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snyk/slack-gif-creator

snyk

slack-gif-creator

Knowledge and utilities for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack. Provides constraints, validation tools, and animation concepts. Use when users request animated GIFs for Slack like "make me a GIF of X doing Y for Slack."

globalComplete terms in LICENSE.txt
0installs0uses~1.9k
v1.0Saved May 2, 2026

Slack GIF Creator

A toolkit providing utilities and knowledge for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack.

Slack Requirements

Dimensions:

  • Emoji GIFs: 128x128 (recommended)
  • Message GIFs: 480x480

Parameters:

  • FPS: 10-30 (lower is smaller file size)
  • Colors: 48-128 (fewer = smaller file size)
  • Duration: Keep under 3 seconds for emoji GIFs

Core Workflow

from core.gif_builder import GIFBuilder
from PIL import Image, ImageDraw

# 1. Create builder
builder = GIFBuilder(width=128, height=128, fps=10)

# 2. Generate frames
for i in range(12):
    frame = Image.new('RGB', (128, 128), (240, 248, 255))
    draw = ImageDraw.Draw(frame)

    # Draw your animation using PIL primitives
    # (circles, polygons, lines, etc.)

    builder.add_frame(frame)

# 3. Save with optimization
builder.save('output.gif', num_colors=48, optimize_for_emoji=True)

Drawing Graphics

Working with User-Uploaded Images

If a user uploads an image, consider whether they want to:

  • Use it directly (e.g., "animate this", "split this into frames")
  • Use it as inspiration (e.g., "make something like this")

Load and work with images using PIL:

from PIL import Image

uploaded = Image.open('file.png')
# Use directly, or just as reference for colors/style

Drawing from Scratch

When drawing graphics from scratch, use PIL ImageDraw primitives:

from PIL import ImageDraw

draw = ImageDraw.Draw(frame)

# Circles/ovals
draw.ellipse([x1, y1, x2, y2], fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)

# Stars, triangles, any polygon
points = [(x1, y1), (x2, y2), (x3, y3), ...]
draw.polygon(points, fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)

# Lines
draw.line([(x1, y1), (x2, y2)], fill=(r, g, b), width=5)

# Rectangles
draw.rectangle([x1, y1, x2, y2], fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)

Don't use: Emoji fonts (unreliable across platforms) or assume pre-packaged graphics exist in this skill.

Making Graphics Look Good

Graphics should look polished and creative, not basic. Here's how:

Use thicker lines - Always set width=2 or higher for outlines and lines. Thin lines (width=1) look choppy and amateurish.

Add visual depth:

  • Use gradients for backgrounds (create_gradient_background)
  • Layer multiple shapes for complexity (e.g., a star with a smaller star inside)

Make shapes more interesting:

  • Don't just draw a plain circle - add highlights, rings, or patterns
  • Stars can have glows (draw larger, semi-transparent versions behind)
  • Combine multiple shapes (stars + sparkles, circles + rings)

Pay attention to colors:

  • Use vibrant, complementary colors
  • Add contrast (dark outlines on light shapes, light outlines on dark shapes)
  • Consider the overall composition

For complex shapes (hearts, snowflakes, etc.):

  • Use combinations of polygons and ellipses
  • Calculate points carefully for symmetry
  • Add details (a heart can have a highlight curve, snowflakes have intricate branches)

Be creative and detailed! A good Slack GIF should look polished, not like placeholder graphics.

Available Utilities

GIFBuilder (core.gif_builder)

Assembles frames and optimizes for Slack:

builder = GIFBuilder(width=128, height=128, fps=10)
builder.add_frame(frame)  # Add PIL Image
builder.add_frames(frames)  # Add list of frames
builder.save('out.gif', num_colors=48, optimize_for_emoji=True, remove_duplicates=True)

Validators (core.validators)

Check if GIF meets Slack requirements:

from core.validators import validate_gif, is_slack_ready

# Detailed validation
passes, info = validate_gif('my.gif', is_emoji=True, verbose=True)

# Quick check
if is_slack_ready('my.gif'):
    print("Ready!")

Easing Functions (core.easing)

Smooth motion instead of linear:

from core.easing import interpolate

# Progress from 0.0 to 1.0
t = i / (num_frames - 1)

# Apply easing
y = interpolate(start=0, end=400, t=t, easing='ease_out')

# Available: linear, ease_in, ease_out, ease_in_out,
#           bounce_out, elastic_out, back_out

Frame Helpers (core.frame_composer)

Convenience functions for common needs:

from core.frame_composer import (
    create_blank_frame,         # Solid color background
    create_gradient_background,  # Vertical gradient
    draw_circle,                # Helper for circles
    draw_text,                  # Simple text rendering
    draw_star                   # 5-pointed star
)

Animation Concepts

Shake/Vibrate

Offset object position with oscillation:

  • Use math.sin() or math.cos() with frame index
  • Add small random variations for natural feel
  • Apply to x and/or y position

Pulse/Heartbeat

Scale object size rhythmically:

  • Use math.sin(t * frequency * 2 * math.pi) for smooth pulse
  • For heartbeat: two quick pulses then pause (adjust sine wave)
  • Scale between 0.8 and 1.2 of base size

Bounce

Object falls and bounces:

  • Use interpolate() with easing='bounce_out' for landing
  • Use easing='ease_in' for falling (accelerating)
  • Apply gravity by increasing y velocity each frame

Spin/Rotate

Rotate object around center:

  • PIL: image.rotate(angle, resample=Image.BICUBIC)
  • For wobble: use sine wave for angle instead of linear

Fade In/Out

Gradually appear or disappear:

  • Create RGBA image, adjust alpha channel
  • Or use Image.blend(image1, image2, alpha)
  • Fade in: alpha from 0 to 1
  • Fade out: alpha from 1 to 0

Slide

Move object from off-screen to position:

  • Start position: outside frame bounds
  • End position: target location
  • Use interpolate() with easing='ease_out' for smooth stop
  • For overshoot: use easing='back_out'

Zoom

Scale and position for zoom effect:

  • Zoom in: scale from 0.1 to 2.0, crop center
  • Zoom out: scale from 2.0 to 1.0
  • Can add motion blur for drama (PIL filter)

Explode/Particle Burst

Create particles radiating outward:

  • Generate particles with random angles and velocities
  • Update each particle: x += vx, y += vy
  • Add gravity: vy += gravity_constant
  • Fade out particles over time (reduce alpha)

Optimization Strategies

Only when asked to make the file size smaller, implement a few of the following methods:

  1. Fewer frames - Lower FPS (10 instead of 20) or shorter duration
  2. Fewer colors - num_colors=48 instead of 128
  3. Smaller dimensions - 128x128 instead of 480x480
  4. Remove duplicates - remove_duplicates=True in save()
  5. Emoji mode - optimize_for_emoji=True auto-optimizes
# Maximum optimization for emoji
builder.save(
    'emoji.gif',
    num_colors=48,
    optimize_for_emoji=True,
    remove_duplicates=True
)

Philosophy

This skill provides:

  • Knowledge: Slack's requirements and animation concepts
  • Utilities: GIFBuilder, validators, easing functions
  • Flexibility: Create the animation logic using PIL primitives

It does NOT provide:

  • Rigid animation templates or pre-made functions
  • Emoji font rendering (unreliable across platforms)
  • A library of pre-packaged graphics built into the skill

Note on user uploads: This skill doesn't include pre-built graphics, but if a user uploads an image, use PIL to load and work with it - interpret based on their request whether they want it used directly or just as inspiration.

Be creative! Combine concepts (bouncing + rotating, pulsing + sliding, etc.) and use PIL's full capabilities.

Dependencies

pip install pillow imageio numpy
Files6
6 files · 34.4 KB

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Overall Score

87/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

88

Quality

88

Clarity

88

Completeness

82

Summary

A toolkit for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack, providing dimension/color constraints, frame composition utilities, easing functions, and validation tools. Guides agents through building animations using PIL primitives (shapes, lines, gradients) and frame composition, with built-in optimization for emoji and message GIFs.

Detected Capabilities

PIL image creation and frame compositionGIF assembly with color quantization and frame deduplicationEasing functions for smooth motion (linear, ease_in, ease_out, bounce, elastic, back)GIF validation against Slack dimension and size requirementsGradient backgrounds and shape drawing utilities (circles, stars, polygons)Frame-level optimization for emoji and message GIF formatsAnimation concepts and motion design patterns

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

create slack gifanimate emoji gifgif for slackmake animated gifslack emoji animation

Risk Signals

INFO

File I/O operations (reading user-uploaded images, writing GIFs to disk)

core/gif_builder.py, core/validators.py, core/frame_composer.py (Image.open, Path.stat, imwrite)
INFO

Dependency imports from external packages (pillow, imageio, numpy)

core/*.py (from PIL import, import imageio, import numpy)
INFO

Filesystem path operations with user-provided paths

core/validators.py:validate_gif(), core/gif_builder.py:save()

Referenced Domains

External domains referenced in skill content, detected by static analysis.

www.apache.org

Use Cases

  • Create animated emoji GIFs for Slack (128x128) with built-in optimization
  • Build message GIFs (480x480) with smooth animations and easing effects
  • Optimize existing GIFs for Slack size and dimension constraints
  • Generate frame-by-frame animations using PIL drawing primitives
  • Apply animation concepts (bounce, fade, spin, zoom) to create polished GIFs

Quality Notes

  • Excellent documentation of Slack requirements (dimensions, FPS, colors) with clear examples upfront
  • Well-structured code in supporting files with comprehensive docstrings and type hints
  • Core workflow clearly illustrated with Python code example early in the skill
  • Animation concepts section is comprehensive, covering 8+ common patterns with implementation guidance
  • Drawing section clearly distinguishes between PIL primitives (recommended) vs emoji fonts (discouraged), managing expectations
  • Utility functions well-documented with parameter descriptions and return types
  • Clear philosophy section explaining what the skill does and does NOT provide (no templates, no emoji fonts)
  • Error handling in validators includes missing file detection and dimension validation
  • Easing functions include convenience mapping (EASING_FUNCTIONS dict) for easy lookup
  • GIFBuilder.save() includes informative console output with file size, dimensions, and frame count
  • Frame deduplication includes threshold parameter to preserve subtle animations vs aggressive removal
  • Optimization strategies section clearly delineates when to apply (only when asked for smaller file size)
  • Dependencies are minimal and well-chosen (pillow, imageio, numpy) with version constraints
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: May 2, 2026

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