Class reference
Outer shadow
Use the .shadow
, .shadow-md
, or .shadow-lg
utilities to apply different sized outer box shadows to an element.
Inner shadow
Use the .shadow-inner
utility to apply a subtle inset box shadow to an element. This can be useful for things like form controls or wells.
Outline shadow
Use the .shadow-outline
utility to apply a focus-ring-style shadow to an element. This can be useful when combined with .focus:outline-none
to create a better looking focus style that follows an element’s border radius.
No shadow
Use .shadow-none
to remove an existing box shadow from an element. This is most commonly used to remove a shadow that was applied at a smaller breakpoint.
Responsive
To control the shadow of an element at a specific breakpoint, add a {screen}:
prefix to any existing shadow utility. For example, use md:shadow-lg
to apply the shadow-lg
utility at only medium screen sizes and above.
For more information about Tailwind’s responsive design features, check out the Responsive Design documentation.
all
sm
md
lg
xl
Customizing
Box Shadows
By default Tailwind provides three drop shadow utilities, one inner shadow utility, and a utility for removing existing shadows. You can change, add, or remove these by editing the shadows
section of your Tailwind config.
If a default
shadow is provided, it will be used for the non-suffixed .shadow
utility. Any other keys will be used as suffixes, for example the key '2'
will create a corresponding .shadow-2
utility.
Responsive and State Variants
By default, only responsive, hover and focus variants are generated for shadow utilities.
You can control which variants are generated for the shadow utilities by modifying the shadows
property in the modules
section of your Tailwind config file.
For example, this config will also generate variants:
Disabling
If you don’t plan to use the shadow utilities in your project, you can disable them entirely by setting the shadows
property to false
in the modules
section of your config file: