I actually developed something just like this some time ago.
The trick (or a trick) is to wrap your page an an iframe, and on the parent window, have a div element that fades into view when a page is requested, and fades out when the page loads.
The parent window looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>< Page1 ></title>
<style>
html, body{
font-family:helvetica;
}
#fade, iframe {
position:absolute;
left:0px;
top:0px;
width:100%;
height:100%;
border-width:0px;
z-index:-1;
opacity:0;
color:#AAA;
background-color:#FFF;
-webkit-transition: opacity 300ms;
-moz-transition: opacity 300ms;
-o-transition: opacity 300ms;
}
iframe {
opacity:1;
z-index:1;
background-color:#FFF;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="fade">
<h1>Loadin..</h1>
</div>
<iframe src="p1.html"></iframe>
<script>
var fade = document.getElementById("fade");
var iframe = document.getElementsByTagName("iframe")[0];
var t = null;
addEventListener("message", function(e) {
if(t!=null)clearTimeout(t);
fade.style.zIndex = "2";
t=setTimeout(function(){
fade.style.opacity = "1";
},0);
}, true);
iframe.addEventListener("load", function() {
if(t!=null)clearTimeout(t);
t=setTimeout(function(){
fade.style.opacity = "0";
},0);
document.title = iframe.contentWindow.document.title;
t=setTimeout(function(){
fade.style.zIndex = "-1";
},300);
}, true);
</script>
</body>
</html>
And the subpages would each have the following code:
<script>
function go() {
window.parent.postMessage("showLoadScreen", "*");
}
</script>
<a href="somepage.html" onclick="go()">somepage.html</a>
This code is a little different in that the fader doesn't pop up unless the requested resource is taking awhile to load. But, you get the idea.
Since the iframe only exists for visual purposes, it shouldn't cause any major problems. However, note that this code uses HTML5's postMessage API, and you may want to tweak it a bit.