Inspired by @artur_bien
This may seem a bit complex at first, but it's actually simple once you get the hang of it. This whole thing is much easier without the scale down effect, feel free to skip the whole override part!
I've made a Lottie animation with the Figma to Lottie plugin and added a custom Framer override that scales down and fades elements, then resets them after a delay. This override includes trigger and target settings.
Preloading the Lottie animation improves performance, so I made the first variant visible with 0% opacity on my site without autoplay. Switching back to the original variant after a delay isn't necessary; it was only done for demonstration purposes, so the effect can repeat.
Inspired by @artur_bien
This may seem a bit complex at first, but it's actually simple once you get the hang of it. This whole thing is much easier without the scale down effect, feel free to skip the whole override part!
I've made a Lottie animation with the Figma to Lottie plugin and added a custom Framer override that scales down and fades elements, then resets them after a delay. This override includes trigger and target settings.
Preloading the Lottie animation improves performance, so I made the first variant visible with 0% opacity on my site without autoplay. Switching back to the original variant after a delay isn't necessary; it was only done for demonstration purposes, so the effect can repeat.
Inspired by @artur_bien
This may seem a bit complex at first, but it's actually simple once you get the hang of it. This whole thing is much easier without the scale down effect, feel free to skip the whole override part!
I've made a Lottie animation with the Figma to Lottie plugin and added a custom Framer override that scales down and fades elements, then resets them after a delay. This override includes trigger and target settings.
Preloading the Lottie animation improves performance, so I made the first variant visible with 0% opacity on my site without autoplay. Switching back to the original variant after a delay isn't necessary; it was only done for demonstration purposes, so the effect can repeat.