Color Combinations
30 handpicked 2–5 color combinations built from the ColorArchive palette. Filter by harmony type or style, copy hex codes, and explore each color in detail.
Showing 30 combinations
A bold complementary contrast between deep blue and warm amber — the classic authority-plus-energy pairing found in finance, sports, and legacy brands.
Use: Financial services, sports branding, packaging with bold shelf impact
Teal's cool precision meets coral's warmth for a balanced complementary pair that feels modern, approachable, and vibrant without aggression.
Use: Consumer apps, wellness brands, social media design, editorial
Deep indigo anchors a palette brightened by citrine yellow — an intellectual, optimistic complementary pair with strong visual energy.
Use: EdTech, creative agencies, youth-oriented brands, premium stationery
Electric and unconventional — violet and lime create maximum visual tension that signals disruption, creativity, and a bold brand personality.
Use: Tech startups, gaming, youth fashion, music brands
Soft rose meets botanical jade for a palette that balances feminine warmth with grounded naturalism — refined without being precious.
Use: Beauty, skincare, wellness retreats, wedding design, lifestyle brands
Three cool-spectrum blues from azure through teal and into jade — a seamless analogous flow evoking open water, clarity, and calm confidence.
Use: Fintech, SaaS dashboards, healthcare, travel brands
Warm coral, apricot, and amber tones blend seamlessly in this analogous trio — the burnished spectrum of late-afternoon light.
Use: Food photography, lifestyle brands, artisan products, hospitality
Emerald, moss, and leaf create a deep botanical green sequence — layered, complex, and grounded in natural authority.
Use: Sustainability brands, outdoor products, botanical beauty, eco packaging
Cobalt, indigo, and violet at low lightness — the deep cool progression of dusk rendered as a moody, premium palette.
Use: Luxury tech, nightlife, cosmetics, meditation apps, creative portfolios
A fiery analogous sequence through warm reds — ember orange bleeding into ruby and crimson for heat, energy, and urgency.
Use: Food & beverage, restaurant branding, fitness, sports, sale events
Red, blue, and yellow in softened form — the classic triad rendered gentle and editorial rather than primary-school primary.
Use: Children's products, creative tools, playful branding, education platforms
Maximum-chroma rose, cobalt, and lime in perfect triadic balance — bold, contemporary, and impossible to ignore.
Use: Sports, gaming, youth brands, festival graphics, bold editorial
The same triadic geometry applied with restraint — dusty coral, slate blue, and sage green for a sophisticated, lived-in palette.
Use: Artisan brands, editorial print, premium home goods, craft packaging
Teal anchors a split pair with coral and amber — the cool anchor provides stability while warm splits add approachability and energy.
Use: Wellness brands, organic food, health apps, yoga studios
Deep indigo splits to citrine-yellow and apricot — a sophisticated three-way balance with intellectual depth and warm vibrancy.
Use: Creative agencies, premium publishing, luxury tech, cultural institutions
A warm greige neutral ground elevated by a precise teal accent — the architect's palette: restrained, spatial, and quietly confident.
Use: Architecture, interior design, premium real estate, professional services
Classic navy paired with warm amber-gold — the enduring institutional palette that signals trust, history, and authority.
Use: Banking, law firms, universities, government, luxury hospitality
Pale blush neutral ground with deep charcoal text — editorial warmth through contrast, the magazine palette brought to digital.
Use: Editorial, fashion, beauty, lifestyle publishing, premium blogs
An almost-white warm background with a single cobalt action color — the SaaS product palette that feels clean, trustworthy, and modern.
Use: SaaS products, productivity tools, fintech apps, professional web UI
Warm sandy neutral with a terracotta accent — the palette of Mediterranean sun and hand-formed clay, material and elemental.
Use: Ceramics, artisan food, travel brands, desert aesthetics
A five-step cobalt scale from near-white through dark ink — the monochromatic toolkit for a blue brand from background to body text.
Use: Corporate branding, design systems, professional web UI, SaaS products
Rose from delicate blush whisper to deep garnet shadow — a five-step monochromatic scale for a warm feminine brand system.
Use: Beauty, bridal, luxury fashion, cosmetics brand systems
Emerald from pale celery whisper through to ink depth — a botanical monochromatic scale for brands built on nature and sustainability.
Use: Sustainability, outdoor brands, botanical cosmetics, eco design systems
Deep blue-violet at maximum depth with a rare violet accent — the dark-mode palette for developer tools, AI products, and premium software.
Use: Developer tools, AI products, dark-mode web apps, technical SaaS
Near-black garnet and merlot depths with a single pale blush highlight — theatrical contrast for editorial fashion, luxury, and film.
Use: Luxury fashion, editorial photography, film & entertainment, premium events
The darkest greens — emerald and moss at near-black depth — for a palette that feels ancient, forested, and dramatically natural.
Use: Whisky brands, premium food, dark-mode nature apps, luxury outdoor
Peony, blush, and rose at whisper softness — the palette of spring florals, tissue paper, and gentle celebration.
Use: Bridal, baby brands, spring events, greeting cards, beauty launches
Pale cerulean and azure at whisper lightness — open, airy, and optically weightless, for products that need to feel effortlessly light.
Use: Airlines, cloud services, baby products, minimalist apps, spa brands
Mint, lime, and moss at soft lightness — the gentle botanical green palette for health, organic, and fresh-food brands.
Use: Health food, supplements, organic brands, botanical skincare, wellness apps
Use our tools to create custom palettes, check contrast, or explore harmonies from any color in the archive.