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Images, fonts, and assets

Components often rely on images, videos, fonts, and other assets to render as the user expects. There are many ways to use these assets in your story files.

Import assets into stories

You can import any media assets by importing (or requiring) them. It works out of the box with our default config. But, if you are using a custom webpack config, you’ll need to add the file loader to handle the required files.

Afterward, you can use any asset in your stories:

MyComponent.stories.ts|tsx
import React from 'react';
 
import imageFile from './static/image.png';
 
import { Meta } from '@storybook/react';
 
export default {
  /* πŸ‘‡ The title prop is optional.
  * See https://storybook.js.org/docs/6/configure#configure-story-loading
  * to learn how to generate automatic titles
  */
  title: 'img',
} as Meta;
 
const image = {
  src: imageFile,
  alt: 'my image',
};
 
export const WithAnImage = () => <img src={image.src} alt={image.alt} />;

Serving static files via Storybook Configuration

We recommend serving static files via Storybook to ensure that your components always have the assets they need to load. We recommend this technique for assets that your components often use, like logos, fonts, and icons.

Configure a directory (or a list of directories) where your assets live when starting Storybook. Use thestaticDirs configuration element in your main Storybook configuration file (i.e., .storybook/main.js) to specify the directories:

.storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
  stories: [],
  addons: [],
  staticDirs: ['../public'],
};

Here ../public is your static directory. Now use it in a component or story like this.

MyComponent.stories.ts|tsx
import React from 'react';
 
import imageFile from './static/image.png';
 
import { Meta } from '@storybook/react';
 
export default {
  /* πŸ‘‡ The title prop is optional.
  * See https://storybook.js.org/docs/6/configure#configure-story-loading
  * to learn how to generate automatic titles
  */
  title: 'img',
} as Meta;
 
const image = {
  src: imageFile,
  alt: 'my image',
};
// Assume image.png is located in the "public" directory.
export const WithAnImage = () => <img src="/image.png" alt="my image" />;

You can also pass a list of directories separated by commas without spaces instead of a single directory.

.storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
  stories: [],
  addons: [],
  staticDirs: ['../public', '../static'],
};

Or even use a configuration object to define the directories:

.storybook/main.js
module.exports = {
  staticDirs: [{ from: '../my-custom-assets/images', to: '/assets' }],
};

[⚠️ Deprecated] Serving static files via Storybook CLI

Using --static-dir or -s option with Storybook CLI is deprecated. It is recommended to use Storybook static directory configuration option instead.

Reference assets from a CDN

Upload your files to an online CDN and reference them. In this example, we’re using a placeholder image service.

MyComponent.stories.ts|tsx
import React from 'react';
 
import { Meta } from '@storybook/react';
 
export default {
  /* πŸ‘‡ The title prop is optional.
  * See https://storybook.js.org/docs/6/configure#configure-story-loading
  * to learn how to generate automatic titles
  */
  title: 'img',
} as Meta;
 
export const WithAnImage = () => <img src="https://place-hold.it/350x150" alt="My CDN placeholder" />;

Absolute versus relative paths

Sometimes, you may want to deploy your Storybook into a subpath, like https://example.com/storybook.

In this case, you need to have all your images and media files with relative paths. Otherwise, the browser cannot locate those files.

If you load static content via importing, this is automatic, and you do not have to do anything.

Suppose you are serving assets in a static directory along with your Storybook. In that case, you need to use relative paths to load images or use the base element.