Every color choice for the website design has an impact on the success of the website. Colors tell visitors if they’re on the right website, help set their mood, and can even spark sales or conversions. The practice of using colors in this way is known as color theory. Color theory is used in every field. For website design, color theory uses color psychology to determine the best colors to use for any genre. In this post, we’ll examine color theory for website design to help you get the most out of your website.
How Color Theory Works
I’m sure you’ve noticed that certain color schemes are used for restaurants, banks, funeral homes, etc. Those same types of businesses avoid certain colors. There is a good reason for this. Colors and color combinations spark feelings and emotions. Certain colors give the feeling of edgy and adventurous, while others give the feeling of safety. They also spark feelings of culture and perception.
Marketers and designers can use those feelings and emotions to their advantage. The practice of understanding how colors affect emotions, and how to use this to your advantage, is known as color theory.
Color theory is a set of rules and guidelines that helps specify which colors and combinations spark which emotions. This works for any topic and the rules and guidelines are the same. Learning color theory provides website designers with a set of guidelines to follow. Following color theory guidelines will make your designs more effective.
Colors inform the visitor that certain elements are where they should focus their attention, should click, read, etc. Colors can increase brand recognition and desirability. They improve the user experience and can help keep them on your site longer.
Color Theory Concepts and Building Color Palettes
The concepts for color theory will help build color palettes that work for your website. In this section, we’ll discuss the major concepts and see how they work. There are lots of tools to help with choosing colors and building color palettes.
We’ll use the free version of Adobe Color for our examples. I recommend using tools such as Adobe Color to create color palettes. You can adjust one color with a slider, or the drag-and-drop tool and Adobe Color automatically adjusts the other colors to find the best match. This takes the guesswork and difficult testing out of the equation and leaves you with colors that work well together. Adobe Color provides each color’s hex code, RBG code, HSB, and LAB, and each can be adjusted with sliders. You can save your colors to your library to reuse anytime.
Color Wheel
The color wheel shows the primary colors with their secondary and tertiary colors to show how the colors relate. You can use them in several combinations to create color palettes. We’ll discuss a few of the best types of combinations.












