@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen
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0.0.2 • Public • Published

Gatsby-image next generation

Speedy, optimized images without the work.

gatsby-image is a React component specially designed to give your users a great image experience. It combines speed and best practices. You can use any image processing library that you want. We suggest using gatsby-plugin-sharp as your image processor. Saving images locally improves the important health metrics for your site.

Note: gatsby-image is not a drop-in replacement for . It's optimized for fixed width/height images and images that stretch the full-width of a container. You can build your own Gatsby-Image with the utilities we export from this package.

Table of Contents

Problem

Large, unoptimized images dramatically slow down your site.

But creating optimized images for websites has long been a thorny problem. Ideally you would:

  • Resize large images to the size needed by your design.
  • Generate multiple smaller images so smartphones and tablets don't download desktop-sized images.
  • Strip all unnecessary metadata and optimize JPEG and PNG compression.
  • Efficiently lazy load images to speed initial page load and save bandwidth.
  • Use the "blur-up" technique or a "traced placeholder" SVG to show a preview of the image while it loads.
  • Hold the image position so your page doesn't jump while images load.

Doing this consistently across a site feels like a task that can never be completed. You manually optimize your images and then… several images are swapped in at the last minute or a design-tweak shaves 100px of width off your images.

Most solutions involve a lot of manual labor and bookkeeping to ensure every image is optimized.

This isn't ideal. Optimized images should be easy and the default.

Solution

With Gatsby, we can make images way way better.

@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen is designed to work seamlessly with Gatsby's native image processing capabilities powered by GraphQL and Sharp. To produce perfect images, you need only:

  1. Import { GatsbyImage } from "@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen" and use it in place of the built-in img.
  2. Write a GraphQL query with all necessary fields needed by @wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen.

The GraphQL query creates multiple thumbnails with optimized JPEG and PNG compression. The @wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen component automatically sets up the "blur-up" effect as well as lazy loading of images further down the screen.

Install

npm install --save @wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen

Depending on the gatsby starter you used, you may need to include gatsby-transformer-sharp and gatsby-plugin-sharp as well, and make sure they are installed and included in your gatsby-config.

npm install --save gatsby-transformer-sharp gatsby-plugin-sharp

Then in your gatsby-config.js:

plugins: [
  `gatsby-transformer-sharp`,
  `gatsby-plugin-sharp`,
  `@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen`,
];

Also, make sure you have set up a source plugin, so your images are available in graphql queries. For example, if your images live in a project folder on the local filesystem, you would set up gatsby-source-filesystem in gatsby-config.js like so:

const path = require(`path`);

module.exports = {
  plugins: [
    {
      resolve: `gatsby-source-filesystem`,
      options: {
        name: `images`,
        path: path.join(__dirname, `src`, `images`),
      },
    },
    `gatsby-plugin-sharp`,
    `gatsby-transformer-sharp`,
    `@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen`,
  ],
};

How to use

This is what a component using @wardpeet/gatsby-image looks like:

// TODO We don't have proper Fragments yet so this isn't user friendly yet
import * as React from 'react';
import { graphql } from 'gatsby';
import { GatsbyImage } from '@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen';

export default ({ data }) => (
  <div>
    <h1>Hello gatsby-image</h1>
    <GatsbyImage
      placeholder={{ fallback: data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.fallback }}
      images={{
        fallback: {
          src: data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.src,
          srcSet: data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.srcSet,
        },
        sources: [
          {
            src: data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.srcWebp,
            srcSet: data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.srcSetWebp,
            type: 'image/webp',
          },
        ],
      }}
      width={data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.width}
      height={data.file.childImageSharp.fixed.height}
      layout="fixed"
      alt="my gatsby image"
    />
  </div>
);

export const query = graphql`
  query {
    file(relativePath: { eq: "blog/avatars/kyle-mathews.jpeg" }) {
      childImageSharp {
        # Specify the image processing specifications right in the query.
        # Makes it trivial to update as your page's design changes.
        fixed(width: 125, height: 125) {
          fallback: base64
          width
          height
          src
          srcSet
          srcWebp
          srcSetWebp
        }
      }
    }
  }
`;

Upgrading from the gatsby-image@2

You can use the compat layer to make the transformation easier.

import React from 'react';
import { graphql } from 'gatsby';
import { GatsbyImage } from 'gatsby-image/compat';

export default ({ data }) => (
  <div>
    <h1>Hello gatsby-image</h1>
    <GatsbyImage fixed={data.file.childImageSharp.fixed} />
  </div>
);

export const query = graphql`
  query {
    file(relativePath: { eq: "blog/avatars/kyle-mathews.jpeg" }) {
      childImageSharp {
        # Specify the image processing specifications right in the query.
        # Makes it trivial to update as your page's design changes.
        fixed(width: 125, height: 125) {
          ...GatsbyImageSharpFixed
        }
      }
    }
  }
`;

Two types of responsive images

There are two types of responsive images supported by gatsby-image.

  1. Images that have a fixed width and height
  2. Images that stretch across a fluid container

In the first scenario, you want to vary the image's size for different screen resolutions -- in other words, create retina images.

For the second scenario, you want to create multiple sizes of thumbnails for devices with widths stretching from smartphone to wide desktop monitors.

To decide between the two, ask yourself: "do I know the exact size this image will be?" If yes, it's the first type. If no and its width and/or height need to vary depending on the size of the screen, then it's the second type.

In Gatsby's GraphQL implementation, you query for the first type by querying a child object of an image called fixed — which you can see in the sample component above. For the second type, you do a similar query but for a child object called fluid.

@wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen props

Name Type Description
placeholder object Object holding the placeholder image
placeholder.fallback string Source for the image
images array List of different image sources (WebP, ...)
images.fallback object
images.fallback.src string The image src if srcset is not supported
images.fallback.srcSet string
images.fallback.sizes string
images.sources array List of different image sources (WebP, ...)
images.sources[].srcSet string
images.sources[].sizes string
images.sources[].type string
images.sources[].media string
layout string "fixed", "responsive" or "intrinsic" are values for layout.
alt string Passed to the img element. Defaults to an empty string
width number Width of the image
height number Height of the image
as React Component The component that wraps the Gatsby Image.

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Install

npm i @wardpeet/gatsby-image-nextgen

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Version

0.0.2

License

MIT

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Collaborators

  • wardpeet