Spinners Animation — Reference
Eclipse
The Eclipse is a CSS animation component that a pure CSS eclipse loader that animates an inset box-shadow across a circle from one side to the other, creating a smooth solar-eclipse sweeping effect. It ships as self-contained HTML and CSS with no external dependencies, making it drop-in ready for any modern web project regardless of framework or build system.
When to use the Eclipse
- Async form submissions and API fetch indicators
- Content loading placeholders in data-heavy dashboards
- Component libraries and design systems that need consistent motion patterns
- Progressive enhancement — works in all modern browsers, degrades gracefully
Performance characteristics
- GPU-accelerated — uses CSS transform and opacity so compositing happens off the main thread
- Zero JavaScript dependency in most configurations — no framework, no bundler required
- Approximately 60 fps on any device that supports CSS animations (Chrome 43+, Firefox 16+, Safari 9+)
- Self-contained in a single HTML file — no npm install, no build step, paste and ship
How it compares
Unlike equivalent JavaScript implementations, the Eclipse does not require any runtime library — there is nothing to install, bundle, or load asynchronously.
Compared to animated GIFs or video embeds, this CSS component is resolution-independent, theme-able via CSS custom properties, and weighs a fraction of the equivalent media file.
Source code
CSS
body { margin: 0; min-height: 100vh; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; background: #0f0f0f; }
.eclipse:before {
display: block;
content: '';
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
animation: eclipse 1s infinite ease;
background-color: #0f0f0f;
border-radius: 100%;
}
@keyframes eclipse {
from { box-shadow: inset 50px 0 0 0 #6366f1; }
to { box-shadow: inset calc(50px * -1) 0 0 0 #6366f1; }
}HTML
<div class="eclipse"></div>Full source
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<style>
body { margin: 0; min-height: 100vh; display: flex; align-items: center; justify-content: center; background: #0f0f0f; }
.eclipse:before {
display: block;
content: '';
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
animation: eclipse 1s infinite ease;
background-color: #0f0f0f;
border-radius: 100%;
}
@keyframes eclipse {
from { box-shadow: inset 50px 0 0 0 #6366f1; }
to { box-shadow: inset calc(50px * -1) 0 0 0 #6366f1; }
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="eclipse"></div>
</body>
</html>Frequently asked questions
How do I add the Eclipse to my project?
Copy the full source code from the code block on this page. Paste the <style> block into your stylesheet (or a <style> tag in your HTML head) and the HTML markup into your template. No npm install or build step is required — the animation is self-contained. To customize colors, speed, or size, use Grepped's workspace at grepped.dev/animations/spinners/eclipse-spinner.
Is the Eclipse free to use?
Yes. All Grepped preset animations are free to use in personal and commercial projects. You may copy, modify, and redistribute the code without attribution. The only limitation is that you may not resell the presets themselves as part of a competing animation library.
Does the Eclipse work on mobile browsers?
Yes. The Eclipse uses standard CSS animations and transforms that are supported in all modern mobile browsers — Chrome for Android, Safari on iOS 9+, Samsung Internet, and Firefox for Android. Where JavaScript is used for interactivity (e.g. cursor effects), it falls back gracefully on touch devices.
Can I customize the Eclipse's colors, speed, or size?
Yes. Open the live customization workspace at grepped.dev/animations/spinners/eclipse-spinner to adjust the animation with real-time sliders, color pickers, and toggles — no code required. For deeper changes, the source code uses CSS custom properties (variables) so you can edit them directly in your stylesheet.
Want to customize this animation or generate a new one from a text prompt?
Open in Workspace — it's free