Color Combinations
Pick a base color and harmony mode to generate a beautiful palette.
Color Harmony Guide
Understanding how different color schemes work together.
Analogic
Analogic color schemes use colors that are positioned next to each other on the color wheel. These palettes create harmony and balance because the colors naturally blend together. Analogic combinations are commonly found in nature, making them visually calming and easy to view.
Best used for soft, natural, and cohesive designs where a smooth transition between colors is important.
Monochrome
Monochrome color schemes are created using different shades, tones, and tints of a single color. This style creates a clean and unified appearance while maintaining visual consistency.
Monochrome palettes are excellent for minimalist layouts, professional branding, and modern user interfaces.
Monochrome Dark
Monochrome Dark palettes focus on deeper shades of a single color to create dramatic and bold visuals. Dark monochromatic designs often feel modern, elegant, and immersive.
These palettes are commonly used in gaming interfaces, luxury branding, cinematic themes, and dark mode applications.
Monochrome Light
Monochrome Light schemes use lighter variations of one color to create soft and airy visuals. These palettes feel clean, modern, and approachable while maintaining a simple and consistent appearance.
They work especially well for wellness brands, lifestyle websites, modern dashboards, and minimalist designs.
Complement
Complementary color schemes combine colors that sit opposite each other on the color wheel. This creates strong visual contrast and helps elements stand out dramatically.
Complement palettes are ideal for attention-grabbing designs, calls-to-action, logos, and vibrant marketing materials.
Analogic Complement
Analogic Complement schemes combine the harmony of neighboring colors with the contrast of a complementary color. This creates balanced palettes that are both visually interesting and easy to manage.
Designers often use this approach when they want colorful layouts without overwhelming the viewer.
Triad
Triadic color schemes use three colors that are evenly spaced around the color wheel. These palettes provide strong contrast while still maintaining balance and vibrancy.
Triad schemes are excellent for playful designs, creative branding, educational content, and energetic interfaces.
Quad
Quad color schemes use four colors evenly distributed around the color wheel. These palettes are rich, dynamic, and highly colorful, offering many possibilities for contrast and balance.
Quad schemes work best when one color is allowed to dominate while the others support the overall composition.