How to use CSS background gradients in HTML emails
Many email clients support CSS background gradients.
In this tutorial, you will learn how to use the tailwindcss-gradients plugin to add colorful gradients to your HTML email templates. We will also cover how to add a fallback so that we render gradients in Outlook too, using VML.
Getting started
Let's start by creating a new Maizzle project.
Open a terminal window and run the new
command:
maizzle new
Follow the steps, using example-gradients
as the folder name.
We said we'll use the tailwindcss-gradients
plugin, so let's go ahead and install it.
First, cd
into the project directory:
cd example-gradients
Next, install the plugin using NPM:
npm install tailwindcss-gradients
Once it finishes, open the example-gradients
folder in your editor.
CSS Gradients
Let's configure and use tailwindcss-gradients
with Tailwind CSS.
Tailwind config
We need to tell Tailwind to use the plugin. Edit tailwind.config.js
and require()
the plugin inside the plugins: []
array:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('tailwindcss-gradients'),
]
}
Next, we need to define what kind of gradients we want to generate, based on which colors.
We do that in the theme: {}
key from tailwind.config.js
.
For example, let's register linear gradients based on the existing color palette:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
linearGradientColors: theme => theme('colors'),
}
}
If you run maizzle build
and take a look at one of the templates in build_local
, you will see file size almost doubled and there are lots of background image gradient utility classes in there:
.bg-gradient-t-transparent {
background-image: linear-gradient(to top, rgba(0, 0, 0, 0), transparent) !important;
}
/* + many more! */
The reason for so many classes is that tailwindcss-gradients
outputs utilities for all combinations of colors defined in our config.
We can, of course, change that and only generate a handful of gradients:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
linearGradientColors: {
'red': '#f00',
'red-blue': ['#f00', '#00f'],
'red-green-blue': ['#f00', '#0f0', '#00f'],
'black-white-with-stops': ['#000', '#000 45%', '#fff 55%', '#fff'],
}
}
}
Run maizzle build
again and you should now see only 64 utility classes generated.
tailwindcss-gradients
can generate many other types of gradients (although not all are supported in email). See all configuration options.Use in HTML
Simply add the utility class on an element that supports background-image
CSS.
We also specify a background color first, so that email clients that don't support CSS background-image gradients can display a fallback:
<table class="w-full">
<tr>
<td class="bg-gray-200 bg-gradient-b-black">
<!-- ... -->
</td>
</tr>
</table>
Outlook VML
Outlook for Windows doesn't support CSS gradients, but we can use VML.
You need to add it right after the element with the CSS gradient class:
<table class="w-full">
<tr>
<td class="bg-blue-500 bg-gradient-b-black-transparent">
<!--[if gte mso 9]>
<v:rect xmlns:v="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:vml" fill="true" stroke="false" style="width:600px;">
<v:fill type="gradient" color="#0072FF" color2="#00C6FF" angle="90" />
<v:textbox style="mso-fit-shape-to-text:true" inset="0,0,0,0">
<div><![endif]-->
[your overlayed HTML here]
<!--[if gte mso 9]></div></v:textbox></v:rect><![endif]-->
</td>
</tr>
</table>
As you can see, you need to set a fixed width on the <v:rect>
element - it is recommended instead of using mso-width-percent: 1000;
, as that is pretty buggy (especially in Outlook 2013).
<v:rect>
element needs to match the width of its parent element (in our case, the <td>
).Body gradient
We can also add a gradient to the body of the email - Outlook support included.
To achieve this, we:
- create a
<div>
that wraps our template: this will be used as the solid background color fallback - place the VML code immediately inside that div, basically wrapping our entire template.
Note how we're using
mso-width-percent: 1000;
instead of a fixed width on the<v:rect>
Here's an example:
<div class="bg-gray-200">
<!--[if gte mso 9]>
<v:rect xmlns:v="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:vml" fill="true" stroke="false" style="mso-width-percent:1000;">
<v:fill type="gradient" color="#edf2f7" color2="#cbd5e0" />
<v:textbox style="mso-fit-shape-to-text:true" inset="0,0,0,0">
<div><![endif]-->
<table class="w-full font-sans">
<tr>
<td align="center" class="bg-gradient-t-gray-400">
<!-- your content here... -->
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<!--[if gte mso 9]></div></v:textbox></v:rect><![endif]-->
</div>
You can see both examples in the project repository ↗
Avoid inlining
Most email clients that support CSS gradients also support @media
queries.
We can register a screen
breakpoint to prevent Juice from inlining our gradient:
// tailwind.config.js
module.exports = {
theme: {
screens: {
screen: {raw: 'screen'},
sm: {max: '600px'},
}
}
}
We can then write the utility class like this:
<table class="w-full">
<tr>
<td class="bg-gray-200 screen:bg-gradient-b-black">
<!-- ... -->
</td>
</tr>
</table>
Resources
- tailwindcss-gradients plugin
- GitHub repo for this tutorial