welcome to your workspace

Add your brand colors — or generate new ones

Review contrast pairings instantly and save your favorites

Refine, harmonize, and export your final board | Full Guide

The Color Palette Lab™ | Your Brand Color Palette Builder

Choose or generate brand colors, check contrast, save favorites, then generate a shareable board.

Step 1
Add Your Brand Colors — or Generate New Ones ↑
Enter your hex values or use the picker. Tone nudges: use − / + to make a color darker or lighter. Rearrange ↑ ↓ as you please.
Step 2
Check Contrast Pairings
Check the box to save your favorite combos. Those become your “approved pairings” below.
Text
Background
Ratio
Status
Save
Step 3
Preview & Export
Optional: Save at least 1 favorite pairing in Step 2 to generate your preview + export.
Your Brand
Your Palette
Approved Pairings

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Color Palette Lab – Quick Beta Feedback

Found something confusing or buggy? This tool is evolving. Your feedback helps me refine it.

Positive feedback and testimonials are absolutely welcome too. Grateful!


How to Use This Tool

Choosing brand colors isn’t just about what looks pretty, it’s about what actually works in the real world. This tool helps you see how your colors behave together when they’re used for text, buttons, and backgrounds.

Here’s how to think about what you’re seeing as you work through it:


1. What “contrast” actually means

Contrast measures how easily text can be read against a background color.

Low contrast may look soft or aesthetic, but it can quickly become hard to read. This is especially true on mobile devices, in bright light, or for people with visual impairments.

Higher contrast = clearer, more accessible communication.


2. Understanding the standards (AA vs AAA)

You’ll see contrast scores and labels like Pass (AA) or Fail as you review pairings.

  • AA is the standard most professional brands aim for. It’s readable, accessible, and realistic for everyday use.
  • AAA is more strict and often best reserved for body text in long-form content, but it can be limiting for brand palettes.

This tool defaults to AA because it balances accessibility and design flexibility.


3. Normal text vs large text

Contrast requirements change depending on text size.

  • Normal text = body copy, paragraphs, navigation, small labels
  • Large text = headlines, big buttons, oversized type 24px+ or ~18+ if bold

Large text can pass contrast at lower ratios because it’s easier to read at scale. That’s why a pairing might fail for body text but still work beautifully for headings.


4. Why some beautiful combinations fail

A failing pairing doesn’t mean the colors are “bad.” It just means they aren’t suited for that specific role together.

Many palettes include:

  • colors meant for backgrounds
  • colors meant for accents
  • colors meant for text

This tool helps you discover how each color wants to be used.


5. Saving favorites

When you check a pairing as a favorite, you’re essentially saying:

“This is an approved, usable combination I feel confident using based on contrast ratios.” You can always uncheck them if you change your mind.

Only favorited pairings appear in your final brand preview and export.

Please note: Favorite pairings can only be saved at Step 2 Contrast Pairings.


6. The final palette preview

The preview at the bottom shows:

  • your full palette
  • example text and buttons
  • your approved color pairings in action

This becomes a visual reference you can screenshot, share, or use when designing your website, graphics, or brand assets.

Please note: Brand colors can only be added or removed at Step 1.

Contrast vs. Color Harmony (Because Yes, You Need Both)

Contrast ensures your colors are readable.
Harmony ensures they feel cohesive.

A palette can technically pass contrast standards and still feel off — too harsh, too busy, or visually exhausting. Harmony is what brings balance.


What makes colors feel harmonious?

Harmony usually comes from a mix of:

  • Shared undertones: Colors that lean warm or cool together tend to feel more natural when paired.
  • Value balance: Pairing light, medium, and dark colors gives your palette breathing room instead of visual clutter.
  • Intentional roles: Not every color needs to do everything. Some are best as backgrounds, some as accents, some as anchors.
  • Repetition: When a color shows up in multiple places (even subtly), it creates visual rhythm.

How this tool supports harmony

This tool doesn’t “score” harmony the way it does contrast — because harmony is contextual and intuitive.
Instead, it helps you:

  • See all of your colors together at once
  • Test how they behave in real UI examples (text, buttons, backgrounds)
  • Narrow your palette down to combinations that both work and feel right

When you save favorite pairings, you’re building a usable harmony system, not just a color list.


A helpful way to think about it

If contrast is about clarity, harmony is about comfort.
Great branding needs both.

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