It's neat but it's terrible UX if you think about it. You hijack someone's scroll. A better solution is for the carousel to move automatically and have a column of smaller thumbnails next to it which the user can click on reloop te cycle from that point onwards. What this means is that the scroll function remains free and thus the user can scroll past the element to whatever is below it if this element isn't what they're after.
Awesome tutorial! I was struggling to get my head around scroll triggers, but this made it clear 🙏🏻
Super glad to hear that Jacques!
Amazing, thank you so much for sharing this technique and explaining the logic behind it. Really great explanation and visual aid!!
So easy to understand your videos. Keep it going mate 🎉
Awes! really like the explanation on the sticky position concept
Great video! Inspired me to try Framer again for real projects!
Awesome, glad to hear it.
This tutorial overdelivers. Great job!
Thanks for the kind words!
Amazing video, please keep it up❤❤
a video record screenshot so blur although i change 1080p, ya I hope in the next videos you will fix it, a video so great, keep going Daniel
Yeah, had some problems with Descripts screen capture. Won't happen again
Nice job mate
HI ! Excellent vidéo. Can you share the figma file please ?
Thank you so much!
amazing 🎉
Thx!
Pls, Share Remix File
It's neat but it's terrible UX if you think about it. You hijack someone's scroll. A better solution is for the carousel to move automatically and have a column of smaller thumbnails next to it which the user can click on reloop te cycle from that point onwards. What this means is that the scroll function remains free and thus the user can scroll past the element to whatever is below it if this element isn't what they're after.