Palette from Base Color
Generate a full palette from a single base color.
Complementary
Base plus its opposite hue (+180°).
#00CAE0#E01600Analogous
Neighbouring hues, ±30° around the base.
#00E087#00CAE0#005AE0Triadic
Three hues evenly spaced 120° apart.
#00CAE0#E000CA#CAE000Tetradic
A rectangle of four hues: +60°, +180°, +240°.
#00CAE0#1600E0#E01600#CAE000Split-complementary
Base with the two hues either side of its complement.
#00CAE0#E0005A#E08700How to use Palette from Base Color
What this tool does
The Palette from Base Color generator takes one colour and instantly expands it into every classic colour harmony. Instead of opening a colour wheel and measuring angles by hand, you pick a base colour and the tool lays out five complete schemes — complementary, analogous, triadic, tetradic and split-complementary — each as a labelled row of copyable swatches. It is a fast way to explore where a single brand or accent colour can go, and to compare the mood of different harmonic relationships before committing to one.
Each harmony is generated by rotating the base hue around the colour wheel in HSL space while holding saturation and lightness steady. That keeps the whole palette feeling consistent: the colours differ in hue but share the same energy and tone, which is exactly what makes a harmony work.
Use cases
In web and UI design, start from a primary brand colour and read off the complementary hue for call-to-action buttons, or use the analogous row for a calm, low-contrast section background. For branding, a triadic scheme gives you a vivid, balanced trio for a logo and its supporting marks. Illustrators and digital artists can lift a tetradic set for a scene that needs warm and cool colours in tension. When building a design system, the split-complementary row is a reliable way to find a secondary accent that contrasts with your primary without the harshness of a direct complement. Marketers and hobbyists putting together slide decks, posters or social graphics can grab a coherent set of colours in seconds.
How to use it
- Pick your base colour with the native colour picker, or type a HEX value
such as
#00C8E0into the text field — the two stay in sync. - Review the five harmony rows. Each is labelled and described, with the exact degree offsets noted so you can see how it was derived.
- Click the copy icon on any swatch to copy that single HEX code.
- Use a row’s Copy row button to grab a whole scheme, or Copy all colours to export every unique colour at once.
- Adjust the base colour at any time — every row recalculates live.
Tips
Pick a base colour with moderate saturation and a mid-range lightness; very dark or very pale starting points produce harmonies whose members look almost identical because rotating the hue of a near-grey colour barely changes it. Complementary pairs are high-energy and best used sparingly — reserve the opposite hue for accents rather than large fills. Analogous schemes are the safest for large areas and gradients because the colours sit close together. If a triadic or tetradic set feels overwhelming, treat one colour as dominant and the others as accents rather than giving them equal space. For accessible text, always check the contrast of any two colours you pair for foreground and background — harmony does not guarantee legibility.
Related techniques
Once you have a palette, fine-tune individual colours by adjusting their lightness and saturation to build tints and shades — a monochromatic ramp from each harmony colour gives you the full set of UI states (hover, active, disabled). Convert any swatch between HEX, RGB, HSL and other formats with a colour converter when you need a specific notation for CSS or a design tool. If your project has accessibility requirements, run the foreground and background pairs through a contrast checker against WCAG AA and AAA thresholds. For a deeper look at a single relationship, the dedicated complementary, analogous, triadic, tetradic and monochromatic tools let you tweak angles and step counts beyond the fixed values used here.
Frequently asked questions
Which colour harmonies does this tool generate?
How are the harmony colours calculated?
Is my colour data sent anywhere?
Can I copy individual swatches or whole rows?
Why do some schemes share colours?
Related tools
Complementary Color Finder
Find the complementary color for any hue.
Analogous Color Scheme
Build an analogous color scheme from any base.
Triadic Color Scheme
Generate a balanced triadic color scheme.
Tetradic Color Scheme
Generate a four-color tetradic harmony.
Monochromatic Color Scheme
Build a monochromatic scheme from one hue.
Random Palette Generator
Generate curated random color palettes.