| name | svg-animations |
| description | Create beautiful, performant SVG animations and illustrations. Use this skill when the user asks to create SVG graphics, icons, illustrations, animated logos, path animations, morphing shapes, loading spinners, or any animated SVG content. Covers SMIL animations, CSS-driven SVG animation, path drawing effects, shape morphing, motion paths, gradients, masks, and filters. |
This skill guides creation of handcrafted SVG animations — from simple animated icons to complex multi-stage path animations. SVGs are a markup language for images; every element is a DOM node you can style, animate, and script.
SVG Fundamentals
Coordinate System
SVGs use a coordinate system defined by viewBox="minX minY width height". The viewBox is your canvas — all coordinates are relative to it, making SVGs resolution-independent.
<svg viewBox="0 0 200 200" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
</svg>
Shape Primitives
<rect x="10" y="10" width="80" height="40" rx="4" fill="#1a1a1a" />
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="30" fill="#e63946" />
<ellipse cx="50" cy="50" rx="40" ry="20" fill="#457b9d" />
<line x1="10" y1="10" x2="90" y2="90" stroke="#2a9d8f" stroke-width="2" />
<polygon points="50,5 95,90 5,90" fill="#e9c46a" />
<polyline points="10,80 40,20 70,60 100,10" fill="none" stroke="#264653" stroke-width="2" />
The <path> Element — The Power Tool
The d attribute defines a path using commands. Uppercase = absolute, lowercase = relative.
| Command | Purpose | Syntax |
|---|
| M/m | Move to | M x y |
| L/l | Line to | L x y |
| H/h | Horizontal line | H x |
| V/v | Vertical line | V y |
| C/c | Cubic bézier | C x1 y1, x2 y2, x y |
| S/s | Smooth cubic bézier | S x2 y2, x y |
| Q/q | Quadratic bézier | Q x1 y1, x y |
| T/t | Smooth quadratic | T x y |
| A/a | Elliptical arc | A rx ry rotation large-arc sweep x y |
| Z/z | Close path | Z |
Cubic Bézier (C): Two control points define the curve. The first control point sets the departure angle, the second sets the arrival angle.
<path d="M 10 80 C 40 10, 65 10, 95 80" stroke="#000" fill="none" stroke-width="2" />
Smooth Cubic (S): Reflects the previous control point automatically — perfect for chaining fluid S-curves.
<path d="M 10 80 C 40 10, 65 10, 95 80 S 150 150, 180 80" stroke="#000" fill="none" />
Arc (A): rx ry x-rotation large-arc-flag sweep-flag x y
large-arc-flag: 0 = small arc, 1 = large arc (>180°)
sweep-flag: 0 = counterclockwise, 1 = clockwise
<path d="M 10,30 A 20,20 0,0,1 50,30 A 20,20 0,0,1 90,30 Q 90,60 50,90 Q 10,60 10,30 Z"
fill="#e63946" />
Grouping and Transforms
<g transform="translate(50, 50) rotate(45)" opacity="0.8">
<rect x="-20" y="-20" width="40" height="40" fill="#264653" />
</g>
Use <g> to group elements for collective transforms, styling, and animation targets.
Gradients, Masks, and Filters
<defs>
<linearGradient id="grad" x1="0%" y1="0%" x2="100%" y2="100%">
<stop offset="0%" stop-color="#e63946" />
<stop offset="100%" stop-color="#457b9d" />
</linearGradient>
<radialGradient id="glow" cx="50%" cy="50%" r="50%">
<stop offset="0%" stop-color="#fff" stop-opacity="0.8" />
<stop offset="100%" stop-color="#fff" stop-opacity="0" />
</radialGradient>
<mask id="reveal">
<rect width="100%" height="100%" fill="black" />
<circle cx="100" cy="100" r="50" fill="white" />
</mask>
<filter id="blur">
<feGaussianBlur in="SourceGraphic" stdDeviation="3" />
</filter>
</defs>
<rect width="200" height="200" fill="url(#grad)" />
<rect width="200" height="200" fill="url(#grad)" mask="url(#reveal)" />
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="20" filter="url(#blur)" fill="#e63946" />
CSS Animations on SVG
Many SVG attributes are valid CSS properties: fill, stroke, opacity, transform, stroke-dasharray, stroke-dashoffset, etc.
Basic CSS Animation
.pulse {
animation: pulse 2s ease-in-out infinite;
transform-origin: center;
}
@keyframes pulse {
0%, 100% { transform: scale(1); opacity: 1; }
50% { transform: scale(1.15); opacity: 0.7; }
}
Stroke Drawing Animation (The Classic)
The most iconic SVG animation. Uses stroke-dasharray and stroke-dashoffset to make a path appear to draw itself.
How it works:
- Set
stroke-dasharray to the path's total length (one giant dash + one giant gap)
- Set
stroke-dashoffset to the same length (shifts the dash off-screen)
- Animate
stroke-dashoffset to 0 (slides the dash into view)
<svg viewBox="0 0 200 200">
<path class="draw" d="M 20 100 C 20 50, 80 50, 80 100 S 140 150, 140 100"
fill="none" stroke="#1a1a1a" stroke-width="3" />
</svg>
<style>
.draw {
stroke-dasharray: 300;
stroke-dashoffset: 300;
animation: draw 2s ease forwards;
}
@keyframes draw {
to { stroke-dashoffset: 0; }
}
</style>
Getting exact path length in JS:
const path = document.querySelector('.draw');
const length = path.getTotalLength();
path.style.strokeDasharray = length;
path.style.strokeDashoffset = length;
Staggered Multi-Path Drawing
.line-1 { animation-delay: 0s; }
.line-2 { animation-delay: 0.3s; }
.line-3 { animation-delay: 0.6s; }
CSS d Property Animation
Modern browsers support animating the d attribute directly in CSS:
path {
d: path("M 10,30 A 20,20 0,0,1 50,30 A 20,20 0,0,1 90,30 Q 90,60 50,90 Q 10,60 10,30 z");
transition: d 0.5s ease;
}
path:hover {
d: path("M 10,50 A 20,20 0,0,1 50,10 A 20,20 0,0,1 90,50 Q 90,80 50,100 Q 10,80 10,50 z");
}
Requirement: Both paths must have the same number and types of commands for interpolation to work.
SMIL Animations (Native SVG)
SMIL animations are declared directly inside SVG markup. They work even when SVG is loaded as an <img> or CSS background-image — where CSS and JS can't reach.
<animate> — Animate Any Attribute
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="20" fill="#e63946">
<animate attributeName="r" from="20" to="40" dur="1s"
repeatCount="indefinite" />
</circle>
With keyframes:
<animate attributeName="cx"
values="50; 150; 100; 50"
keyTimes="0; 0.33; 0.66; 1"
dur="3s" repeatCount="indefinite" />
<animateTransform> — Transform Animations
<rect x="-20" y="-20" width="40" height="40" fill="#264653">
<animateTransform attributeName="transform" type="rotate"
from="0" to="360" dur="4s" repeatCount="indefinite" />
</rect>
Types: translate, scale, rotate, skewX, skewY
<animateMotion> — Move Along a Path
<circle r="5" fill="#e63946">
<animateMotion dur="3s" repeatCount="indefinite" rotate="auto">
<mpath href="#motionPath" />
</animateMotion>
</circle>
<path id="motionPath" d="M 20,50 C 20,0 80,0 80,50 S 140,100 140,50"
fill="none" stroke="#ccc" />
rotate="auto" orients the element tangent to the path. rotate="auto-reverse" flips it 180°.
<set> — Discrete Value Changes
<rect width="40" height="40" fill="#264653">
<set attributeName="fill" to="#e63946" begin="1s" />
</rect>
Timing and Synchronization
<animate id="first" attributeName="cx" to="150" dur="1s" fill="freeze" />
<animate attributeName="cy" to="150" dur="1s" begin="first.end" fill="freeze" />
<animate attributeName="r" to="30" dur="0.5s" begin="first.end + 0.5s" fill="freeze" />
Trigger values:
begin="click" — on click
begin="2s" — after 2 seconds
begin="other.end" — when another animation ends
begin="other.end + 1s" — 1s after another ends
begin="other.repeat(2)" — on 2nd repeat of another
Easing with calcMode and keySplines
<animate attributeName="cx" values="50;150" dur="1s"
calcMode="spline" keySplines="0.42 0 0.58 1" />
calcMode options: linear (default), discrete, paced, spline
keySplines takes cubic-bezier control points (x1 y1 x2 y2) per interval. Common easings:
- Ease-in-out:
0.42 0 0.58 1
- Ease-out:
0 0 0.58 1
- Bounce-ish:
0.34 1.56 0.64 1
Shape Morphing with SMIL
Both shapes must have identical command structures (same number of points, same command types):
<path fill="#e63946">
<animate attributeName="d" dur="2s" repeatCount="indefinite"
values="M 50,10 L 90,90 L 10,90 Z;
M 50,90 L 90,10 L 10,10 Z;
M 50,10 L 90,90 L 10,90 Z" />
</path>
Animation Patterns & Recipes
Loading Spinner
<svg viewBox="0 0 50 50">
<circle cx="25" cy="25" r="20" fill="none" stroke="#1a1a1a"
stroke-width="3" stroke-linecap="round"
stroke-dasharray="90 150" stroke-dashoffset="0">
<animateTransform attributeName="transform" type="rotate"
from="0 25 25" to="360 25 25" dur="1s"
repeatCount="indefinite" />
<animate attributeName="stroke-dashoffset" values="0;-280"
dur="1.5s" repeatCount="indefinite" />
</circle>
</svg>
Animated Checkmark
<svg viewBox="0 0 52 52">
<circle cx="26" cy="26" r="24" fill="none" stroke="#4caf50"
stroke-width="2" class="draw"
style="stroke-dasharray:150;stroke-dashoffset:150;
animation:draw .6s ease forwards" />
<path fill="none" stroke="#4caf50" stroke-width="3"
stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"
d="M14 27l7 7 16-16" class="draw"
style="stroke-dasharray:50;stroke-dashoffset:50;
animation:draw .4s ease .5s forwards" />
</svg>
Morphing Hamburger to X
<svg viewBox="0 0 24 24" id="menu">
<path id="top" d="M 3,6 L 21,6" stroke="#1a1a1a" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round">
<animate attributeName="d" to="M 5,5 L 19,19" dur="0.3s" begin="menu.click" fill="freeze" />
</path>
<path id="mid" d="M 3,12 L 21,12" stroke="#1a1a1a" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round">
<animate attributeName="opacity" to="0" dur="0.1s" begin="menu.click" fill="freeze" />
</path>
<path id="bot" d="M 3,18 L 21,18" stroke="#1a1a1a" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round">
<animate attributeName="d" to="M 5,19 L 19,5" dur="0.3s" begin="menu.click" fill="freeze" />
</path>
</svg>
Gradient Animation (Color Shift)
<defs>
<linearGradient id="shift" x1="0%" y1="0%" x2="100%" y2="0%">
<stop offset="0%">
<animate attributeName="stop-color"
values="#e63946;#457b9d;#2a9d8f;#e63946"
dur="4s" repeatCount="indefinite" />
</stop>
<stop offset="100%">
<animate attributeName="stop-color"
values="#457b9d;#2a9d8f;#e63946;#457b9d"
dur="4s" repeatCount="indefinite" />
</stop>
</linearGradient>
</defs>
<rect width="200" height="100" fill="url(#shift)" rx="8" />
Breathing / Pulsing Glow
<circle cx="100" cy="100" r="30" fill="#e63946">
<animate attributeName="r" values="30;35;30" dur="2s"
calcMode="spline" keySplines="0.4 0 0.6 1;0.4 0 0.6 1"
repeatCount="indefinite" />
<animate attributeName="opacity" values="1;0.6;1" dur="2s"
calcMode="spline" keySplines="0.4 0 0.6 1;0.4 0 0.6 1"
repeatCount="indefinite" />
</circle>
Wave / Liquid Effect
<path fill="#457b9d" opacity="0.7">
<animate attributeName="d" dur="5s" repeatCount="indefinite"
values="M 0,40 C 30,35 70,45 100,40 L 100,100 L 0,100 Z;
M 0,40 C 30,50 70,30 100,40 L 100,100 L 0,100 Z;
M 0,40 C 30,35 70,45 100,40 L 100,100 L 0,100 Z"
calcMode="spline" keySplines="0.4 0 0.6 1;0.4 0 0.6 1" />
</path>
Best Practices
-
Use viewBox, never hardcode width/height in the SVG — let the container size it. This keeps it resolution-independent.
-
<defs> for reusable definitions — gradients, filters, masks, clipPaths, and reusable shapes belong in <defs>.
-
Prefer SMIL for self-contained SVGs (icons, logos loaded via <img>) — CSS/JS won't work there. Use CSS animations when the SVG is inlined and you want to coordinate with the rest of the page.
-
Shape morphing requires matching commands — same number of path commands, same types, same order. If shapes differ, add invisible intermediate points to equalize.
-
stroke-linecap="round" makes line animations look polished.
-
fill="freeze" in SMIL keeps the final animation state. Without it, the element snaps back.
-
transform-origin: center in CSS — SVG transforms default to the origin (0,0), not the element center. Always set this explicitly.
-
Use getTotalLength() in JS to get exact path lengths for stroke animations instead of guessing.
-
Layer animations with <g> groups — animate the group transform separately from individual element properties for complex choreography.
-
Performance: SVG animations are GPU-composited when animating transform and opacity. Animating d, points, or layout attributes triggers repaints — use sparingly on complex SVGs.
-
will-change: transform on animated SVG elements helps the browser optimize compositing.
-
Accessibility: Add role="img" and <title> / <desc> elements. Use prefers-reduced-motion media query to disable animations for users who request it:
@media (prefers-reduced-motion: reduce) {
svg * {
animation: none !important;
transition: none !important;
}
}