I was answering this question, and I was unable to post my answer due to containing code that is not properly formatted as code. All my code has been formatted properly as far as I can tell.
Here is the answer:
You can probably make the shape of the t-shirt and lights using SVGs, and the animations with keyframes.
>Blinking Animation:
.blinking{
animation:blinkingText 0.8s infinite;
}
@keyframes blinkingText{
0%{ color: #000; }
49%{ color: transparent; }
50%{ color: transparent; }
99%{ color:transparent; }
100%{ color: #000; }
}
<!-- language: lang-html -->
<span class="blinking">Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet</span>
<!-- end snippet -->
In the `@keyframes blinkingText` selector, each percent represents a change at a certain point in the animation. In the `.blinking` selector, the `animation:blinkingText` represents which `@keyframes` animation will be used, the `0.8s` represents the time interval that an iteration of the animation runs for, and the `infinite` means that the animation won't stop.
>Rotating Animation:
<!-- language: lang-css -->
.rotate {
animation: rotate 2s linear infinite;
}
@keyframes rotate {
from {
transform: rotate(0deg);
}
to {
transform: rotate(360deg);
}
}
<!-- language: lang-html -->
<div class="rotate" style="width: 100px; height: 100px; line-height: 100px; text-
align: center;">Lorem ipsum</div>
<!-- end snippet -->
Happy coding!
[More animation tricks][1]
[More on keyframes][2]
[1]: https://cssreference.io/animations/
[2]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/@keyframes
What is going on?
Note: I removed the <!-- -->
that define the language used so the snippet can be run because it was being displayed as some <pre></pre>
tag with letters and numbers inside.