Find Variations Of Any Color With 0to255
A web designer usually starts with a color and needs the variations of that color for hover, borders, gradients, etc. while designing/styling an element.
In order to be stable for the overall of the design, while choosing color variants, picking them from the same levels is a much better way compared to just guessing using the color picker of our image editing software.
0to255 is a simple-yet-effective web-based color finder which is specially created for web designers to make this process easier.
After picking the color you want to start with, the tool provides you a range of colors from black to white using an interval optimized for web design.
And, just click the variation you want to use and the hex code is automatically copied to your clipboard.
- Tags:
HEX
- Filed under: Colours, Design, No License
- 4 Comments












4 Responses for "Find Variations Of Any Color With 0to255"
I don’t see any good use for this. I mean the 255 versions of a colour are useless out of the context that you are going to use them in. Also there are far more advanced color pickers on the internet, like kuler from adobe.
Maybe you should post another resource
.
@Mosselman,
I’m a fan of Kuler and ColorSchemer Studio.
While creating CSS files for hover, visited.. I usually use the ColorSchemer’s “mixer” which does the same thing and probably better. But it is a paid app.
However, Kuler and many others (like ColorSchemeDesigner) are focused more on color palettes (which is great).
I agree that it is a very simple app. but I think this is what makes it useful for not getting a palette but getting a consistent curve for all colors used.
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@Mosselman I agree that there are more advanced color pickers. I created 0to255 to make a very common task easier: finding lighter and darker colors. It’s quicker than opening Photoshop.
Adobe Kuler is for color inspiration and finding color schemes. It’s a fun tool, but it solves a different problem than 0to255. I also recommend checking out http://colourlovers.com/ for color inspiration. I prefer their color palettes over Adobe Kuler.
ColorSchemer is a really nice tool and I recommend it if you need something that powerful. For most web design, though, 0to255 gets the job done.