New! Now on
iPhone & iPad
Gnome app icon — a friendly purple-hatted gnome holding a chat bubble

Gnome

A tiny Mac menubar app for sending animated GIFs anywhere you can type. Hit a keyboard shortcut, search a GIF, paste it. Day better. World improved.

The truest thing about animated GIFs is that they are a critical pillar of modern human communication, and yet getting one into a Slack message or an iMessage thread or an email reply usually requires opening a browser, navigating to a website, searching, right-clicking, copying, switching back, pasting, and apologizing for the delay. By then the moment has passed, and the joke is dead, and what was the point of any of this, really?

Gnome lives in your Mac’s menubar. You hit a keyboard shortcut. A little search window appears. You type what you’re looking for — weird al, shrug, nailed it, that’s a paddlin’ — and a grid of GIFs appears. Click the one you want. It’s now on your clipboard. Paste it wherever you were typing. Joke saved. World improved.

That’s really the whole app. It does exactly that, and it gets out of the way. No account. No sign-in. No newsletter. Just GIFs, faster.

Oh, and: Gnome also handles your local GIF library, if you have one. Search it, tag it, organize it — the stash of GIFs you’ve been hoarding in a folder somewhere becomes actually useful. Even better: Gnome uses Apple’s built-in vision tech to analyze the frames of every animation in your library, so you can search for text that actually appears inside the GIFs themselves. Type don't call me Shirley, and there’s your Airplane GIF, no matter what you named the file.

And there’s a built-in GIF Creator, because sometimes the internet hasn’t yet produced the GIF you need. Drop in a background image, type something bold on top, throw in a flurry of animated emoji sparkles, sprinkle some confetti if the moment calls for it — then copy the finished GIF straight to your clipboard. Same paste-it-anywhere flow as everything else, except this time the GIF is one you just invented. You will become insufferable about this. That’s fine.

Wait, why is the app called Gnome? Because that’s how I pronounce the “G” in “GIF.”

The app is $7 to unlock everything forever. Go ahead and grab it.

Otherwise: after five minutes of unpaid use, the app will only ever return GIFs featuring “Weird Al” Yankovic or Rick Astley. Which is, depending on your perspective, either a steep penalty or a generous gift. Your call.

The whole app, basically
The Gnome menubar window showing a search for ‘Weird Al’ with a grid of matching GIF thumbnails
Searching for “Weird Al” in the menubar. As one does.
Now with a GIF Creator
Gnome’s GIF Creator window: a background photo of someone scooping ice cream with the text ‘Creating GIFs is fun!’ overlaid, plus a sidebar of controls for font, style, animation, emoji sparkles, and a confetti effect, ending in a big purple Copy GIF button
Type, sparkle, confetti.
The resulting animated GIF: the ice-cream photo with ‘Creating GIFs is fun!’ in bold text, gold party-emoji sparkles bouncing around, and confetti raining down
Copy. Paste. Done.
Pick a background, add words, add nonsense.
Out comes a GIF that nobody else on earth ever saw.
Lives in your menubar
No app to switch to. No browser tab to lose. Hit your keyboard shortcut, the gnome appears, you do your business, the gnome disappears.
Click → clipboard → done
Click a GIF and it’s on your clipboard, ready to paste into Slack, Messages, Mail, Notes, or any other app that accepts an image.
Search that finds the bit
Powered by Klipy, which has a wonderfully comprehensive library of the GIFs you’re actually thinking of.
Built for VoiceOver

Gnome is properly accessible. The whole interface is keyboard-navigable, every GIF in the results is labeled with its title and caption for VoiceOver, and there are dedicated commands to copy just a GIF’s title or just its caption to your clipboard. Useful for screen reader users, and also for the times when sharing what a GIF says works better than sharing the GIF itself.