TL;DR: Sometimes, all you need are copyable RGB/HEX values.
white, 255 255 255, #ffffff
black, 0 0 0, #000000
green, 0 150 130, #009682
blue, 0 100 170, #4664aa
maygreen, 140 182 60, #8cb63c
yellow, 252 229 0, #fce500
orange, 223 155 27, #df9b1b
brown, 167 130 46, #a7822e
red, 162 34 35, #a22223
purple, 163 16 124, #a3107c
cyan, 35 161 224, #23a1e0
Colors from the KIT corporate design color scheme.
The RGB values listed in the image are integers from 0 to 255, taken from the corporate design guide. These values are then divided by 255 and consequently lie between 0 and 1. This is the format that matplotlib needs.
pip install kitcolors
All colors have RGB
, rgb
, and hex
attributes.
Furthermore, there exist RGBa
, rgba
, and hexa
methods that take alpha
as an additional argument.
>>> from kitcolors import green
>>> green.rgb
(0.0, 0.5882352941176471, 0.5098039215686274)
>>> green.RGB
(0, 150, 130)
>>> green.hex
'#009682'
>>> green.rgba(0.2)
(0.0, 0.5882352941176471, 0.5098039215686274, 0.2)
>>> green.RGBa(0.2)
(0, 150, 130, 0.2)
>>> green.hexa(0.2)
'#00968233'