name: css-alpha-masking
description: Apply CSS alpha masking with linear-gradient for horizontal or vertical edge fades (mask-image and -webkit-mask-image). Use when asked for alpha masks, fade edges, or CSS mask gradients.
CSS Alpha Masking Skill
Workflow
- Confirm direction (horizontal or vertical) and fade stop percentages.
- Provide the inline CSS snippet and any needed class usage.
- Offer small tweaks only (direction, stop positions, colors).
Usage checklist
- Apply the mask styles directly on the element or in a CSS class.
- Always include both
mask-image and -webkit-mask-image for Safari.
- Ensure the element has visible content; masks reveal/hide alpha only.
Horizontal (left/right) fade
/* Add this inline CSS to any element */
mask-image: linear-gradient(to right, transparent, black 15%, black 85%, transparent);
-webkit-mask-image: linear-gradient(to right, transparent, black 15%, black 85%, transparent);
Vertical (top/bottom) fade
/* Add this inline CSS to any element */
mask-image: linear-gradient(to bottom, transparent, black 15%, black 85%, transparent);
-webkit-mask-image: linear-gradient(to bottom, transparent, black 15%, black 85%, transparent);
Customization knobs
- Direction:
to right, to left, to bottom, to top.
- Fade depth: adjust
15% and 85% stops.
- Strength: change
transparent to rgba(0,0,0,0.2) for softer fades.
Common pitfalls
- Forgetting the
-webkit-mask-image fallback in Safari.
- Expecting masks to work on elements with
overflow: hidden but no visible content behind.
Questions to ask when specs are missing
- Which direction should the fade go?
- How wide should the fade edges be?
- Is this for images, text, or a container background?