin: 0 100%;
transform-origin: 0 100%;
}
.heart:after {
left: 26%;
-webkit-transform: rotate(45deg) translateZ(0);
transform: rotate(45deg) translateZ(0);
-webkit-transform-origin: 100% 100%;
transform-origin: 100% 100%;
}
@-webkit-keyframes animateHeart {
0% {
-webkit-transform: scale(0.8);
}
5% {
-webkit-transform: scale(0.9);
}
10% {
-webkit-transform: scale(0.8);
}
15% {
-webkit-transform: scale(1);
}
50% {
-webkit-transform: scale(0.8);
}
100% {
-webkit-transform: scale(0.8);
}
}
@keyframes animateHeart {
0% {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
5% {
transform: scale(0.9);
}
10% {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
15% {
transform: scale(1);
}
50% {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
100% {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
}
span {
font-family: 'Cantora One', sans-serif;
font-size: 64px;
position: absolute;
top: 165px;
}
<div class="heart">
</div>
Solution 3:
I like ketan's answer, but I wanted to improve the heart animation to make it more realistic.
- A heart does not double in size when it beats. 10% change in size looks better to me.
- I like it getting both larger and smaller
- When it stops moving altogether it looks dead to me. Even when it isn't beating, it needs to expand or contract a little
- I removed the "alternate directions" code so that it runs the same way through every time
- I explicitly have the heart start end and at normal scale (1) and have the animation in the middle of the sequence. It seems clearer that way to me.
#heart img{
position:absolute;
left:0;
right:0;
margin:0 auto;
}
@keyframes heartFadeInOut {
0% {transform: scale(1);}
25% {transform: scale(.97);}
35% {transform: scale(.9);}
45% {transform: scale(1.1);}
55% {transform: scale(.9);}
65% {transform: scale(1.1);}
75% {transform: scale(1.03);}
100% {transform: scale(1);}
}
#heart img.bottom {
animation-name: heartFadeInOut;
animation-iteration-count: infinite;
animation-duration: 2s;
}
<div id="heart" >
<img class="bottom" src="https://i.stack.imgur.com/iBCpb.png" width="100px">
</div>