Awesome-omni-skill color-palette
Create distinctive, accessible color palettes for UI/web design that avoid generic AI aesthetics. Use when designing websites, applications, or any digital interface requiring thoughtful color selection. Provides curated domain-specific palettes, color theory guidance, accessibility validation, and strategies to break away from overused patterns (purple gradients, orange-teal combinations, generic tech blues). Includes contrast checkers, palette generators, and comprehensive reference materials organized by domain (Tech/SaaS, E-commerce, Healthcare, Finance, Creative, Food).
git clone https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/development/color-palette" ~/.claude/skills/diegosouzapw-awesome-omni-skill-color-palette-3e1760 && rm -rf "$T"
skills/development/color-palette/SKILL.mdColor Palette Creation
Overview
This skill helps create distinctive, accessible color palettes for UI and web design that stand out from generic AI-generated aesthetics. It provides color theory guidance, curated domain-specific examples, accessibility validation tools, and strategies to avoid overused patterns.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill when:
- Designing color palettes for websites, apps, or digital interfaces
- Users request color schemes for specific domains or industries
- Building design systems or style guides
- Ensuring accessibility compliance (WCAG AA/AAA)
- Breaking away from generic "AI-looking" designs
- Need validation of existing color choices
Workflow
Step 1: Understand Context and Requirements
Before selecting or generating colors, gather essential context:
Domain/Industry Questions:
- What industry or domain is this for? (Tech/SaaS, E-commerce, Healthcare, Finance, Creative, Food, etc.)
- What emotions or associations should the palette convey?
- Are there existing brand colors to work with or extend?
Technical Requirements:
- Light mode, dark mode, or both?
- Accessibility requirements? (WCAG AA minimum, AAA preferred)
- How many colors needed? (Typically: 1-2 primary, 1-2 secondary, 1-2 accents, full neutral scale, semantic colors)
Distinctiveness Goals:
- Should this avoid looking "AI-generated"?
- Any specific colors or combinations to avoid?
- Preference for warm vs cool tones?
Step 2: Select Base Approach
Choose one of these approaches based on the context:
Approach A: Domain-Specific Curated Palettes
When to use: Clear industry/domain, want proven effective combinations
Process:
- Read
focusing on the relevant domain sectionreferences/color-palette-ui-design-reference.md - Present 2-3 palette options from that domain
- Explain what makes each effective
- Adapt the chosen palette if needed
Example domains:
- Tech/SaaS: Trust & stability, Modern minimal, Professional dashboards, Dark mode
- E-commerce: Fashion, Beauty, Sports, Home, Luxury
- Healthcare: Calm professional, Soothing apps, Mental health/wellness
- Finance: Traditional banking, Modern fintech, Investment platforms
- Creative/Portfolio: Bold & modern, Minimalist, Artistic, Developer portfolios
- Food/Restaurant: Warm & appetizing, Delivery apps, Organic, Upscale
Approach B: Generate from Brand Color
When to use: Starting from existing brand color(s), need to build complete system
Process:
- Use
to create color scales:scripts/generate_palette.pypython scripts/generate_palette.py #3B82F6 scale - Generate harmonious colors using color theory:
python scripts/generate_palette.py #3B82F6 complementary python scripts/generate_palette.py #3B82F6 triadic python scripts/generate_palette.py #3B82F6 analogous - Validate contrast ratios (Step 3)
- Apply 60-30-10 rule (see reference document)
Approach C: Custom Palette from Inspiration
When to use: Need unique, distinctive palette; have specific inspiration sources
Process:
- If user provides inspiration (image, artwork, location), extract colors from that source
- Review "Common AI Design Pitfalls" section in references to avoid generic patterns
- Apply color harmony principles from reference document
- Use "Anti-AI Checklist" to ensure distinctiveness
- Validate accessibility (Step 3)
Step 3: Validate Accessibility
Always validate contrast ratios using the contrast checker script:
python scripts/check_contrast.py <foreground> <background> <text-size>
Examples:
# Check normal text on background python scripts/check_contrast.py #1A1A1A #FFFFFF normal # Check large text (headings) python scripts/check_contrast.py #4A4A4A #FFFFFF large # Check button contrast python scripts/check_contrast.py #FFFFFF #3B82F6 normal
Requirements:
- Normal text: 4.5:1 minimum (AA), 7:1 preferred (AAA)
- Large text (18pt+): 3:1 minimum (AA), 4.5:1 preferred (AAA)
- UI components (buttons, borders, icons): 3:1 minimum
If validation fails:
- Darken the foreground color
- Lighten the background color
- Use the palette generator to create darker/lighter shades
- Consider alternative color combinations
Step 4: Structure Complete Color System
Organize the palette following design system best practices:
Primary Colors
- Main brand identity (1-2 colors)
- Full scale (50-950 shades)
- Use for: Logo, primary buttons, active states
Secondary Colors
- Supporting brand colors (1-3 colors)
- Full or partial scale depending on usage
- Use for: Secondary buttons, icons, less prominent features
Accent Colors
- Attention-drawing colors (1-2 colors)
- Apply 60-30-10 rule: Use for only 10% of the design
- Use for: CTAs, highlights, badges, notifications
Neutral Colors
- Grays/neutrals for structure
- Full scale (50-950) required
- Use for: Text, backgrounds, borders, disabled states
Semantic/Functional Colors
- Success: Green shades
- Error: Red shades
- Warning: Yellow/Orange shades
- Info: Blue shades
Naming Convention:
Primitive tokens: blue-500, gray-100, red-700 Semantic tokens: background-surface-primary, text-body, button-primary-background
Step 5: Avoid AI Design Pitfalls
Before finalizing, review against the Anti-AI Checklist from the reference document:
Critical checks:
- NOT purple/blue gradients on white (unless brand-appropriate)
- NOT orange and teal combination
- NOT high-saturation gradients everywhere
- Includes context-specific colors (not generic)
- Has real-world inspiration source
- Reflects specific brand story or domain
- Uses unique shades, not default values
If any red flags appear, revise using:
- Nature-inspired gradients instead of purple-blue
- Muted accents instead of neon on dark
- Unexpected color combinations that still harmonize
- Industry-specific references from the curated palettes
Step 6: Present the Palette
Format the final palette clearly:
Primary Color - [Name] (#HEX) ├─ 50: #XXXXXX ├─ 100: #XXXXXX ├─ ... └─ 950: #XXXXXX Secondary Color - [Name] (#HEX) [Similar structure] Accent Color - [Name] (#HEX) [Similar structure] Neutral Colors - Gray (#HEX) [Full scale] Semantic Colors: ├─ Success: #XXXXXX (contrast: X.X:1) ├─ Error: #XXXXXX (contrast: X.X:1) ├─ Warning: #XXXXXX (contrast: X.X:1) └─ Info: #XXXXXX (contrast: X.X:1)
Include:
- Color names and hex values
- Contrast ratios for key combinations
- Usage guidance (what each color is for)
- Why this palette is effective for the domain
- How it avoids generic AI patterns
Quick Reference
Color Theory Harmonies
Complementary: Colors opposite on color wheel (high contrast, maximum tension) Analogous: Adjacent colors (harmonious, smooth, low contrast) Triadic: Three colors equally spaced (vibrant, balanced) Split-Complementary: Base + two adjacent to complement (high contrast, less tension)
For detailed explanations, see
references/color-palette-ui-design-reference.md → Color Theory Fundamentals
60-30-10 Rule
60% - Dominant color (backgrounds, main surfaces) 30% - Secondary color (cards, secondary surfaces) 10% - Accent color (CTAs, highlights, focal points)
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
- Purple/blue gradients - Most overused AI pattern
- Orange and teal - Instantly recognizable as AI-generated
- High-saturation everywhere - No visual rest
- Generic semantic colors - Standard blue/green/red without uniqueness
- Template thinking - Not considering specific context
Resources
scripts/check_contrast.py - Validate WCAG contrast ratios scripts/generate_palette.py - Generate color scales and harmonies references/color-palette-ui-design-reference.md - Comprehensive guide including:
- Color theory fundamentals
- Color psychology
- 60+ curated palette examples by domain
- Design system approaches (Material Design, Tailwind, Ant Design)
- Accessibility guidelines
- Anti-AI design strategies
Examples
Example 1: Tech SaaS Dashboard
User request: "Create a professional color palette for a B2B SaaS analytics dashboard"
Process:
- Read Tech/SaaS section from references
- Choose "Professional SaaS Dashboard" palette as base
- Validate contrast ratios
- Extend with full scales using generator
Output:
Primary: Professional Blue (#0072BB) ├─ Use for: Primary actions, active states, links └─ Contrast validated: 4.6:1 on white background ✓ Secondary: Dark Navy (#28324E) ├─ Use for: Headers, important text, secondary buttons └─ Contrast validated: 12.4:1 on white background ✓ Success: Soft Green (#77D38C) Warning: Amber (#F0AD4E) Error: Muted Red (#C1666B) Neutral: Blue-Gray scale (#B5BDD7 to #28324E) Why this works: - Calm blue conveys trust and professionalism - Muted semantic colors don't overwhelm data visualizations - Full blue-gray neutral scale maintains cohesive color temperature - Avoids purple-gradient cliche while staying professional
Example 2: E-commerce Fashion Site
User request: "I need warm, earthy colors for a sustainable fashion e-commerce site"
Process:
- Read E-commerce → Fashion & Apparel from references
- Select earthy palette, modify for sustainability emphasis
- Validate all key combinations
Output:
Primary: Dark Teal (#264653) ├─ Evokes nature, sustainability, calm └─ Use for: Navigation, primary buttons Secondary: Living Teal (#2A9D8F) ├─ Fresh, natural, growth └─ Use for: Highlights, hover states Accent 1: Terracotta (#E76F51) ├─ Warm, earthy, organic └─ Use for: CTAs, sale badges Accent 2: Gold (#E9C46A) └─ Use for: Premium products, special offers Why this avoids AI-generic: - Uses earthy tones instead of bright tech colors - Warm accents on cool base (intentional temperature mixing) - Terracotta is distinctive, not overused - Reflects real sustainable fashion brand aesthetics
Example 3: Dark Mode App
User request: "Dark mode palette for a creative tools app, want to avoid the generic neon-on-dark look"
Process:
- Review "Dark Mode SaaS" and "Common AI Pitfalls" sections
- Choose muted accents instead of full neon
- Generate custom scales
- Validate all contrast ratios
Output:
Background: Very Dark Navy (#0A0E27) Surface: Dark Blue-Gray (#1E2749) Primary: Vibrant Blue (#4A9EFF) ├─ Bright enough for contrast, not neon └─ Contrast: 8.2:1 on background ✓ Secondary: Lavender Indigo (#8B7FE8) ├─ Creative, sophisticated └─ Contrast: 7.1:1 on background ✓ Text: Off-White (#E8EAF6) └─ Contrast: 13.2:1 on background ✓ Why this works: - Deep, rich backgrounds (not pure black) - Accents are vibrant but not harsh neon - Lavender adds creativity without purple-gradient cliche - Excellent contrast without eye strain
Tips for Success
- Always start with context - Don't jump to colors before understanding domain, audience, and purpose
- Use references liberally - The curated palettes have been validated in real products
- Validate early and often - Check contrast ratios as you build, not at the end
- Be distinctive - Actively avoid the most common AI patterns
- Tell a story - Every color choice should relate to brand narrative or domain
- Consider the whole system - Think beyond just primary colors to complete scales and semantic colors
- Test in context - Colors look different on screens, in different lighting, next to different content
Advanced Usage
Creating Color Palettes from Images
If user provides an image for inspiration:
- Identify 2-3 dominant colors manually or describe the color scheme
- Extract hex values or approximate them
- Use those as base colors for palette generation
- Apply color theory to create harmonious extensions
- Validate and refine for accessibility
Multi-Brand Color Systems
For products with multiple brands or themes:
- Establish shared neutral scale (used across all themes)
- Create distinct primary colors for each brand
- Ensure all themes meet same accessibility standards
- Use semantic token naming for easy theme switching
- Document when to use each brand variant
Accessibility-First Approach
For products requiring AAA compliance:
- Start with contrast requirements (7:1 for normal text)
- Work backward to find valid color combinations
- Use darker/lighter shades than typical
- Test with colorblind simulators
- Provide high-contrast mode as option
Common Questions
Q: How do I make a palette feel unique without sacrificing usability? A: Use unique shades of standard semantic colors. Green for success is expected, but use a distinctive shade with appropriate cultural/domain context.
Q: The palette generator created colors that don't match my brand. What do I do? A: The generator creates mathematically uniform scales. You can manually adjust specific levels while keeping others, or use it as a starting point and refine by hand.
Q: How many colors should a complete palette have? A: Minimum: 1 primary (with scale), 1 neutral (with scale), 4 semantic colors. Typical: 1-2 primary, 1-2 secondary, 1-2 accent, 1 neutral (all with scales), 4 semantic colors. Complex: Multiple primaries, extensive semantic colors, specialized scales.
Q: What if the user insists on purple gradients? A: If it's genuinely part of their brand, make it distinctive: use unique purple shades, unexpected gradient combinations, or pair with unexpected accent colors. Avoid the default #6366F1 → #8B5CF6 → white pattern.