Struggling to choose brand colors that actually look good together? This simple, beginner-friendly guide walks you through the exact steps to build a beautiful palette, minus the overwhelm.
If you’ve ever chosen your brand colours and then realised your graphics look a bit like a circus tent in a windstorm… you’re not alone.
Most creators aren’t designers, and that’s perfectly fine.
The problem isn’t your taste, it’s the lack of a simple structure.
Creatives usually make three common mistakes:
- Picking colors you like individually, not colors that work together.
- Loving teal, coral, neon pink and mustard doesn’t make them best friends on a canvas.
- Choosing too many colors
- Three to five colors is the sweet spot.
- Using colors inconsistently across graphics
- Even great colors look messy when the shades change constantly.
The good news?
You only need a few simple rules to pick a professional-looking palette.
the Rules to Picking Colors
Step 1: Start with one ‘Emotion’ color
Every brand has a vibe – a feeling.
That feeling should guide your primary color choice.
Ask yourself:
“What do I want my brand to feel like?”
Here are quick shortcuts:
- Calm + gentle: soft blues, dusty pinks, lavender, cool neutrals
- Bold + modern: charcoal, white, deep navy, electric accents
- Creative + playful: bright teals, coral, sunshine yellow
- Cozy + warm: sage, terracotta, cream, coffee browns
Your primary colour is your anchor.
Everything else will build around it.
💡 Quick Tip: If your brand threw a party, what color would the balloons be? Now choose that color.
Step 2: Build the Rest of Your Palette the Easy Way
Once you have your anchor color, use the 60/30/10 rule:
- 60% Primary colour
- 30% Secondary colour
- 10% Accent colour
Use these FREE tools to generate matching colors:
- Coolors.co: auto-generates 5-color palettes
- Canva’s Color Palette Generator: upload an image you love
- ColorHunt.co: curated palettes in every aesthetic
Look for colors that:
- Share similar undertones (warm/cool)
- Don’t clash or vibrate
- Support your brand personality
Keep it simple – three to five colors maximum.
Step 3: Test Your Palette in Real Designs (Most People Skip This!)
Never trust a color palette until you’ve seen it in action.
Test it in:
- A Pinterest pin
- Primary color as the background.
- Secondary for design elements.
- Accent for buttons or pop text.
- A square social graphic
- Try the accent color as the background.
- A simple mock website banner
- Check that text remains readable.
Ask yourself:
- Does this look calming or chaotic?
- Do the colours feel like your brand?
- Is the text easy to read?
If your eyes hurt: revise.
If your shoulders relax: keep it.
Step 4: Avoid These Common Color Traps
Even a great palette can fall apart if used incorrectly. Watch for these:
- Using two very bright colors together
- Pairing muted colors with highly saturated ones
- Using black text on bright backgrounds
- Letting accent colors take over
- Ignoring contrast & accessibility
Good colors only work when used well.
Step 5: Save Your Color Palette (This Is Where Consistency Begins)
Once you’ve finalised your colors, save all hex codes.
Add them to:
- Canva Brand Kit
- A simple brand board
- Your website theme settings
- Template files
- A notes app or Google Doc
You’ll reuse these colors constantly, so keep them visible and accessible.
💡 Quick Tip: Create a single Canva template (Pinterest pin, Instagram square, or PDF cover) and update only text when creating new content. Your brand will look instantly cohesive.
Step 6: Need Inspiration? Use These Palette Ideas
- Neutral Calm
- Soft beige · Warm grey · Dusty rose · Chocolate accent
- Perfect for journaling, planning, printables, or lifestyle creators.
- Bright & Playful
- Teal · Yellow · Soft coral · Navy accent
- Great for kid-focused brands or fun, high-energy creators.
- Modern Minimalist
- Charcoal · Off-white · Cool beige · Gold accent
- Ideal for business, productivity, and template sellers.
- Cozy Cottagecore
- Sage · Cream · Peach · Terracotta
- Lovely for self-care, homestead, and magic/garden-themed brands.
Brand Color Checklist
Choose one primary “emotion” color
- Add 1–2 supporting colors
- Choose a subtle accent
- Apply the 60/30/10 rule
- Test graphics in Canva
- Save hex codes
- Add to Canva Brand Kit
- Use consistently
Simple. Beginner-friendly. Zero circus vibes.
