In this Showit design tutorial, we’ll walk you through how to build a stacking effect in Showit. It feels dynamic, layered, and editorial — but it’s surprisingly simple to build inside Showit once you know how the canvas settings work.
If you’ve been wanting to level up your Showit site with a photo-forward section that actually feels different — this tutorial is for you.
In the video below, I’ll walk you through the exact setup. But if you prefer to read (or want to reference this later), we’ve included written instructions, screenshots, and a free share key so you can explore it on your own time.
Let’s get into it.
This effect includes:
This photo stacking section is perfect for:
It adds movement without requiring animation or code. It feels high-design without being high effort.
Plus: it’s fully customizable, so you can plug in your own visuals and use it again and again.
This is the section you want visible behind all the stacking images—usually a headline or intro text.
In the canvas settings:
Window Height
Top on Scroll
0
(this ensures it sits behind everything else)This pins the canvas in place as other elements scroll over it.
For each image you want to appear as users scroll:
In the canvas settings:
Normal
Top on Scroll
1
(higher than the base canvas)Transparent
(this is crucial!)Why transparent? If you add a background color, it will block out your base canvas and ruin the layered effect. You want the image to feel like it’s floating in, not on a solid block.
This part is a bit of trial and error.
Pro Tip: Keep your key content (like text) in mind. You don’t want your stacked images overlapping anything important.
We recommend limiting the number of stacked images on mobile to avoid scroll fatigue. In our demo, we only kept the first three image canvases active on mobile.
On mobile:
Window Height
on some of the stacking canvases for added controlWhatever canvas comes after your stacking section (maybe an About section or gallery) needs a higher stacking order than your stacked images.
Set it to:
2
or higherIf not, you risk weird floaty layers sitting over your content later in the page. And nobody wants that.
It feels high impact, but it’s actually super simple once you understand how the settings work. Whether you’re building out your own site in Showit or piecing together a new Showit template, this effect adds just the right amount of movement and magic. Play around with it, make it yours — and if you haven’t already, grab the free share key above so you can see how it all comes together!
Psssst — want more canvases? Meet the Web Designer Library Membership.
Charis is the co-founder of Web Designer Library, a community-driven platform empowering business owners to scale with confidence and creativity.
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