Updated on: April 08, 2018

With Gatsby.js, it's pretty easy to get a static site up and running with one of their starter templates. The gatsby-starter-blog (https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog) demonstrates how a Gatsby static site can function with blog posts written in markdown files. There is a list of blog posts on the homepage, but it would be nice to see a featured image with each post. Let's dive into the gatsby-starter-blog and associate a featured or cover image to a markdown post.

Start by installing the gatsby-starter-blog official starter.

gatsby new gatsby-blog https://github.com/gatsbyjs/gatsby-starter-blog cd gatsby-blog gatsby develop

Open up your browser and head to http://localhost:8000/ to see the starter Gatsby site. You can see three blog posts on the homepage, but no images are associated with them. Let's fix that!

Exploring the file structure and plugins

First, let's explore how this site is working right now. If we look at the file structure of this site, it looks like this:

Gatsby Starter Blog File Structure

We can see that all the blog posts live in the /src/pages directory, in their own separate folder. There is an image in the hello-world post, but that is not a featured image that we can query on the homepage. The index.js that's in /src/pages is the React component for the homepage.

If we open up gatsby-config.js , we can see the plugins used for processing the /src/pages directory:

plugins : [ { resolve : ` gatsby-source-filesystem ` , options : { path : ` ${ __dirname } /src/pages ` , name : 'pages' , } , } , { resolve : ` gatsby-transformer-remark ` , options : { plugins : [ { resolve : ` gatsby-remark-images ` , options : { maxWidth : 590 , } , } , { resolve : ` gatsby-remark-responsive-iframe ` , options : { wrapperStyle : ` margin-bottom: 1.0725rem ` , } , } , 'gatsby-remark-prismjs' , 'gatsby-remark-copy-linked-files' , 'gatsby-remark-smartypants' , ] , } , } , ` gatsby-transformer-sharp ` , ` gatsby-plugin-sharp ` ,

The first plugin is gatsby-source-filesystem and the path of /src/pages is added there as an option. This is telling Gatsby to look in that directory and make the files there available to query in GraphQL.

Since our markdown files are in there, the second plugin, gatsby-transformer-remark, will parse the markdown files into usable data nodes for GraphQL.

The last two plugins, gatsby-transformer-sharp and gatsby-plugin-sharp, are what we'll need later to process and query our featured images.

Adding a featured image to a blog post

Open up the markdown file for the latest blog post, titled "New Beginnings" here /src/pages/hi-folks/index.md . At the top, you'll see some info for the post, known as "frontmatter"

--- title: New Beginnings date: '2015-05-28T22:40:32.169Z' ---

Here we see the title of the post and the date published. We can add a path to our featured image here like so:

--- title: New Beginnings date: '2015-05-28T22:40:32.169Z' featuredImage: './featured-image.jpg' ---

Head over to https://unsplash.com/ and download a free stock image, saving it as featured-image.jpg in our post directory /src/pages/hi-folks .

Since we're here, might as well add images to the other two posts. *Update* - You'll actually need a featuredImage for all of your posts right now, or else you'll get an error Cannot read property 'childImageSharp' of null when trying to render your page.

Go ahead and download two more images, save them in the other two blogs at /src/pages/hello-world and /src/pages/my-second-post . Make sure to save all the images with the name featured-image.jpg Open up their respective index.md files and add featuredImage: "./featured-image.jpg" to the frontmatter. Double check your image names and make sure they match what's in your frontmatter!

You can always save the images under a different name, just make sure your frontmatter reflects this.

Displaying the featured image in the homepage query

In order to display our new featured image, we're going to install a Gatsby React component called gatsby-image. From the terminal, let's stop our gatsby develop process and then install the gatsby-image component:

yarn add gatsby-image

Check out my previous post about gatsby-image to learn more about it.

Open up the homepage component at /src/pages/index.js . If we go to the bottom of this React component, we'll see the GraphQL query:

export const pageQuery = graphql ` query IndexQuery { site { siteMetadata { title } } allMarkdownRemark(sort: { fields: [frontmatter___date], order: DESC }) { edges { node { excerpt fields { slug } frontmatter { date(formatString: "DD MMMM, YYYY") title } } } } } ` ;

Under the allMarkdownRemark field, you'll see the frontmatter data we looked at earlier. We will add the featuredImage field here just below the title, so your query now looks like this:

export const pageQuery = graphql ` query IndexQuery { site { siteMetadata { title } } allMarkdownRemark(sort: { fields: [frontmatter___date], order: DESC }) { edges { node { excerpt fields { slug } frontmatter { date(formatString: "DD MMMM, YYYY") title featuredImage { childImageSharp { sizes(maxWidth: 630) { ...GatsbyImageSharpSizes } } } } } } } } ` ;

The childImageSharp part is using the two Gatsby sharp plugins we mentioned earlier to process the images. ...GatsbyImageSharpSizes is from the gatsby-image component we installed earlier, you can learn more about the different image types available from the official gatsby-image page. Since our featured image will be fluid, we are using the sizes option with a maxWidth of 630px to match our content's container.

Let's start up gatsby-develop again and add our image. Up at the top of /src/pages/index.js , we'll import the gatsby-image component right below the Bio component:

import Bio from '../components/Bio' ; import Img from 'gatsby-image' ; import { rhythm } from '../utils/typography' ;

In our posts.map() function, we'll add the <Img /> component right below the <h3> and pass it the props for sizes. Your return() statement should now look like this:

return ( < div > < Helmet title = { siteTitle } /> < Bio /> { posts . map ( ( { node } ) => { const title = get ( node , 'frontmatter.title' ) || node . fields . slug ; return ( < div key = { node . fields . slug } > < h3 style = { { marginBottom : rhythm ( 1 / 4 ) } } > < Link style = { { boxShadow : 'none' } } to = { node . fields . slug } > { title } </ Link > </ h3 > < Img sizes = { node . frontmatter . featuredImage . childImageSharp . sizes } /> < small > { node . frontmatter . date } </ small > < p dangerouslySetInnerHTML = { { __html : node . excerpt } } /> </ div > ) ; } ) } </ div > ) ;