+++ title = "Creating a theme" weight = 30 +++ Creating is exactly like creating a normal site with Gutenberg, except you will want to use many [Tera blocks](https://tera.netlify.com/docs/templates/#inheritance) to allow users to easily modify it. ## Getting started As mentioned, a theme is just like any site: start with running `gutenberg init MY_THEME_NAME`. The only thing needed to turn that site into a theme is to add `theme.toml` configuration file with the following fields: ```toml name = "my theme name" description = "A classic blog theme" license = "MIT" homepage = "https://github.com/Keats/gutenberg-hyde" # The minimum version of Gutenberg required min_version = "0.4.0" # An optional live demo URL demo = "" # Any variable there can be overriden in the end user `config.toml` # You don't need to prefix variables by the theme name but as this will # be merged with user data, some kind of prefix or nesting is preferable # Use snake_casing to be consistent with the rest of Gutenberg [extra] # The theme author info: you! [author] name = "Vincent Prouillet" homepage = "https://vincent.is" # If this is porting a theme from another static site engine, provide # the info of the original author here [original] author = "mdo" homepage = "http://markdotto.com/" repo = "https://www.github.com/mdo/hyde" ``` A simple theme you can use as example is [Hyde](https://github.com/Keats/hyde). ## Working on a theme As a theme is just a site, you can simply use `gutenberg serve` and make changes to your theme, with live reloading working as expected. Make sure to commit every directory (including `content`) in order for other people to be able to build the theme from your repository. ### Caveat Please note that [include paths](https://tera.netlify.com/docs/templates/#include) can only be used in normal templates. Theme templates should use [macros](https://tera.netlify.com/docs/templates/#macros) instead. ## Submitting a theme to the gallery If you want your theme to be featured in the [themes](./themes/_index.md) section of this site, the theme will require two more things: - `screenshot.png`: a screenshot of the theme in action with a max size of around 2000x1000 - `README.md`: a thorough README explaining how to use the theme and any other information of importance The first step is to make sure the theme is fulfilling those three requirements: - have a `screenshot.png` of the theme in action with a max size of around 2000x1000 - have a thorough `README.md` explaining how to use the theme and any other information of importance - be of reasonably high quality When your theme is ready, you can submit it to the [themes repository](https://github.com/Keats/gutenberg-themes) by following the process in the README.