There's also www.colorbrewer.org
This are useful tools to get the colours of your map to work together. I would be really interested to hear how our resident industry pros (and talented amateurs) go about colour selection:
http://wellstyled.com/tools/colorscheme2/index-en.html
http://www.limov.com/colour/schemes.lml
http://www.colorschemer.com/online.html
http://www.degraeve.com/color-palette/
http://www.colorbrewer.org
http://mudcu.be/sphere/
http://kuler.adobe.com/
http://colorschemedesigner.com/
http://www.tigercolor.com/
::Edit:: added the links below to the OP
Last edited by ravells; 08-04-2012 at 06:30 AM.
There's also www.colorbrewer.org
Okay, color me stupid (a little joke there...very little) but I never knew such things existed! These are amazingly useful!
As a photoshop user, I could see loading a scheme, then playing with tints & hues (+brightness/contrast, etc.) on the entire scheme at once' this would to keep the color ratios in line, yet offer a wide range of actual color choices!
Thanks, fellas! Great finds!
Don
My gallery is here
__________________________________________________ _______
"Keep your mind in hell, but despair not." --Saint Silouan [1866-1938]
There is also Colorjack here - one of the best of the lot. I'm making this thread a sticky as these tools might prove to be very useful to the occasional visitor who may not be aware of it and to mappers in general.
Last edited by ravells; 10-02-2007 at 09:58 AM.
ON a similar note, does anyone know of a reference for indexed gradients for terrain elevation mapping?
I have a few (tropical, desert, generic, Mediterranean) and will upload them, but was looking for a reference....
-Rob A>
Have a look at the Relief Shading site and the Shaded Relief sites. The author of the latter answers emails...well he answered mine anyway, but that was a year or so ago.
Ravs
And another one:
http://www.degraeve.com/color-palette/
This one is different as it will take any image on the web and produces one dull palette and one vibrant palette that match the colors in the image provided.
For example using the current featured map:
gave this result:
2007-10-31_181345.png
-Rob A>
Another method (with more control) is to import the picture into a raster editing program (like GIMP, photoshop etc) and use a mosaic filter to break up the image into large squares of uniform colour. You can then use the colour picker to sample all the colours on the page (some programs have an automatic script which does this for you with one click).
and instant colours that all work together visually (because they're natural)