Colormind is a color scheme generator that uses deep learning. It can learn color styles from photographs, movies, and popular art.
Different datasets are loaded each day, check back tomorrow for even more color inspiration. Visit the
blog for tech info or have a look at our
API
Paper Mario+
Taken from the in-game assets of the original Paper Mario on Nintendo 64, this dataset has the classic Nintendo look - bright blues, greens and reds.
Amélie+
A classic film with a very specific color palette. Heavy on reds and greens with virtually no cool colors.
Castlevania+
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night is a cult classic Playstation 1 title. Featuring vampires, demons and other monsters, it has a somewhat dark palette that leans toward warmer colors.
Architecture+
Photos of cityscapes and architecture have relatively mild colors, with darker blues, greys and browns as the main color components. Great for a somber, serious look.
Keep in touch
Sign up to our mailing list for news and announcements related to Colormind
Usage tips
If no colors are locked Colormind will generate color palettes at random.
If you have a specific starting color in mind, pick that color and lock it. The location of the color does matter, so experiment with different placements.
If you have two complementary colors, try placing them at the opposite ends of the palette. Colormind will tend to generate nice intermediate values.
If you want more variety try placing contrasting colors closer together, colormind will then tend to create triadic and other more complex color schemes.