Polished pan-zoom image viewer for Phoenix apps. The foundation for layered image experiences (deep zoom, annotations, ML overlays) — also useful standalone whenever you just need a good image viewer.
A fresco is the wet-plaster surface you paint on. Fresco the library is the surface every layered image experience sits on top of: extensions attach to the same viewer instance via a small extension API. Used alone, it's still a complete viewer with pan, zoom, fit-to-view, Heroicons nav, viewport clamping, and smooth animations.
Install
def deps do
[
{:fresco, "~> 0.1"}
]
endThen in your assets/js/app.js, import the JS hook and spread it into your LiveSocket hooks:
import "../../deps/fresco/priv/static/fresco.js"
let liveSocket = new LiveSocket("/live", Socket, {
hooks: { ...window.FrescoHooks, ...colocatedHooks }
})The hook name is FrescoViewer — if you maintain an explicit hooks map instead of spreading window.FrescoHooks, register it as { FrescoViewer: window.FrescoHooks.FrescoViewer }.
OpenSeadragon is lazy-loaded from jsDelivr on first viewer mount — no extra <script> tags needed.
Use it standalone
<Fresco.viewer
id="photo"
src={~p"/uploads/photo.jpg"}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
/>You get:
- Pan: click-drag, touch-drag, keyboard arrows
- Zoom: mouse wheel, pinch, double-click, dedicated buttons,
+/-keys - Fit-to-view initial state regardless of image / container aspect ratio
- Heroicons nav overlay: zoom-in / zoom-out / reset / fullscreen
- Viewport clamped so the image can't be panned off-screen
- Subtle dot-grid background on the viewer container (Figma/Miro style); shows through any padding around the image and lights up the void in
infinite_canvasmode. Override.fresco-viewerin your own CSS for dark mode or a different accent. - Smooth animations tuned snappy-but-not-jarring
Infinite canvas
Opt-in mode that unclamps the viewer — the user can pan past the image edges into surrounding empty space and zoom out until the image is a thumbnail in the middle of a vast canvas. Useful when a layered overlay (e.g. Etcher annotations) needs to draw shapes, callouts, or labels in the white space next to the image, Figma / Miro / Excalidraw style.
<Fresco.viewer
id="photo"
src={~p"/uploads/photo.jpg"}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
infinite_canvas
/>What changes when infinite_canvas is on:
visibilityRatiodrops to0(image can fully scroll off-screen)constrainDuringPanflips tofalse(no rubber-band during drag)minZoomImageRatiolowers to0.05so the image can shrink to a thumbnail- The default
.fresco-viewerdot-grid background that's present on every viewer becomes visible in the void around the image (in default clamped mode it's covered by OSD's canvas). The host div also picks up a.fresco-viewer--infinitemodifier class so you can target infinite-mode-only styling.
The home button (reset zoom) still returns to "image fits viewport" — the image stays the anchor point, just no longer the cage. Default is infinite_canvas={false}, so every existing viewer keeps the stock clamped behavior with no template changes required.
Multiple images on one canvas
Pass :sources (a list of maps) instead of :src to lay multiple images out on the same viewer. Each entry has src plus optional x, y, width in viewport units. The first image conventionally anchors the layout at x: 0, y: 0, width: 1, so x: 1.1 means "just to the right with a 10% gap."
<Fresco.viewer
id="gallery"
sources={[
%{src: "/uploads/a.jpg"},
%{src: "/uploads/b.jpg", x: 1.1},
%{src: "/uploads/c.jpg", x: 0, y: 1.1, width: 0.8}
]}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
infinite_canvas
/>- Height is derived from each image's natural aspect ratio — don't specify it.
- Each entry's
srcruns through the same source-provider chain as the single-image:src, so you can mix plain images with DZI tile pyramids handled by Tessera. :srcand:sourcesare mutually exclusive in practice — pass one. Both given,:sourceswins.- Typically paired with
:infinite_canvasso the user can pan freely across the layout. Without it, "Reset view" fits all sources into the viewport at mount. - Live re-renders that change the
:sourceslist re-open the viewer while preserving the current zoom/pan — same trick asswapSourcePreservingBounds.
⚠️ Caveat:
handle.imageToScreen/screenToImagecurrently operate on the first source only. If you're building an extension that needs to address pixels in source #2+ (e.g. annotations on a second image in the layout), you'll need to apply the offset yourself for now. Multi-image coordinate disambiguation is planned but not yet implemented.
Rotation
Opt-in 90° rotation button. Adds a fifth button to the nav column that rotates the image 90° clockwise each click. Rotation is tracked independently of zoom/pan, so "Reset view" recenters without un-rotating.
<Fresco.viewer
id="photo"
src={~p"/uploads/photo.jpg"}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
rotate
/>Default is rotate={false} — every existing viewer keeps the stock four-button layout.
Theming (light / dark / system / inherit)
Fresco ships with light + dark palettes for the viewer host background, dot grid, and nav buttons. Pass :theme to pick one:
<Fresco.viewer
id="photo"
src={~p"/uploads/photo.jpg"}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
theme={:system}
/>:system(default) — follow the OS / browserprefers-color-scheme.:light— force light palette regardless of OS preference.:dark— force dark palette regardless of OS preference.:inherit— emit only the host structure; the parent app's CSS supplies the palette. Use this to follow a parent theme system (see below).
Heads up:
:systemis the default since0.1.4. Viewers on dark-OS machines render dark out of the box. Passtheme={:light}to lock the old always-light look.
Theming is implemented as CSS custom properties on .fresco-viewer:
| Variable | Purpose |
|---|---|
--fresco-bg | Host background color |
--fresco-grid-dot | Dot grid color |
--fresco-nav-bg | Nav button background |
--fresco-nav-bg-hover | Nav button hover background |
--fresco-nav-fg | Nav button icon color |
--fresco-nav-focus | Focus-ring color |
Integrating with a parent theme system
Pass theme={:inherit} and define the six --fresco-* variables on .fresco-viewer[data-fresco-theme="inherit"] in your own CSS. Fresco skips its own var declarations for inherit-mode viewers, so the parent's values land directly. The mapping is open-ended — wire each --fresco-* to whatever your design system exposes (CSS custom properties, fixed colors, theme tokens, anything that resolves to a CSS color).
<Fresco.viewer
id="photo"
src={~p"/uploads/photo.jpg"}
class="w-full h-[80vh] rounded"
theme={:inherit}
/>Example: daisyUI tokens. Each --fresco-* maps to a daisyUI theme token; flipping daisyUI's data-theme on <html> flips Fresco's palette automatically.
.fresco-viewer[data-fresco-theme="inherit"] {
--fresco-bg: var(--color-base-100);
--fresco-grid-dot: var(--color-base-300);
--fresco-nav-bg: var(--color-neutral);
--fresco-nav-bg-hover: var(--color-base-content);
--fresco-nav-fg: var(--color-neutral-content);
--fresco-nav-focus: var(--color-primary);
}Example: bare colors. No design system required — just pin each --fresco-* to whatever you want. Useful if you only have one viewer or want a one-off palette.
.fresco-viewer[data-fresco-theme="inherit"] {
--fresco-bg: #1a1a2e;
--fresco-grid-dot: rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.08);
--fresco-nav-bg: #16213e;
--fresco-nav-bg-hover: #0f3460;
--fresco-nav-fg: #e94560;
--fresco-nav-focus: #f8b400;
}The [data-fresco-theme="inherit"] selector matches Fresco's other theme branches at specificity 20, so any override at this selector always wins.
Use it as a foundation for extensions
Fresco publishes each live viewer to window.Fresco.viewerFor(domId). Peer libraries (Tessera for deep zoom, future Etcher for annotations, etc.) look up the handle and attach without forking the viewer.
// In another LiveView hook on the same page:
window.Fresco.onViewerReady("photo", function(handle) {
// Coordinate adapters
handle.imageToScreen({x: 100, y: 50});
handle.screenToImage({x: 800, y: 400});
// Viewport
handle.getViewportBounds();
handle.fitBounds(rect, /* immediately */ true);
// Swap the source while preserving the user's zoom/pan
handle.swapSourcePreservingBounds("/path/to/new-source");
// Subscribe to viewer events
const unsub = handle.on("zoom", function(e) { /* … */ });
});Source providers
Override Fresco's default "treat the URL as a plain image" behavior for specific URL patterns:
window.Fresco.registerSourceProvider(
function(url) { return url.toLowerCase().endsWith(".dzi"); },
function(url) { return url; } // OSD takes a DZI URL directly
);This is how Tessera (the deep-zoom layer that builds on Fresco) attaches: it registers a .dzi source provider so DZI manifests automatically trigger tile loading.
Family of packages
Fresco is the foundation. Related published packages:
tessera— deep zoom for very high-resolution images via DZI tile pyramids. Built on Fresco.- Etcher (planned) — annotation + markup tools (drawing, arrows, text, comment threads on regions of an image). Will build on Fresco.
You can use Fresco entirely on its own; you don't need any of the related packages.
License
MIT — see LICENSE.