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Color Scheme Designer 3 (colorschemedesigner.com)
123 points by melvinram on March 9, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 17 comments



If anyone's curious, the title is typeset in Fertigo Pro, an awesome, free typeface from Jos Buivenga's exljbris foundry. You can grab it at http://www.josbuivenga.demon.nl/fertigo.html

Along with color schemes, keep typography in mind for your next design!

Of course, non-standard typefaces are still rather limited on the web, and sIFR isn't the solution. Nonetheless, exceptions can be made for wordmarks and logotypes. With luck, Webkit's expanding market share will finally bring font embedding to the web. Progressive enhancement, anyone?

Prediction: Jos Buivenga will become the implicit answer to John Gruber's dilemma of embedded typefaces: "The fonts you’re allowed to embed legally aren't worth using; the fonts that are worth using aren't embeddable."


I've been loving this guy's fonts for about a year or two now, he gets featured regularly in smashingmagazine and it's totally deserved.

For something with a bit more personality (which means you can't use it on every project) check out his Diavlo font, it's the one I used in this piece of my portfolio:

http://alabut.com/work.html#paybackable


Jos Buivenga, along with John Gruber, is responsible for introducing me to the world of typography. I'm seconding this guy as a terrific resource for free fonts, and as a great read if you want to know where designers get their idea for fonts.


Any way to find those fonts without needing to register somewhere?


very nice...but leaves me hanging for my purposes.

I would pay to have an export of the sample pages in a programmer friendly CSS "starter kit" such as Blueprint or more to my needs, Compass.

Forget about micro-charging or recurring monthly bills. Charge $100 or more for 30 days of exports to various well done programmer friendly formats.

This is good stuff. I'm waiting for someone to come up with the next step to enable programmers to create all-in-one CSS grid and typography and color palette starter kits.


This is an excellent tool. I especially like the built-in preview systems and the "color-blind" modes, so that I can be sure I'm generating enough contrast for those users.

Kudos.


That is probably the awesomest thing I've ever seen.


It's great but it won't solve the problem that programmers can't design. I did the error hundred times to think that nice colors generates nice websites but in fact, colors should be the last detail in designing. Layout should be king. But I'm just a programmer...


Yes, but even on simple sites and simple layouts, you still need to be sure that you are using a decent color pallete, especially when you don't have / can't afford to hire a designer for what you're working on.


Not bad at all. I've been using Kuler: http://kuler.adobe.com/


I've used a lot of color scheme picker web sites. You've just made them all irrelevant. My hat's off to you.


I like this a lot. I'm having trouble linking the colors shown in "Scheme Info" with the ones in the main display at right. Could you number the areas somehow? Or show the codes within the lorem ipsum text?


this is Sofa King awesome for us developer designer hybrids. It's excellent. My only feedback is that maybe the hue/angle popups could be sliders and the color popup could be one of those WSIWYG color pickers.

Also, maybe showcase some really nice ones that are preset to give people some ideas. I guess for a future release people could submit their schemes or post them.


The site preview options were very nice.


I had no idea that only 85.5% of the population had normal color vision.


I had no idea that anyone was completely black-and-white colorblind. Imagine how abstract the concept of "color" would be if you've never seen it.


I was always looking for a good tool that does this! This one is great!




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