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Gatsby Starter Sanity Homepage

Create a homepage using Gatsby and Sanity. This starter demonstrates how to use Sanity to build a homepage and can be customized to match your own visual branding.

View the Demo

Note: This version of the Sanity homepage starter is written in TypeScript. If you want to use Sanity but JavaScript is more your style, there is also a JavaScript version maintained on GitHub.

Quick start

You will need a Sanity account to use this starter. You can create a new account or use an existing one.

  1. Create a Gatsby site

    Use the Gatsby CLI to get started locally:

    npx gatsby new my-homepage https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-sanity-homepage-ts
  2. Set up Sanity Studio

    1. In the studio directory, install dependencies for Sanity Studio:

      yarn
    2. Create a new Sanity project by running:

      yarn sanity-init

      This will prompt you to log in if this is your first time using Sanity CLI.

    3. Deploy the Sanity GraphQL API for your new project:

      yarn deploy
    4. Optionally, to import the demo content for this starter run:

      yarn sanity-import
    5. Start the Sanity Studio development server to start editing content:

      yarn start
    6. In your Gatsby site's directory, to create .env.development and .env.production files with configuration for your Sanity project, run:

      yarn & yarn setup
  3. Start developing

    In your site directory, start the development server:

    yarn start

    Your site should now be running at http://localhost:8000

  4. Open the source code and start editing

Deploy your site

Once your content is available in Sanity, deploy your site to Gatsby Cloud:

  1. Push your local site to a new repo in either GitHub, GitLab, or Bitbucket
  2. Log into your Gatsby Cloud Dashboard and click on Add a site
  3. Use the Import from a Git repository option to find your site
  4. Add the environment variables from your .env.production file to Gatsby Cloud during setup
  5. Click Build site and your site should start building

For a more detailed walkthrough, see the tutorial on how to build your site with Gatsby Cloud.

Deploy without using the CLI

Alternatively, you can deploy this starter directly to Gatsby Cloud.

This repository uses the gatsby-provision convention to allow for automatic CMS content provisioning during the Deploy Now flow in Gatsby Cloud. After you Quick Connect Sanity to your site, you will be given the option to run the gatsby-provision script to populate the selected project and dataset with the site's associated content model and content.

Otherwise, you can always set up your content in Sanity manually before deploying to Gatsby Cloud.

Deploy to Gatsby

Setting up Gatsby Cloud Preview

To use Gatsby Cloud Preview with this site, see the documentation for Connecting to Sanity via Quick Connect.

What's included?

├── README.md
├── gatsby-config.js
├── gatsby-node.js
├── src
│   ├── components
│   ├── pages
│   ├── colors.css.ts
│   ├── styles.css.ts
│   └── theme.css.ts
└── .env.EXAMPLE
  1. gatsby-config.js: Gatsby config file that includes plugins required for this starter.
  2. gatsby-node.js: Gatsby Node config file that creates an abstract data model for the homepage content.
  3. src/: The source directory for the starter, including pages, components, and Vanilla Extract files for styling.

How to

Update the color theme

To update the colors used in this starter, edit the src/colors.css.ts file.

// src/colors.css.ts
export const colors = {
  background: "#f03e2f",
  text: "#000000",
  primary: "#000000",
  muted: "#f14e41",
  active: "#e6e6e6",
  black: "#000",
}

If you'd like to add additional colors, add additional keys to this object. This file is imported into src/theme.css.ts and creates CSS custom properties, that can be imported and used in other .css.ts files.

The UI components file src/components/ui.tsx imports styles from src/components/ui.css.ts. You can see how the theme and color values are being used in this file.

Add your logo

Logo

Replace the src/components/brand-logo.tsx component with your own brand logo. If you have an SVG version, it can be rendered inline as a React component, following the example in this file. Note that SVG attributes will need to be camel cased for JSX.

Using an inline SVG for the logo allows it to pick up the colors used in CSS, which is how the logo colors are inverted for the mobile menu.

If you prefer to use an image, use the StaticImage component from gatsby-plugin-image in place of the SVG in this file.

Customize headings, buttons, and other styles

Headings & Buttons

To further customize the look and feel of the homepage, edit the UI components in src/components/ui.tsx and styles in src/components/ui.css.ts.

Customize section components

To customize any of the sections of the homepage, edit the relevant component in src/components. Most of the styles for these components are handled with shared UI components in src/components/ui.tsx.

Create custom section components

To create a new type of section in your homepage, you'll want to create a new section component, using the existing components as an example. For this example, we'll create a new "Banner" component.

  1. First, update your schema in the Sanity Studio.

    1. In the studio directory, create a new file in the schema directory for your new section. For this example, name it homepageBanner.js

      // studio/schema/homepageBanner.js
      export default {
        name: "homepageBanner",
        title: "Homepage Banner",
        type: "document",
        fields: [
          { title: "Heading", name: "heading", type: "string" },
          { title: "Text", name: "text", type: "string" },
        ],
      }
    2. Add this module to the schema.

      // studio/schema/schema.js
      // ...
      import homepageBanner from "./homepageBanner"
      
      export default createSchema({
        name: "default",
        types: schemaTypes.concat([
          // ...
          homepageBanner,
        ]),
      })
    3. Add this new section type to the schema in studio/schema/homepage.js

      // studio/schema/homepage.js
      export default {
        name: "homepage",
        title: "Homepage",
        type: "document",
        fields: [
          { title: "Title", name: "title", type: "string" },
          { title: "Description", name: "description", type: "string" },
          { title: "Image", name: "image", type: "image" },
          {
            title: "Content",
            name: "content",
            type: "array",
            of: [
              {
                type: "reference",
                to: [
                  { type: "homepageHero" },
                  { type: "homepageFeature" },
                  { type: "homepageFeatureList" },
                  { type: "homepageCta" },
                  { type: "homepageLogoList" },
                  { type: "homepageTestimonialList" },
                  { type: "homepageBenefitList" },
                  { type: "homepageStatList" },
                  { type: "homepageProductList" },
                  // Add the new section
                  { type: "homepageBanner" },
                ],
              },
            ],
          },
        ],
      }
    4. In the studio directory, start Sanity Studio by running:

      yarn start
    5. Navigate to the Homepage and add a new section with this new Homepage Banner section.

    6. Deploy the updated GraphQL API by running:

      yarn deploy
  2. Update gatsby-node.js

    Edit your site's gatsby-node.js file, adding an interface for HomepageBanner that matches the schema in Sanity Studio. This allows the homepage to query the abstract HomepageBanner type.

    // in gatsby-node.js
    exports.createSchemaCustomization = async ({ actions }) => {
      // ...
      actions.createTypes(`
        interface HomepageBanner implements Node & HomepageBlock {
          id: ID!
          blocktype: String
          heading: String
          text: String
        }
      `)
      // ...
      actions.createTypes(`
        type SanityHomepageBanner implements Node & HomepageBanner & HomepageBlock @dontInfer {
          id: ID!
          blocktype: String @blocktype
          heading: String
          text: String
        }
      `)
      // ...
    }
  3. Next, create the Banner component:

    // src/components/banner.tsx
    import * as React from "react"
    import { graphql } from "gatsby"
    import { Section, Container, Heading, Text } from "./ui"
    
    export default function Banner(props) {
      return (
        <Section>
          <Container>
            <Heading>{props.heading}</Heading>
            <Text>{props.text}</Text>
          </Container>
        </Section>
      )
    }
    
    export const query = graphql`
      fragment HomepageBannerContent on HomepageBanner {
        id
        heading
        text
      }
    `
  4. Export the component from src/components/sections.tsx

    // src/components/sections.tsx
    export { default as HomepageHero } from "./hero"
    export { default as HomepageFeature } from "./feature"
    export { default as HomepageFeatureList } from "./feature-list"
    export { default as HomepageLogoList } from "./logo-list"
    export { default as HomepageBenefitList } from "./benefit-list"
    export { default as HomepageTestimonialList } from "./testimonial-list"
    export { default as HomepageStatList } from "./stat-list"
    export { default as HomepageCta } from "./cta"
    export { default as HomepageProductList } from "./product-list"
    
    // add export for new component
    export { default as HomepageBanner } from "./banner"
  5. Add the GraphQL query fragment to the query in src/pages/index.tsx

    // in src/pages/index.tsx
    export const query = graphql`
      {
        homepage {
          id
          title
          description
          image {
            id
            url
          }
          blocks: content {
            id
            blocktype
            ...HomepageHeroContent
            ...HomepageFeatureContent
            ...HomepageFeatureListContent
            ...HomepageCtaContent
            ...HomepageLogoListContent
            ...HomepageTestimonialListContent
            ...HomepageBenefitListContent
            ...HomepageStatListContent
            ...HomepageProductListContent
            # New component fragment
            ...HomepageBannerContent
          }
        }
      }
    `

Troubleshooting

Errors after making changes to the schema

If you've made changes to the gatsby-node.js file or changes to the Sanity data model, clear the Gatsby cache before running the develop server:

yarn clean && yarn start

🎓 Learning Gatsby

Looking for more guidance? Full documentation for Gatsby lives on the website. Here are some places to start:

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