Gatsby Theme Insta Grid

yarn add @melanienolan/gatsby-theme-insta-grid

Oh hey!

If you want to add a grid of Instagram images to your Gatsby site, you're in the right place.

Gatsby Theme Insta Grid gives you a customisable grid component to easily add a collection of images from either an Instagram account or hashtag to your site.

Check out the docs here.

You can add a basic grid:

Or a complex grid:

Hello. Us again. First things first: you’re doing great. Keep it up. Here, we even got you something.⁣
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This is the brightest supernova remnant in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a galaxy rich in gas and dust orbiting the Milky Way. Called N49, the supernova formed when a massive star used up all its hydrogen and exploded, sending an interstellar shockwave. Deep within these wisps is the star’s remaining core, a dense neutron star spinning at one revolution every eight seconds. By the time you read this sentence, the tiny star will have spun 3.5 times.⁣
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The image combines data from our Chandra X-ray Telescope (blue colors) and our Spitzer Space Telescope (red colors). Enjoy this image of the cosmos. You deserve it. Because hey now: you’re an all-star.⁣ 🌟 ⁣

Credit: NASA/CXC/STScI/JPL-Caltech/UIUC/Univ. of Minn.⁣
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#feelgood #supernova #universe #space #nasa #workit
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Behold: the California Nebula. Do you see a long, narrow shape resembling the Golden State?⁣
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This infrared image was captured by our Spitzer Space Telescope on Jan. 25, 2020, just five days before Spitzer officially ended its mission. The red and blue bands on either side of the image represent two different wavelengths of light; the gray area shows both wavelengths. ⁣
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This nebula is located about 1,000 light-years from Earth. The visible light comes from gas in the nebula being heated by a nearby, extremely massive star known as Xi Persei, or Menkib. Spitzer's infrared view reveals a different feature: warm dust, with a consistency similar to soot, that is mixed in with the gas. The dust absorbs visible and ultraviolet light from nearby stars and then re-emits the absorbed energy as infrared light.⁣
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Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech⁣
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#nebula #infrared #universe #california #nasa⁣
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The old and the new, in perfect harmony.⁣
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This dreamy, swirling spiral of stars is an image of galaxy NGC 2906 captured by @NASAHubble. The blue speckles seen scattered across the galaxy are clusters of massive, young stars, which emit hot, blue-tinged radiation as they rapidly burn through their fuel. The swaths of orange are a mix of older stars that have swollen and cooled, and low-mass stars that were never especially hot to begin with. Because of their lower temperatures, these stars emit cooler, reddish radiation. ⁣
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Regardless of their age, temperature or tint, one thing's for sure: their beauty radiates for all the universe to see -- just like yours does ✨ ⁣
Image Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Filippenko⁣
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#galaxy #nasa #feelgoodcontent #hubble #space #stars #universe #telescope⁣ ⁣ #outerspace
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On May 27 we launch into a new era of human spaceflight.

We launch for the first time in 9 years from American soil, with American Astronauts on an American rocket. We launch together with our partners at @SpaceX as part of our Commercial Crew Program. We #LaunchAmerica.

Pictured here is SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft that will carry @nasaastronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to the @iss. It will lift off on a Falcon 9 rocket, from Launch Complex 39A in Florida, for the Demo-2 mission, the final flight test for SpaceX. The mission will validate our partner's crew capabilities to return American spaceflight from American soil since the end of the space shuttle program so that we can continue preparing our #Artemis missions to the Moon -- and beyond.

#letsdothis #crewdragon #spacex #nasa
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Catching heat in Saturn’s atmosphere 🪐A mystery that’s unravelling … ⁣
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This false-color composite image, constructed from data obtained by our Cassini spacecraft, shows the glow of auroras streaking out about 1,000 kilometers or 600 miles from the cloud tops of Saturn's south polar region.⁣
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The upper layers in the atmospheres of gas giants — Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus and Neptune — are hot, just like Earth's. But unlike Earth, the Sun is too far from these outer planets to account for the high temperatures. ⁣
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New analysis of Cassini’s data finds a viable explanation for what's keeping the upper layers of Saturn, and possibly the other gas giants, so hot: auroras at the planet's north and south poles. Electric currents, triggered by interactions between solar winds and charged particles from Saturn's moons, spark the auroras and heat the upper atmosphere.⁣
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Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASI/University of Arizona/University of Leicester⁣
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#Saturn #NowYouKnow #Planets #Science #NASA #SolarSystem⁣
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Home safe and sound. 🌏⁣
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Andrew Morgan and Jessica Meir of @NASAAstronauts and Oleg Skripochka of @Roscosmos are safely back on Earth from their stay on board the International Space Station (@ISS), after their Soyuz spacecraft landed in Kazakhstan at 1:16 a.m. EDT this morning. ⁣
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Today's landing wraps up a 205-day mission for both @Astro_Jessica and Oleg Skripochka and a 272-day mission for @AstroDrewMorgan. ⁣
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Jessica and Drew will self-isolate at our Johnson Space Center before reuniting with their families. We're so glad to have you back. ⁣
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Image Credit: NASA ⁣
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#HomeSweetHome #NASA #Touchdown #WelcomeHome ⁣
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Caption this. Here, we’ll give you some context:
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Pictured here is Apollo 13 commander Jim Lovell making final preparations to jettison the Lunar Module that ended up not making it to the Moon. Fifty years ago, on April 11, 1970, Lovell and his two crewmates Jack Swigert and Fred Haise launched on the third lunar landing mission. But soon they would have a problem. An exploded oxygen tank on the spacecraft’s service module caused carbon dioxide to build up in the crew cabin. To save energy, the crew shut off the spacecraft’s fuel cells. They were coasting in space – cold and alone. But thanks to duct tape, hoses and ingenuity, teams at Mission Control helped the crew devise a system that would scrub the toxic gas so they could come home. ⁣
Why is this photo blurry? The #Hasselblad camera for this shot was intended for lunar surface photography. But hey – a space pic is a space pic, arewerite? ⁣
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Tonight we're premiering our Apollo 13 documentary "Home Safe" at 8pm ET on nasa.gov. Watch with us!⁣
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Credit: NASA⁣
Scan courtesy: Apollo Lunar Surface Journal/Kipp Teague ⁣
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#Apollo13 #crafty #problemsolved #NASAatHome #nasa #space
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"Houston, we've had a problem."⁣
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It was a mission burdened with problems from the beginning. But failure was not an option. Today marks the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 13 mission’s oxygen tank explosion which derailed the nation’s third attempt to land on the Moon.⁣
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The explosion nearly left astronauts Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert and Fred Haise stranded in space. Fighting to keep their spacecraft alive, they raced against the clock alongside Mission Control. To save power, the crew shut down several critical systems -- including heat. Quickly, their Apollo spacecraft became an igloo. Water condensed onto the computer displays and switches. Toxic levels of carbon dioxide filled the spacecraft cabin. Thankfully, ingenuity, teamwork and cool heads brought the crew home to a safe splashdown in the Pacific Ocean on April 18, 1970. What could have been a tale of tragedy turned into a tale of triumph. ⁣
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We remember the lessons of Apollo 13 as we prepare our return to the Moon under our #Artemis program. Houston, we're going back. This time, to stay. ⁣
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Image Credit: NASA⁣
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#Apollo #NASA #Apollo13 #OTD #SuccessStories #Moon
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It truly is amazing what humans are capable of. 👏You’re looking at three space travelers lifting off atop a Soyuz rocket. ⁣
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At 4:05 a.m. EDT, crew members Chris Cassidy (@Astro_Seal) of @NASAAstronuats and Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner of the Russian space agency @roscosmosofficial launched on their way to the @iss. They arrived at the space station at 10:13 a.m. EDT where they will work and live until October of this year. ⁣
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The next time you see our astronauts launching to space, they will be lifting off right from @NASAKennedy in Florida as part of our Commercial Crew Program. This will be a big day for us and the country, so get excited! ⁣
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Image Credit: NASA/GCTC/Andrey Shelepin⁣
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#NASA #LiftOff #Incredible #AstronautLife #Space #PhotographyOfTheDay
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This spiral galaxy captured by @NASAHubble may look serene and peaceful as it swirls in the vast, silent emptiness of space, but don’t be fooled — it keeps a violent secret. It is believed that this galaxy consumed another smaller galaxy to become the large and beautiful spiral that we observe today.

#galaxy #nasa #hubble #secret
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Find someone who looks at you the way @Astro_Seal looks at Earth 😍 ⁣
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At 4:05 a.m. EDT tomorrow, Chris Cassidy of @NASAAstronauts will launch alongside crewmates Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner of the Russian space agency @roscosmosofficial to the @ISS. This will be Cassidy’s third trip to the orbital lab, and he says he will be savoring every minute of it. ⁣
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🚀 Early risers and night owls, unite! And tune into launch coverage starting at 3 a.m. EDT. ⁣
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📺 nasa.gov/live ⁣
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Image Credit: NASA⁣
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#RocketLaunch #NASA #EarthPics #NavySeals #RelationshipGoals⁣
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Sometimes... there’s more than meets the eye. 👀 Swipe to reveal two very different takes on an iconic image. ⁣
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In the first image, researchers revisited one of @NASAHubble's most popular sights: the Eagle Nebula’s Pillars of Creation. Here, the pillars are seen in infrared light, which pierces through obscuring dust and gas and unveil a more unfamiliar — but just as amazing — view of the pillars. ⁣
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The entire frame is peppered with bright stars and baby stars are revealed being formed within the pillars themselves. Swipe left to view the same image in visible light.⁣
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Image Credit: NASA, ESA/Hubble and the Hubble Heritage Team⁣
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#NASA #PillarsOfCreation #Suprises #Swipe #Universe⁣
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© Melanie Nolan 2020