Wedding Color Palette Generator

30 curated wedding color palettes with HEX, RGB, CMYK, and Pantone codes. Download a one-page vendor brief for your florist, stationer, and rental team — in one tap, no signup.

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Sage Garden

Sage & Blush Romance

The most-saved spring/summer palette on Pinterest. Soft, garden-fresh, photographs beautifully in any light.

Tap any swatch HEX or use the color picker to micro-adjust the palette.

Sage Green

RGB 184, 197, 166

CMYK 7, 0, 16, 23

Pantone 5783 C

Dusty Blush

RGB 229, 196, 192

CMYK 0, 14, 16, 10

Pantone 489 C

Cream

RGB 245, 239, 230

CMYK 0, 2, 6, 4

Pantone 11-0507

Forest Accent

RGB 107, 142, 78

CMYK 25, 0, 45, 44

Pantone 7742 C

Warm Taupe

RGB 139, 115, 85

CMYK 0, 17, 39, 45

Pantone 4645 C

How it reads in context

Together with their families

Anna & James

June 14 · 2026

Florist brief

Primary blooms: white peonies, blush garden roses, sage eucalyptus. Accent with dried wheat and fern. Avoid hot magenta and primary red.

Stationer brief

Textured cream paper. Digital print with optional warm-taupe foil. Avoid bright white — it will clash with the cream.

Rentals & tablescape

Cream linens, blush napkins alternated with sage. Cross-back wood chairs. Clear or smoked-grey glass. No gold rims.

Attire guidance

Bridesmaids in sage. Groomsmen in warm taupe suits or navy with sage tie. MOB in dusty blush or champagne.

Or email the brief PDF to yourself

Send the same vendor brief PDF straight to your inbox so you can forward it to your florist or stationer in one tap.

We don't store your email or share it. Everything generates in your browser, gets sent once, and is forgotten.

How it works

Browse 50 palettes

Filter by style — sage, dusty blue, terracotta, burgundy, boho, moody, pastel, modern, tropical, or seasonal.

Pick the one that fits

Click any palette to see large swatches with HEX, RGB, CMYK, and Pantone codes — plus florist, stationer, and attire guidance.

Send to your vendors

Download the one-page vendor brief PDF. Email it to your florist, stationer, and rental company before the first meeting.

How to choose a wedding color palette

Most couples spend a long time on this and end up close to where they started. Three things to consider, in order:

  • Your venue's base palette. If your venue has dark wood, exposed brick, or strong stone tones, those colors are already part of your palette whether you like it or not. Pick blooms and linens that complement them rather than fight them.
  • Season and time of day. Light, pastel palettes wash out in dim evening lighting. Saturated jewel tones look heavy in bright sun. Spring gardens want pastel and sage; January ballrooms want burgundy, plum, and emerald.
  • Whether your blooms exist. Florists can't always source true periwinkle, true coral, or true black flowers. Stick to palettes built from blooms that actually grow — that's what the brief for each palette tells you.

The 5 rules of a working wedding palette

  1. 3 colors plus 2 accents. A primary color, a secondary color, a neutral base, plus two small-dose accents (often a metallic and a deep contrast). Five total. Any more and the room starts to feel busy.
  2. One color earns most of the room. Pick your dominant color — usually the lightest or the neutral — and let it cover 60% of the visible space (linens, walls, light, florals).
  3. Test it under your real lighting. Hold the swatches under the actual venue lighting (incandescent, candle, fluorescent, daylight) before you commit. Colors shift dramatically.
  4. Print a physical swatch. Order a printed swatch from a stationer (most do this for $5–15) before placing the full invitation order. Screen color and print color almost never match without a proof.
  5. Send the brief to every vendor. If your florist, stationer, and rental company are all eye-balling sage from different reference images, you're going to end up with three different sages. The PDF brief is how you avoid that.

Frequently asked questions

Is this wedding color palette generator really free?
Yes — completely free, no signup, no email. All 30 palettes run in your browser, and the vendor brief PDF generates locally on your device. We never see your selections.
What's a vendor brief and why do I need one?
A vendor brief is a one-page document you can hand to your florist, stationer, rental company, and dress shop so everyone's working from the same palette. It includes HEX codes, RGB, CMYK (for print), and Pantone approximations — plus plain-language guidance like 'avoid bright white paper' or 'no gold rims on glassware.' It's the difference between 'I want sage and blush' (vague) and a concrete document every vendor can match against.
Are these palettes designer-approved?
The 30 palettes here are based on the most-saved wedding color combinations on Pinterest from 2022 to 2026, cross-checked with what's actually trending in real-world weddings (florist supply availability, fabric color trends, photographer feedback). They're not random — every palette is a known-good combination that photographs well and is buildable with real vendors.
Can I customize a palette?
The current version lets you browse and pick from 50 curated palettes — we made this choice on purpose. Most couples who think they want a fully custom palette actually do better picking from a curated set, because the curated palettes account for things like 'does this look good in candlelight' and 'can a florist actually source these blooms.' Full custom-palette editing is on the roadmap.
What's the difference between HEX, RGB, CMYK, and Pantone?
HEX (#B8C5A6) and RGB are for screens — websites, save-the-dates, social media. CMYK is for ink-based printing — your wedding invitations, programs, menus. Pantone is the standard spot-color system that printers and fabric mills use — share Pantone codes when ordering linens, ribbons, custom dresses, or anything where exact color matching matters across runs. Our brief includes all four.
Do these palettes work for any season?
Most palettes work year-round, but some are season-coded: Sage & Blush is strongest in spring/summer, Burgundy palettes peak in fall, Winter Frost is for January/February. The style label (Sage Garden, Burgundy, Seasonal, etc.) tells you the strongest fit. If you're between seasons, the Pastel and Modern palettes are the most flexible.
How do I share the palette with my florist?
Use the 'Download vendor brief (PDF)' button — it generates a one-page PDF with the swatches, codes, and plain-language guidance specific to florists. Email it directly to your florist before the first meeting and they'll come prepared with bloom options that match. Same PDF works for stationers and rental companies, since each section is tailored to that vendor type.
Will the Pantone codes match exactly?
Pantone codes shown are the closest approximations from a digital HEX value — they're a starting point, not an exact match. For anything where exact color is critical (custom-dyed fabric, large-format printing), ask your vendor to do a physical Pantone color match against the printed swatch. Most professional printers and tailors can do this for free or for a small swatch fee.

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