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slack-gif-creator

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Slack GIF Creator - Flexible Toolkit

A toolkit for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack. Provides validators for Slack's constraints, composable animation primitives, and optional helper utilities. Apply these tools however needed to achieve the creative vision.

Slack's Requirements

Slack has specific requirements for GIFs based on their use:

Message GIFs:

  • Max size: ~2MB
  • Optimal dimensions: 480x480
  • Typical FPS: 15-20
  • Color limit: 128-256
  • Duration: 2-5s

Emoji GIFs:

  • Max size: 64KB (strict limit)
  • Optimal dimensions: 128x128
  • Typical FPS: 10-12
  • Color limit: 32-48
  • Duration: 1-2s

Emoji GIFs are challenging - the 64KB limit is strict. Strategies that help:

  • Limit to 10-15 frames total
  • Use 32-48 colors maximum
  • Keep designs simple
  • Avoid gradients
  • Validate file size frequently

Toolkit Structure

This skill provides three types of tools:

  1. Validators - Check if a GIF meets Slack's requirements
  2. Animation Primitives - Composable building blocks for motion (shake, bounce, move, kaleidoscope)
  3. Helper Utilities - Optional functions for common needs (text, colors, effects)

Complete creative freedom is available in how these tools are applied.

Core Validators

To ensure a GIF meets Slack's constraints, use these validators:

from core.gif_builder import GIFBuilder

# After creating your GIF, check if it meets requirements
builder = GIFBuilder(width=128, height=128, fps=10)
# ... add your frames however you want ...

# Save and check size
info = builder.save('emoji.gif', num_colors=48, optimize_for_emoji=True)

# The save method automatically warns if file exceeds limits
# info dict contains: size_kb, size_mb, frame_count, duration_seconds

File size validator:

from core.validators import check_slack_size

# Check if GIF meets size limits
passes, info = check_slack_size('emoji.gif', is_emoji=True)
# Returns: (True/False, dict with size details)

Dimension validator:

from core.validators import validate_dimensions

# Check dimensions
passes, info = validate_dimensions(128, 128, is_emoji=True)
# Returns: (True/False, dict with dimension details)

Complete validation:

from core.validators import validate_gif, is_slack_ready

# Run all validations
all_pass, results = validate_gif('emoji.gif', is_emoji=True)

# Or quick check
if is_slack_ready('emoji.gif', is_emoji=True):
    print("Ready to upload!")

Animation Primitives

These are composable building blocks for motion. Apply these to any object in any combination:

Shake

from templates.shake import create_shake_animation

# Shake an emoji
frames = create_shake_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '😱', 'size': 80},
    num_frames=20,
    shake_intensity=15,
    direction='both'  # or 'horizontal', 'vertical'
)

Bounce

from templates.bounce import create_bounce_animation

# Bounce a circle
frames = create_bounce_animation(
    object_type='circle',
    object_data={'radius': 40, 'color': (255, 100, 100)},
    num_frames=30,
    bounce_height=150
)

Spin / Rotate

from templates.spin import create_spin_animation, create_loading_spinner

# Clockwise spin
frames = create_spin_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '🔄', 'size': 100},
    rotation_type='clockwise',
    full_rotations=2
)

# Wobble rotation
frames = create_spin_animation(rotation_type='wobble', full_rotations=3)

# Loading spinner
frames = create_loading_spinner(spinner_type='dots')

Pulse / Heartbeat

from templates.pulse import create_pulse_animation, create_attention_pulse

# Smooth pulse
frames = create_pulse_animation(
    object_data={'emoji': '❤️', 'size': 100},
    pulse_type='smooth',
    scale_range=(0.8, 1.2)
)

# Heartbeat (double-pump)
frames = create_pulse_animation(pulse_type='heartbeat')

# Attention pulse for emoji GIFs
frames = create_attention_pulse(emoji='⚠️', num_frames=20)

Fade

from templates.fade import create_fade_animation, create_crossfade

# Fade in
frames = create_fade_animation(fade_type='in')

# Fade out
frames = create_fade_animation(fade_type='out')

# Crossfade between two emojis
frames = create_crossfade(
    object1_data={'emoji': '😊', 'size': 100},
    object2_data={'emoji': '😂', 'size': 100}
)

Zoom

from templates.zoom import create_zoom_animation, create_explosion_zoom

# Zoom in dramatically
frames = create_zoom_animation(
    zoom_type='in',
    scale_range=(0.1, 2.0),
    add_motion_blur=True
)

# Zoom out
frames = create_zoom_animation(zoom_type='out')

# Explosion zoom
frames = create_explosion_zoom(emoji='💥')

Explode / Shatter

from templates.explode import create_explode_animation, create_particle_burst

# Burst explosion
frames = create_explode_animation(
    explode_type='burst',
    num_pieces=25
)

# Shatter effect
frames = create_explode_animation(explode_type='shatter')

# Dissolve into particles
frames = create_explode_animation(explode_type='dissolve')

# Particle burst
frames = create_particle_burst(particle_count=30)

Wiggle / Jiggle

from templates.wiggle import create_wiggle_animation, create_excited_wiggle

# Jello wobble
frames = create_wiggle_animation(
    wiggle_type='jello',
    intensity=1.0,
    cycles=2
)

# Wave motion
frames = create_wiggle_animation(wiggle_type='wave')

# Excited wiggle for emoji GIFs
frames = create_excited_wiggle(emoji='🎉')

Slide

from templates.slide import create_slide_animation, create_multi_slide

# Slide in from left with overshoot
frames = create_slide_animation(
    direction='left',
    slide_type='in',
    overshoot=True
)

# Slide across
frames = create_slide_animation(direction='left', slide_type='across')

# Multiple objects sliding in sequence
objects = [
    {'data': {'emoji': '🎯', 'size': 60}, 'direction': 'left', 'final_pos': (120, 240)},
    {'data': {'emoji': '🎪', 'size': 60}, 'direction': 'right', 'final_pos': (240, 240)}
]
frames = create_multi_slide(objects, stagger_delay=5)

Flip

from templates.flip import create_flip_animation, create_quick_flip

# Horizontal flip between two emojis
frames = create_flip_animation(
    object1_data={'emoji': '😊', 'size': 120},
    object2_data={'emoji': '😂', 'size': 120},
    flip_axis='horizontal'
)

# Vertical flip
frames = create_flip_animation(flip_axis='vertical')

# Quick flip for emoji GIFs
frames = create_quick_flip('👍', '👎')

Morph / Transform

from templates.morph import create_morph_animation, create_reaction_morph

# Crossfade morph
frames = create_morph_animation(
    object1_data={'emoji': '😊', 'size': 100},
    object2_data={'emoji': '😂', 'size': 100},
    morph_type='crossfade'
)

# Scale morph (shrink while other grows)
frames = create_morph_animation(morph_type='scale')

# Spin morph (3D flip-like)
frames = create_morph_animation(morph_type='spin_morph')

Move Effect

from templates.move import create_move_animation

# Linear movement
frames = create_move_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '🚀', 'size': 60},
    start_pos=(50, 240),
    end_pos=(430, 240),
    motion_type='linear',
    easing='ease_out'
)

# Arc movement (parabolic trajectory)
frames = create_move_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '⚽', 'size': 60},
    start_pos=(50, 350),
    end_pos=(430, 350),
    motion_type='arc',
    motion_params={'arc_height': 150}
)

# Circular movement
frames = create_move_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '🌍', 'size': 50},
    motion_type='circle',
    motion_params={
        'center': (240, 240),
        'radius': 120,
        'angle_range': 360  # full circle
    }
)

# Wave movement
frames = create_move_animation(
    motion_type='wave',
    motion_params={
        'wave_amplitude': 50,
        'wave_frequency': 2
    }
)

# Or use low-level easing functions
from core.easing import interpolate, calculate_arc_motion

for i in range(num_frames):
    t = i / (num_frames - 1)
    x = interpolate(start_x, end_x, t, easing='ease_out')
    # Or: x, y = calculate_arc_motion(start, end, height, t)

Kaleidoscope Effect

from templates.kaleidoscope import apply_kaleidoscope, create_kaleidoscope_animation

# Apply to a single frame
kaleido_frame = apply_kaleidoscope(frame, segments=8)

# Or create animated kaleidoscope
frames = create_kaleidoscope_animation(
    base_frame=my_frame,  # or None for demo pattern
    num_frames=30,
    segments=8,
    rotation_speed=1.0
)

# Simple mirror effects (faster)
from templates.kaleidoscope import apply_simple_mirror

mirrored = apply_simple_mirror(frame, mode='quad')  # 4-way mirror
# modes: 'horizontal', 'vertical', 'quad', 'radial'

To compose primitives freely, follow these patterns:

# Example: Bounce + shake for impact
for i in range(num_frames):
    frame = create_blank_frame(480, 480, bg_color)

    # Bounce motion
    t_bounce = i / (num_frames - 1)
    y = interpolate(start_y, ground_y, t_bounce, 'bounce_out')

    # Add shake on impact (when y reaches ground)
    if y >= ground_y - 5:
        shake_x = math.sin(i * 2) * 10
        x = center_x + shake_x
    else:
        x = center_x

    draw_emoji(frame, '⚽', (x, y), size=60)
    builder.add_frame(frame)

Helper Utilities

These are optional helpers for common needs. Use, modify, or replace these with custom implementations as needed.

GIF Builder (Assembly & Optimization)

from core.gif_builder import GIFBuilder

# Create builder with your chosen settings
builder = GIFBuilder(width=480, height=480, fps=20)

# Add frames (however you created them)
for frame in my_frames:
    builder.add_frame(frame)

# Save with optimization
builder.save('output.gif',
             num_colors=128,
             optimize_for_emoji=False)

Key features:

  • Automatic color quantization
  • Duplicate frame removal
  • Size warnings for Slack limits
  • Emoji mode (aggressive optimization)

Text Rendering

For small GIFs like emojis, text readability is challenging. A common solution involves adding outlines:

from core.typography import draw_text_with_outline, TYPOGRAPHY_SCALE

# Text with outline (helps readability)
draw_text_with_outline(
    frame, "BONK!",
    position=(240, 100),
    font_size=TYPOGRAPHY_SCALE['h1'],  # 60px
    text_color=(255, 68, 68),
    outline_color=(0, 0, 0),
    outline_width=4,
    centered=True
)

To implement custom text rendering, use PIL's ImageDraw.text() which works fine for larger GIFs.

Color Management

Professional-looking GIFs often use cohesive color palettes:

from core.color_palettes import get_palette

# Get a pre-made palette
palette = get_palette('vibrant')  # or 'pastel', 'dark', 'neon', 'professional'

bg_color = palette['background']
text_color = palette['primary']
accent_color = palette['accent']

To work with colors directly, use RGB tuples - whatever works for the use case.

Visual Effects

Optional effects for impact moments:

from core.visual_effects import ParticleSystem, create_impact_flash, create_shockwave_rings

# Particle system
particles = ParticleSystem()
particles.emit_sparkles(x=240, y=200, count=15)
particles.emit_confetti(x=240, y=200, count=20)

# Update and render each frame
particles.update()
particles.render(frame)

# Flash effect
frame = create_impact_flash(frame, position=(240, 200), radius=100)

# Shockwave rings
frame = create_shockwave_rings(frame, position=(240, 200), radii=[30, 60, 90])

Easing Functions

Smooth motion uses easing instead of linear interpolation:

from core.easing import interpolate

# Object falling (accelerates)
y = interpolate(start=0, end=400, t=progress, easing='ease_in')

# Object landing (decelerates)
y = interpolate(start=0, end=400, t=progress, easing='ease_out')

# Bouncing
y = interpolate(start=0, end=400, t=progress, easing='bounce_out')

# Overshoot (elastic)
scale = interpolate(start=0.5, end=1.0, t=progress, easing='elastic_out')

Available easings: linear, ease_in, ease_out, ease_in_out, bounce_out, elastic_out, back_out (overshoot), and more in core/easing.py.

Frame Composition

Basic drawing utilities if you need them:

from core.frame_composer import (
    create_gradient_background,  # Gradient backgrounds
    draw_emoji_enhanced,         # Emoji with optional shadow
    draw_circle_with_shadow,     # Shapes with depth
    draw_star                    # 5-pointed stars
)

# Gradient background
frame = create_gradient_background(480, 480, top_color, bottom_color)

# Emoji with shadow
draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '🎉', position=(200, 200), size=80, shadow=True)

Optimization Strategies

When your GIF is too large:

For Message GIFs (>2MB):

  1. Reduce frames (lower FPS or shorter duration)
  2. Reduce colors (128 → 64 colors)
  3. Reduce dimensions (480x480 → 320x320)
  4. Enable duplicate frame removal

For Emoji GIFs (>64KB) - be aggressive:

  1. Limit to 10-12 frames total
  2. Use 32-40 colors maximum
  3. Avoid gradients (solid colors compress better)
  4. Simplify design (fewer elements)
  5. Use optimize_for_emoji=True in save method

Example Composition Patterns

Simple Reaction (Pulsing)

builder = GIFBuilder(128, 128, 10)

for i in range(12):
    frame = Image.new('RGB', (128, 128), (240, 248, 255))

    # Pulsing scale
    scale = 1.0 + math.sin(i * 0.5) * 0.15
    size = int(60 * scale)

    draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '😱', position=(64-size//2, 64-size//2),
                       size=size, shadow=False)
    builder.add_frame(frame)

builder.save('reaction.gif', num_colors=40, optimize_for_emoji=True)

# Validate
from core.validators import check_slack_size
check_slack_size('reaction.gif', is_emoji=True)

Action with Impact (Bounce + Flash)

builder = GIFBuilder(480, 480, 20)

# Phase 1: Object falls
for i in range(15):
    frame = create_gradient_background(480, 480, (240, 248, 255), (200, 230, 255))
    t = i / 14
    y = interpolate(0, 350, t, 'ease_in')
    draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '⚽', position=(220, int(y)), size=80)
    builder.add_frame(frame)

# Phase 2: Impact + flash
for i in range(8):
    frame = create_gradient_background(480, 480, (240, 248, 255), (200, 230, 255))

    # Flash on first frames
    if i < 3:
        frame = create_impact_flash(frame, (240, 350), radius=120, intensity=0.6)

    draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '⚽', position=(220, 350), size=80)

    # Text appears
    if i > 2:
        draw_text_with_outline(frame, "GOAL!", position=(240, 150),
                              font_size=60, text_color=(255, 68, 68),
                              outline_color=(0, 0, 0), outline_width=4, centered=True)

    builder.add_frame(frame)

builder.save('goal.gif', num_colors=128)

Combining Primitives (Move + Shake)

from templates.shake import create_shake_animation

# Create shake animation
shake_frames = create_shake_animation(
    object_type='emoji',
    object_data={'emoji': '😰', 'size': 70},
    num_frames=20,
    shake_intensity=12
)

# Create moving element that triggers the shake
builder = GIFBuilder(480, 480, 20)
for i in range(40):
    t = i / 39

    if i < 20:
        # Before trigger - use blank frame with moving object
        frame = create_blank_frame(480, 480, (255, 255, 255))
        x = interpolate(50, 300, t * 2, 'linear')
        draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '🚗', position=(int(x), 300), size=60)
        draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '😰', position=(350, 200), size=70)
    else:
        # After trigger - use shake frame
        frame = shake_frames[i - 20]
        # Add the car in final position
        draw_emoji_enhanced(frame, '🚗', position=(300, 300), size=60)

    builder.add_frame(frame)

builder.save('scare.gif')

Philosophy

This toolkit provides building blocks, not rigid recipes. To work with a GIF request:

  1. Understand the creative vision - What should happen? What's the mood?
  2. Design the animation - Break it into phases (anticipation, action, reaction)
  3. Apply primitives as needed - Shake, bounce, move, effects - mix freely
  4. Validate constraints - Check file size, especially for emoji GIFs
  5. Iterate if needed - Reduce frames/colors if over size limits

The goal is creative freedom within Slack's technical constraints.

Dependencies

To use this toolkit, install these dependencies only if they aren't already present:

pip install pillow imageio numpy

Source

git clone https://github.com/ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills/blob/master/slack-gif-creator/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Slack GIF Creator is a toolkit for building animated GIFs tailored to Slack's constraints. It provides validators to ensure size, dimensions, and color limits, a library of composable animation primitives (shake, bounce, spin, pulse), and helper utilities for common tasks. Use it to deliver engaging, upload-ready Slack GIFs or emoji animations from descriptive prompts like 'make me a GIF for Slack of X doing Y'.

How This Skill Works

You compose frames using animation primitives, then run the Slack validators to verify size, dimensions, color counts, and duration before saving. The typical workflow uses GIFBuilder to assemble frames, followed by checks like check_slack_size, validate_dimensions, and validate_gif, finishing with is_slack_ready to confirm upload readiness. Optional helpers optimize for emoji use, colors, and effects to meet Slack's constraints.

When to Use It

  • You need a Message GIF that fits Slack's size and dimension limits (approx. 2 MB, 480x480).
  • You are creating an Emoji GIF under the 64 KB limit with 128x128 dimensions.
  • You want to validate color count, frame count, and duration early in the workflow.
  • You want to compose complex motion using the Shake, Bounce, Spin, and Pulse primitives.
  • You’re turning a natural-language prompt (e.g., 'GIF for Slack of X doing Y') into an upload-ready Slack asset.

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Build frames using animation primitives (shake, bounce, spin, etc.) with GIFBuilder for your target size.
  2. Step 2: Save and validate with check_slack_size, validate_dimensions, and validate_gif, adjusting colors/dimensions as needed.
  3. Step 3: If Emoji GIF, ensure num_colors and frames meet Slack's emoji constraints; then upload when is_slack_ready returns true.

Best Practices

  • Start by identifying the target type (Message GIF vs Emoji GIF) and tailor size, dimensions, and duration to Slack's requirements.
  • For emoji GIFs, keep to 10-15 frames and 32-48 colors; avoid gradients and complex shading.
  • Validate file size, dimensions, and overall readiness early and as you iterate.
  • Prefer simple, clear designs and reuse animation primitives to minimize frames and code size.
  • Test the final GIF in a Slack context (emoji picker or message) to ensure readability and performance.

Example Use Cases

  • A Slack message GIF showing a user avatar completing a task with a 2–5 second duration.
  • An emoji-style GIF where the 'rocket' emoji spins and grows in place within 128x128, under 64 KB.
  • A subtle Shake animation applied to a word or icon to emphasize a point in a chat.
  • A Bounce sequence for a progress indicator in a Slack bot response.
  • A kaleidoscope-like ripple using simple motion primitives to create a playful Slack reaction.

Frequently Asked Questions

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