Hunter Palettes · Color atlas
Explore color by character, not just by name.
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Palette families
Cool
Cool palettes tend to recede, creating visual space and composure. Blue, green, violet, and gray can communicate calm or precision, but careful undertones and a warm counterpoint keep them from feeling detached.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Dark
Dark palettes create atmosphere through small differences in value. Near-black is only the beginning: tinted shadows, lifted surfaces, soft text, and controlled accents build depth that pure black alone cannot provide.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Light
Light palettes create space by keeping most surfaces high in value. Unlike pastels, they may be almost neutral; their character comes from subtle undertones, careful separation, and a small number of darker elements that define structure.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Neon
Neon works through contrast, not quantity. One or two electric accents become more vivid when surrounded by decisive darks or clean pale surfaces, giving the energy somewhere to land.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Pastel
Pastels are lightened colors with a quiet visual presence. The strongest pastel systems pair airy surfaces with one dependable anchor, so the result feels gentle without losing hierarchy or readability.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Vintage
Vintage color is less about a specific decade than a sense of material history. Faded pigments, paper neutrals, softened contrast, and a few weighty darks create palettes that feel collected rather than newly generated.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Vivid
Vivid palettes use saturation to create confidence and momentum. Their success depends on hierarchy: strong colors need unequal roles, clear value differences, and neutral space so the composition stays expressive rather than exhausting.
Explore 5 palettes ↗Warm
Warm palettes move visually toward the viewer. Reds, oranges, yellows, and brown-based neutrals can feel generous, energetic, familiar, or luxurious depending on their saturation and depth.
Explore 5 palettes ↗