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Rebranding
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Rebranding Through Color: How to Change Your Palette Without Losing Your Audience

A strategic guide to brand color evolution — when to change, how to manage the transition, and how to preserve brand equity while updating your visual identity.

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Key points
High-equity brand colors should evolve, not be replaced — shift lightness or saturation before shifting hue to preserve recognition while modernizing.
Competitive saturation is the most legitimate trigger for color change — when three direct competitors share your hue, differentiation through color has eroded.
A transition palette that combines old and new elements gives audiences a cognitive bridge across the rebrand without losing continuity.

When to change your brand color

Brand color changes are expensive — they require updating every brand touchpoint and rebuilding color associations that may have taken years to establish. Most color changes happen for the wrong reasons: the founder wants something different, a new designer arrives with different preferences, or the change is made for novelty rather than strategic need. The right reasons to change: competitive saturation (your color has been adopted by several direct competitors), positioning change (the brand has moved market position and the old color no longer fits), reproduction failures (the legacy color has consistent print reproduction issues), or accessibility failures (the existing color system cannot be made accessible without fundamental changes).

Equity preservation: what to keep

Before designing a new color, document the current color equity — the degree to which your current color is associated with your brand by your target audience. High-equity brands (instantly recognizable colors) should preserve as much as possible during a transition. The most conservative change is a lightness or saturation shift within the same hue: taking a legacy blue from 55% saturation to 65% modernizes it without losing hue recognition. The next step is a small hue shift (20-30 degrees): a legacy teal moving toward blue or toward green retains familiarity while adding freshness. Hue jumps of 60+ degrees are the most disruptive and require the most transition support.

Planning the transition

A rebrand transition architecture defines which elements change immediately and which phase out over time. Digital touchpoints — website, app, social channels — can change overnight. Physical materials — packaging, signage, printed collateral — have lead times of weeks to months and may not be replaced until inventory is exhausted. The transition palette bridges both states: a set of colors that are neither the old brand nor the new brand, but that look coherent alongside both. Usually this means introducing one element of the new color while retaining the strongest element of the old one — a new primary with the original secondary, for example.

Documenting the new system

A rebrand is an opportunity to document the color system more thoroughly than it was originally. The new system should specify: all values in HEX, RGB, CMYK, and PMS formats; the lightness and saturation ranges within which each color can be used; approved tints and shades; approved combinations; semantic roles (which color is primary, which is secondary, which is used for error and success states); and photographic color direction (grading preferences, surface colors, model tones). ColorArchive palette exports provide all digital values; completing the system requires adding print-specific specification through soft proofing with your print vendor.

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Soft neutrals and muted warm surfaces for editorial, beauty, and premium product work.

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