Umit Akcan@umitakcn · Designer, lives in 🇰🇷
There is no way to use these palettes :)
@umitakcn I know you'd have to skip through a lot to find one that will work :) What would you like to see in this tool that would make it more useful?
Umit Akcan@umitakcn · Designer, lives in 🇰🇷
@armi2n it would be more useful if last 3 colors were similar tones of first or second colors. First and second colors are main, others are different tones of main colors. Does it make sense?
@umitakcn absolutely, you are right. Maybe when I make those changes, I can make it onto design for startups ;)
Matt Bruno@mattrbruno
@armi2n @umitakcn While I think having logic to show colors that go together is preferable, perhaps a near term, easier to implement solution is allowing you to lock colors you do like so that it stays the same as you generate new colors (think Urban Spoon). You can slowly lock in colors as you go, until you arrive on 5 you really like and think go together.
Nick NM Yap@addlikefollow · CPO, ROCKI
@armi2n @umitakcn How about having some example palettes of known companies as starting point and making changes from there to find a new palette. Kinda like Pandora music, where u start with a known artist :)
@mattrbruno really love the idea 😄 solves the problem of using a particular color theory to algorithmically generate palettes and allows to discover colors on your own. Another idea is to allow the user to choose the amount of colors they'd like to have next to each other.
@addlikefollow hmm... Definitely something to think about. A starting point is probably very useful.