5

Changing the text color to white when the background color is black works great using mix-blend-mode: difference. Move the mouse to the text to see the effect:

const blackBox = document.querySelector(".black-box");
window.addEventListener('mousemove', function(event) {
  blackBox.style.left = `${event.pageX - 50}px`;
  blackBox.style.top = `${event.pageY - 50}px`;
});
.wrapper {
  background-color: white;
}
h1 {
  position: relative;
  z-index: 2;
  color: white;
  mix-blend-mode: difference;
}

.black-box {
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
  position: absolute;
  z-index: 1;
  background-color: black;
}
<div class="wrapper">
  <h1>Lorem Ipsum</h1>
</div>
<div class="black-box"></div>

This understandably doesn't result in white text if the background is anything other than black:

const box = document.querySelector(".box");
window.addEventListener('mousemove', function(event) {
  box.style.left = `${event.pageX - 50}px`;
  box.style.top = `${event.pageY - 50}px`;
});
.wrapper {
  background-color: white;
}
h1 {
  position: relative;
  z-index: 2;
  color: white;
  mix-blend-mode: difference;
}

.box {
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
  position: absolute;
  z-index: 1;
  background-image: url("https://placekitten.com/100/100")
}
<div class="wrapper">
  <h1>Lorem Ipsum</h1>
</div>
<div class="box"></div>

Is there any way to make it so the text changes color from black to white as soon as the background differs from white?

Tholle
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  • in this particular case or a generic solution? I doubt mix-blend-mode will help here – Temani Afif Mar 29 '19 at 20:20
  • A generic solution would be optimal. Alright, thank you for your insight! I have an image that can change that the user can move with the mouse over text, and the text should go from black to white like the first code snippet. – Tholle Mar 29 '19 at 20:26

1 Answers1

7

Here is an idea that rely on background coloration and not mix-blend-mode. The trick is to have a gradient with the same dimension as the image that you move the same way to simulate the blend mode:

const box = document.querySelector(".box");
const h1 = document.querySelector("h1");
window.addEventListener('mousemove', function(event) {
  box.style.left = `${event.pageX - 50}px`;
  box.style.top = `${event.pageY - 50}px`;
  
  h1.style.backgroundPosition = `${event.pageX - 50}px ${event.pageY - 50}px`;
});
.wrapper {
  background-color: white;
}
h1 {
  position: relative;
  z-index: 2;
  color: white;
  background: 
    /*gradient                   position   /    size  */
    linear-gradient(#fff,#fff) -100px -100px/100px 100px fixed no-repeat,
    #000;
  -webkit-background-clip: text;
  background-clip: text;
  -webkit-text-fill-color: transparent;
  color: transparent;
}

.box {
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
  position: absolute;
  z-index: 1;
  background-image: url("https://placekitten.com/100/100")
}
<div class="wrapper">
  <h1>Lorem Ipsum</h1>
</div>
<div class="box"></div>

I have considered background-attachment:fixed to place the gradient relatively to the viewport since your element is position:absolute with no ancestor positioned so it's also positioned relatively to the viewport.

Temani Afif
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