Generate Palette
Create random color schemes or start from a base color.
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Click any color to copy HEX code
Generate unlimited color palettes for your designs
HEX
#667EEA
RGB
102, 126, 234
Brightness
Light
HEX
#764BA2
RGB
118, 75, 162
Brightness
Dark
HEX
#F093FB
RGB
240, 147, 251
Brightness
Light
HEX
#4FACFE
RGB
79, 172, 254
Brightness
Light
HEX
#43E97B
RGB
67, 233, 123
Brightness
Light
Pro Tip
Use the 60-30-10 rule: 60% dominant color, 30% secondary, 10% accent. This creates balanced, professional designs.
Create random color schemes or start from a base color.
Fine-tune hues, saturation, and brightness.
Copy HEX, RGB, or HSL values for your project.
Color Palette Generator is structured so you can move from inputs to defensible outputs without hunting for hidden options. Step 1 (“Generate Palette”): Create random color schemes or start from a base color. Step 2 (“Adjust Colors”): Fine-tune hues, saturation, and brightness. Step 3 (“Export Codes”): Copy HEX, RGB, or HSL values for your project. Following that sequence reduces rounding drift: you lock the scenario first, then layer refinements (tax mode, compounding frequency, activity tier, or niche multiplier) only after baseline numbers look sensible. When you revisit a calculation weeks later, the same order of operations makes spreadsheets and screenshots easier to reconcile with what the UI showed.
Effective color palettes use complementary, analogous, or triadic color relationships. Understanding color psychology helps create emotionally resonant designs.
Revisit Color Palette Generator whenever baseline assumptions shift—rates, calendars, population denominators, or hardware targets. The numbers you export today become the audit trail that makes tomorrow’s decision defensible to teammates, clients, or regulators reviewing your methodology.
Developer utilities sit on a narrow ledge between convenience and trust. Encoding, formatting, and random generation should happen with predictable algorithms: Base64 maps octets to a 64-character alphabet with padding rules defined in RFC 4648; JSON validation must respect Unicode escapes and duplicate-key semantics expected by your downstream parser. Password generators should draw from cryptographically secure randomness where available, but you should still prefer a dedicated password manager for high-value secrets. Because PureUnits runs these flows in your browser, payloads are not intentionally stored on our servers—yet you remain responsible for shoulder-surfing, compromised devices, and clipboard history. When handling PII or regulated data, run tools on air-gapped machines or internal builds that match your security review checklist.
Seasoned users pair the in-app insight—“Use the 60-30-10 rule: 60% dominant color, 30% secondary, 10% accent. This creates balanced, professional designs.”—with external checks specific to their industry. For Color Palette Generator, treat that guidance as a hypothesis: note the assumption, measure the delta against real-world data you trust, and update defaults when your own history disagrees with generic benchmarks. Documenting those adjustments is what turns a quick answer into a repeatable workflow your team can audit.
Three adjacent tools from the same workflow—open in a new tab mentally, same privacy model here.
Good palettes have appropriate contrast, harmonious relationships, and suit the project's mood and purpose.
Limit palettes to 3-5 colors: primary, secondary, accent, and neutral shades. More colors can create visual chaos.
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