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Workspace Status
Pick any tool from the shortcut bar below to start building a working palette flow.
Press spacebar to regenerate. Lock colors you want to keep, then move straight into shades, fixes, or brand system work.
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Color 1
Color 2
Color 3
Color 4
Color 5
Palette size
Add up to 8 colors. New colors join the same generation flow.
Harmony Score
73/100
Accessibility Score
36/100
Visual Balance
73/100
Move this result into the next tool instead of starting over.
Recommended Next Step
Build Shades
Expand this palette into usable ramps.
Ready For Handoff
Other Ways To Continue
Tool Guide
Use this page to find a promising starting direction quickly, then keep only the colors that deserve to survive into deeper refinement. It works best when you treat generation as selection, not as a one-click final answer.
Early-stage exploration for brand concepts, landing pages, dashboards, and product refreshes.
Generating several fast directions before choosing which route is worth developing into ramps, contrast checks, and a full system.
Start with a mode that matches the real context when possible. That usually produces stronger first-pass results than generating completely blind.
Lock only the hero or anchor colors you truly believe in. Leaving the rest flexible gives the generator room to improve the surrounding palette.
If the palette feels exciting but not stable, move it into Fix Palette. If the direction feels strong and you need more depth, continue into Shades or Brand System.
For a detailed walkthrough of selection, locking, and judging good palette structure, use the full resource guide below.
A palette generator is best used as an exploration tool, not as a replacement for design judgment. It helps you create several possible directions quickly so you can compare mood, hierarchy, and contrast potential before committing to one route.
The strongest results usually come from treating generation as a filtering process. Look for one color that can carry brand recognition, one support color that adds range, and at least one neutral or surface-friendly color that makes the set usable beyond a hero section.
A generated palette becomes more valuable when you pressure-test it immediately. Try the colors in a button, a page background, a card, and a text treatment. If the palette only looks good as isolated swatches, it still needs refinement before it can support a product interface.
Use generation when the team needs options and momentum before narrowing the design direction.
Do not treat a generated set as final until it has been tested in real UI roles and accessibility checks.
Move promising colors into Shades, Contrast, Fix Palette, or Brand System depending on what feels weak.