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customizing Chakra UI theme in a Gatsby project

So this is going to be my first post on DEV.to πŸŽ‰

In this article, I'm going to explain how to add your own custom themes to your Gatsby project.

TL;DR

  1. create a new file in src/gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui/theme.js
  2. import original theme from @chakra-ui/core & add your own properties
  3. restart server

prerequisites

  • gatsby project is set up
  • gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui is added to your project

If you haven't added the plugin yet, check out the docs on how to do so.

step 1: add a theme.js file

Create a a theme.js file under src/gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui/.
(Most likely you need add the gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui folder under src )

This will allow Gatsby to shadow the theme.js file.

Shadowing is a concept introduced by Gatsby so users can use their own themes.
What this does is that it replaces a file in the webpack bundle with a file in the src directory.
For example, if you have a plugin named gatsby-plugin-awesome and you want to replace awesomeFile.js with your own version, you would create a new file in src/gatsby-plugin-awesome/awesomeFile.js.
Then you can use your own version of awesomeFile.js in your project instead of the default version provided by the plugin.

This comment on Github Issues is also another explanation on shadowing.

step 2: edit theme.js

This is where we write our custom theme.

I'm going to add a custom color called "brandPurple" that has a value of "#673FB4".

First, we'll copy & paste the code from the plugin docs.

// src/gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui/theme.js
const theme = {};

export default theme;

This code is overwriting the default theme provided by the plugin with an empty theme.

⚠️ Don't try to run gatsby develop with this code yet; you're going to see a bunch of errors because the theme object is {}, and none of the previously available values can be accessed.

Next, we're going to add the default theme provided by Chakra UI to our custom theme.

// src/gatsby-plugin-chakra-ui/theme.js
import { theme as defaultTheme } from "@chakra-ui/core"

const theme = {
  ...defaultTheme
};

export default theme;

We rename theme as defaultTheme because we don't want names to clash for Chakra UI's theme with our own variable theme.

You can run gatsby develop with this code now, but you won't see any changes, because we haven't added anything to our theme yet.

Finally, we add our own "brandPurple" color like so:

// src/gatsby-plugin-awesome/theme.js
import { theme as defaultTheme } from "@chakra-ui/core"

const theme = {
  ...defaultTheme,
  colors: {
    ...defaultTheme.colors,
    brandPurple: "#673FB4",
  },
}

export default theme

final code

// src/gatsby-plugin-awesome/theme.js

import { theme as defaultTheme } from "@chakra-ui/core"

const theme = {
  ...defaultTheme,
  colors: {
    ...defaultTheme.colors,
    brandPurple: "#673FB4",
  },
}

export default theme

step 3: restart server

In order for the theme.js to shadow, we need to restart the server.
Go ahead and hit Ctrl+C (or other shortcut keys depending on your computer), and enter gatsby develop

At this point, we're all set and we can use our new "brandPurple" color just like any other theme colors provided by Chakra UI.

Here's an example test code.

// src/pages/testPage.js
import React from "react"
import { Box } from "@chakra-ui/core"

const TestPage = () => {
  <Box bg="brandPurple">
    here's the new color!
  </Box>
}

export default TestPage

see also: plugin docs, Chakra UI docs on custom themes

Feel free to leave a comment or hit me up on Twitter if you have any questions.

Top comments (2)

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stevanpopo profile image
StevanPopo

How to add Google Fonts in Gatsby with Chakra UI?

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nerdess profile image
Sissi Adamski

The shadowing seems a bit awkward, are you not supposed to pass the theme as prop to ?