KColor

Free color palettes that don’t look like a rookie picked them.

Most design work dies in the “pick a color” phase because you’re staring at a blank canvas with no rules. KColor fixes that by generating ready-to-use palettes fast, plus a library of handpicked combos when you don’t want randomness. It helps teams and solo makers move from vibes to real hex codes that hold up in UI, brand, and content.

Your design isn’t “bad”. Your colors are.

KColor just made the most annoying part of design feel simple: picking a palette you won’t hate tomorrow.

Here’s the deal: most palette tools either drown you in options or spit out candy colors that die the second you put text on top. KColor (kcolor.co) goes the other way. Quick picks. Clear outputs. No drama.

What KColor ships (and why it matters)

KColor is a web app built around one job: give you usable color combinations on demand.

You get a palette generator when you need ideas now.

And you get handpicked palettes when you want something that already looks “designed” without scrolling Pinterest for an hour.

But there’s a catch: a palette isn’t helpful if you can’t use it.

So KColor focuses on practical stuff designers actually need:

Palettes you can paste into real work

It revolves around hex colors and web-friendly schemes, so you can drop them into Figma, a CSS file, a Tailwind config, or a brand doc without translating anything.

Inspiration without the rabbit hole

Instead of turning “find colors” into a side quest, kcolor.co pushes you toward decisions. Generate. Compare. Save. Move on.

Tools for more than “pretty colors”

The site leans into common workflows people search for:

  • building a UI palette
  • finding trendy / pastel combos
  • grabbing a palette from an image
  • using a color wheel mindset (without doing color theory homework)

It gets worse when you ship: colors that look fine to you can read like mud to someone else.

KColor includes designer tools aimed at avoiding that “why does this look off?” moment - especially when contrast and perception matter.

Who this is for

If you build landing pages, SaaS dashboards, pitch decks, thumbnails, or brand kits, KColor fits.

If you’re not a designer, it fits even more.

You don’t need taste. You need a system that gets you to a solid answer fast, then lets you get back to shipping.

KColor is free (yes, actually free). Try it once. Steal a palette. Ship the page.

Frequently Asked Questions

How to choose a color palette for a website without design experience?
Start with a small set: 1 main color, 1 accent, 2 neutrals, then test it on buttons and headings. On kcolor.co you can generate palettes fast and grab hex codes that already work together, so you stop guessing and start building.
How to generate matching colors from a single brand color?
Best way to find a color palette from an image for a brand refresh?
How to pick colors that work for UI buttons, text, and backgrounds?
Why do my colors look good in the editor but bad on the live site?
How to stop wasting hours searching for “nice colors” for social media posts?