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Colors

Print Color Palette Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A print color palette generator produces muted, low-saturation color sets that reproduce reliably on paper, where screens and presses do not match. Pick a mood — Editorial, Warm, Cool, or Earthy — and it returns colors that avoid the punchy neons and pure brights that look great on a monitor but turn muddy or oversaturated in CMYK printing. Designers working on brochures, posters, packaging, and stationery use it to start from tones that translate predictably to ink, reducing the surprises that come from proofing. Each swatch is given as a hex code you can use as a working reference in your layout, then convert to CMYK in your print software. The palette varies slightly on each run, so generate until the combination suits your piece. Always confirm with a physical proof before a full run, since paper stock and press conditions affect the final result.

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How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Pick a mood for your printed piece.
  2. Set how many colors you want.
  3. Click Generate to produce a print-friendly palette.
  4. Use the hex codes as a reference, then convert to CMYK and proof.

Use Cases

  • Choosing colors for a brochure, poster, or flyer
  • Building a print-friendly palette for packaging or stationery
  • Avoiding oversaturated tones that print muddy in CMYK
  • Starting an editorial layout from balanced, paper-safe colors
  • Picking muted brand colors that work in print and on screen

Tips

  • Favour muted tones — vivid neons rarely survive CMYK conversion.
  • Convert to CMYK in your design software before sending to print.
  • Always order a physical proof to confirm the colors on your stock.
  • Keep one dark and one light tone for legible text on the page.

FAQ

why do print colors differ from screen colors

Screens emit light using RGB, while print mixes ink in CMYK, a smaller gamut. Bright, saturated RGB colors — especially vivid blues and greens — often cannot be reproduced in ink and shift when converted, which is why muted palettes print more predictably.

are these exact cmyk values

No. The swatches are hex codes chosen to sit within ranges that translate well to ink. Use them as a starting reference, then convert to CMYK in your design software and confirm with a printed proof before committing to a run.

will a printed proof match my screen

Not exactly, and that is expected. Monitor calibration, paper stock, and press settings all affect output. A physical proof from your printer is the only reliable check, so always proof before a large print job.