Color deeply influences the overall look and feel of a
website and can form the first impression about a company for visitors. Color
is one of the top three most important factors in a purchasing decision,
according to an article by the Touro College Journal.
What do consider when
developing a color palette
Companies and clients will often have a set of colors used
in the corporate logo that they want implemented in the site design. It’s the
web designer’s job to educate the client about how those colors will fit into
the site’s style and gently encourage changes if necessary.
Colors have different meanings in different cultures and
countries, so understanding the meaning of color in your target market is
important. Here are some general guidelines for color codes:
• Blue
is associated with stability, trust, and confidence. It is an excellent color
for credit card website or other sites needing to inspire confidence.
• Black
represents elegance, wealth, sophistication, and mystery.
• White
symbolizes peace, purity, and simplicity.
• Orange
represents warmth, enthusiasm, or warning.
• Red is
associated with strength, power, love, and desire.
• Green
can represent nature, health, vigor, and community.
• Yellow
is often associated with brightness, happiness, idealism, and hope.
Text colors
Text is harder to read on a monitor than on paper so the
choice of background and font colors is supremely important. Readability of
text is the primary concern. If the text is light colored, then the background
must be dark and vice versa. White and black are the most common combination
and red and blue are useful for link and highlighted text. Contrast is
important for making text readable, so avoid dark backgrounds with text of too
similar a tone.
Browser-safe colors
A common problem when attempting to build a web design
around an established set of logo colors is that Pantone colors do not always
reproduce accurately in browsers. When a non-browser safe color appears in a
website, browsers will adapt by shifting the color. Some computers with aging
graphics hardware may also fail to display colors correctly.
The best way to avoid this issue is to stick to the
“browser-safe palette” of 256 or 216 colors (for really conservative
designers). These colors are designed to be accurately displayed in all browser
and hardware environments. While some designers (and clients) may find this
limiting, it is the only way to ensure that a site is always viewed at its
best. By limiting colors this way, designers can ensure that file sizes are
smaller and that the site will load quickly.
Color psychology
Designers of all stripes know that colors can be organized
into groups based on the feel they give a viewer. They fall into three basic
categories, and sites incorporating colors from each group can have a more
balanced feel.
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