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Colors

Thème de couleurs pour tableau de bord

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A dashboard color theme generator builds the layered, low-glare palette an analytics interface needs: a soft page background, white cards, a deep sidebar, primary and muted text tones, an accent for active states and links, and two chart colors for positive and negative trends. Dashboards are dense with numbers, tables, and charts that people stare at for long stretches, so the surfaces stay muted and the accent is used sparingly to keep the focus on data rather than decoration. From a single accent hue it derives a cohesive set where the sidebar anchors navigation, the cards lift content off the page, and the positive and negative chart colors read trends at a glance. Analysts, product teams, and developers use it to theme admin panels, reporting tools, and KPI dashboards. Each value is a labelled, paste-ready hex code mapping onto surfaces, text, accent, and chart roles.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Set your accent hue from 0 to 360.
  2. Click Generate to build the dashboard theme.
  3. Map page, card, and sidebar to your layout.
  4. Use the chart colors for positive and negative trends.

Use Cases

  • Theming an analytics or admin dashboard
  • Choosing surface colors for cards and a sidebar
  • Setting primary and muted text tones for data
  • Picking positive and negative trend chart colors
  • Keeping a reporting tool calm and readable

Tips

  • Keep surfaces muted and use the accent sparingly.
  • Reserve green and red for directional trends.
  • Float white cards above the soft page background.
  • Check muted text contrast before shipping.

FAQ

why keep dashboard surfaces muted

Dashboards are data-dense and viewed for long sessions, so loud surfaces cause fatigue and distract from the numbers. Muted page and card tones with a sparing accent keep attention on the content that matters.

what are the chart colors for

The positive and negative colors give trends an instant read: green for gains and up-states, red for losses and down-states. Using conventional directional colors means users grasp movement without checking a legend.

why a dark sidebar with light content

A deep sidebar separates navigation from the data area and anchors the layout, while light cards keep tables and charts maximally readable. The contrast also helps users orient between chrome and content.

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