Custom palette previewer

Apply any color palette to your own wedding photo

Upload a white-or-cream wedding scene photo, click each region you want to tint (bouquet petals, tablecloth, ribbon — anything), and apply colors. The entire pipeline runs in your browser — no Photoshop, no uploads to a server, no AI. Use it to preview how a palette will look in your specific venue before locking florals.

Tip: works best with white or cream backgrounds. Bright/dark photos won't take the tint cleanly.

Step 1

Pick a scene + upload your source photo

Best results: a white-or-cream wedding scene photo at 1600×1200 or larger. The image will be downscaled and center-cropped to 4:3.

How to use this

  1. Upload a photo. Drag in a wedding scene with a white-or-cream subject — a bouquet on a marble countertop, a styled tablescape, a ceremony arch against an outdoor backdrop. Your photo is resized to 1600×1200 and processed entirely in your browser. Nothing uploads to our servers.
  2. Click each region you want to tint. Each click flood-fills from that pixel — every connected pixel within the tolerance band joins the active mask. Click multiple regions to add to the same mask (e.g. all the flowers in a bouquet).
  3. Switch masks for different palette colors. You can build up to 5 masks per scene — one for each color in a typical wedding palette. Common assignments: mask 1 = main florals, 2 = secondary florals, 3 = linen/paper background, 4 = ribbon/accent, 5 = greenery.
  4. Apply a palette + download. Pick any of our 50 curated palettes and the tool tints each mask with the matching swatch. Download the colorized PNG to share with your florist or your partner, or save the mask files to re-use later.

Tips for clean results

  • Pick the right photo. Tight subject, plain background, near-white tones. Photos with heavy bokeh or dappled sunlight have soft transitions that flood-fill struggles with.
  • Start with low tolerance. Tolerance 20–30 is the sweet spot for most photos. If your first click underfills, raise it. If it bleeds into the neighbor region, lower it.
  • Use multiple clicks per mask. A bouquet might be 3–5 separate connected blooms in the photo. Click each one — they all accumulate into the same mask layer.
  • It's OK to leave masks empty. Not every scene needs all 5. A simple ceremony arch might only use 3 — the unused masks export nothing.
  • Don't paint everything. Leave the background (sky, wall, floor) un-masked so the original grayscale shows through. Aim for 50-70% total mask coverage; full coverage washes out the photo's natural depth.

When to use this vs. picking from our 50 curated palettes

The 50 curated palettes already have mockup scenes built — for most couples, that preview is enough to make a decision. This tool is for the case where you want to see a specific palette on yourvenue's actual photos — your specific bouquet, your specific tablescape — to confirm the colors work in your exact light. It's a power tool, not a starting point.