Dominant Color Extractor
A dominant color extractor helps you find the most visually prominent colors in an image.
Upload, drag and extract
Supports JPEG, PNG, GIF, WEBP and SVG. You can also paste an image directly with Ctrl+V.
Pick _ Swatches
Image Color Extractor
Extract dominant palettes from any image instantly.
Color Picker
Pick precise HEX/RGB/HSL colors instantly with live eyedropper preview.
Color Format Converter
Instant HEX ↔ RGB ↔ HSL ↔ CMYK ↔ CSS conversion for all web formats.
Random Color Generator
Generate unlimited random HEX/RGB colors for design inspiration.
Complementary Color Finder
Find perfect 180° opposite colors via interactive color wheel.
Color Contrast Checker
WCAG 2.2 AA/AAA validation with live 4.5:1+ ratio calculations.
Relevant _ Article
10 Color Tools Every Web Designer Needs in 2026 And Why One Platform Has Them All
Discover the 10 essential color tools professional web designers use daily — from palette generators to WCAG contrast checkers. See how Coloraccy replaces them all in one free platform.
Best Free Color Palette Generator for Web Designers in 2026 — Why Coloraccy Is the Smarter Choice
If you have spent any time designing websites, mobile apps, or brand identities, you already know how much time disappears into color decisions. Should this button be #3B82F6 or a shade darker? Does your background-text contrast actually pass WCAG AA? Does your palette feel cohesive or just accidental? These are not small questions — they are the difference between a product that feels polished and one that looks like it was assembled in a hurry.
How to Choose Brand Colors That Actually Work (Complete Guide)
Most brand color decisions are made backwards. A founder picks a color they like, a designer builds around it, and six months later the brand feels slightly off — not wrong enough to fix, but not quite right either. The colors work in isolation and fall apart in application.
How to Use Color Palettes in Web UI (Best Practices)
Most color mistakes in web UI are not taste problems. They are structural problems. The designer picked good colors — a warm cream, a deep teal, a muted coral — but without a clear system for how those colors relate to each other and which roles they play, the interface ends up feeling inconsistent, visually noisy, or simply hard to use.
Observe _ Spectrum
Blue
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Sky Blue
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Baby Blue
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Black
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Jet Black
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Royal Blue
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Navy Blue
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Onyx Black
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White
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Coal Black
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