Blog post Open Graph Image Template
A clean article card with your headline, summary, and author byline.
A clean article card with your headline, summary, and author byline.
Every Open Graph image template is included with Basic and Pro. Pick a plan to copy the code, install with the CLI, and download the raw SVG.
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Use the Blog post template when you want every article on your site to ship a share card that looks designed without anyone opening a design tool. It leads with the headline, backs it up with a one line summary, and closes with an author byline and your blog address, the three things a reader scans before deciding to click through from a feed.
This template is a metadata image route for the Next.js App Router. The file exports size, contentType, and alt values plus a default async function that returns an ImageResponse. When a page in the segment is shared, satori converts the JSX into an SVG document, the runtime rasterizes that SVG into a 1200 by 630 PNG, and Next.js serves the result and wires the og:image and twitter:image tags into the page head automatically. The card is code all the way down, so real page data can flow straight into the artwork.
Install with the shadcn CLI using your Shadcn UI Blocks API key:
npx shadcn@latest add @shadcn-ui-blocks/og-image-blog-post
The file lands at app/opengraph-image.tsx, which makes it the site wide share card. For a blog you will usually move it into the post segment instead, for example app/blog/[slug]/opengraph-image.tsx. You can also copy the code from this page straight into your project.
The card renders text with Inter, read from assets/fonts at your project root with node:fs so the font files never ship to the browser. Download the latin woff files for weights 400, 500, 600, and 700 from Fontsource and save them as assets/fonts/inter-latin-400-normal.woff and so on.
Everything editable sits in the content object at the top of the file: the brand row, the category chip, the headline, the summary, and the byline. To generate a unique card per post, accept params in the default export, look up the post the same way the page does, and feed its frontmatter into the JSX. Headlines stay readable up to about two rendered lines; the summary is happiest under 140 characters.
satori supports a focused subset of CSS: flexbox layout only, flat colors, and an explicit display: flex on any element with multiple children. Keep those rules in mind if you rework the layout.