Use align-items: flex-start
on the container, or align-self: flex-start
on the flex items.
No need for display: inline-flex
.
An initial setting of a flex container is align-items: stretch
. This means that flex items will expand to cover the full length of the container along the cross axis.
The align-self
property does the same thing as align-items
, except that align-self
applies to flex items while align-items
applies to the flex container.
By default, align-self
inherits the value of align-items
.
Since your container is flex-direction: column
, the cross axis is horizontal, and align-items: stretch
is expanding the child element’s width as much as it can. (The column
setting is also the reason why display: inline-flex
isn’t working.)
You can override the default with align-items: flex-start
on the container (which is inherited by all flex items) or align-self: flex-start
on the item (which is confined to the single item).
Learn more about flex alignment along the cross axis here:
- How does flex-wrap work with align-self, align-items and align-content?
Learn more about flex alignment along the main axis here:
- In CSS Flexbox, why are there no “justify-items” and “justify-self” properties?