Help:Using colours

To use a colour in a template or table you can use the hex triplet (e.g.

#CD7F32 is bronze) or HTML color name (e.g. red).

Editors are encouraged to make use of tools, such as Color Brewer 2 to create Brewer palettes, listed at MOS:COLOR for color scheme selection used in graphical charts, maps, tables, and webpages with accessibility in mind for color-blind and visually impaired users.

For color tables and a color pallette, see MOS:COLORS. For the WikiProject, see Wikipedia:WikiProject Color.

Overriding font colour

To apply colour to text, use: <span style="color:hex triplet or colour name">text</span>

Note that you cannot use the Commonwealth spelling, "colour", in HTML tags used in wikitext.

Examples:

  • <span style="color:red">red writing</span> shows as red writing
  • <span style="color:#0f0">green writing</span> shows as green writing
  • <span style="color:#0000FF">blue writing</span> shows as blue writing

Template font colour

{{Font color}}, or its redirect {{Font colour}}, can also be used.

{{Font colour|fontcolour|backgroundcolour|Your text here}}

MarkupRenders as
{{font color|red|This text is different}}

This text is different
to change text-color only (Note: do not style text as a link)

{{font color|red|yellow|This text is different}}

This text is different
to change text and background color

{{font color||yellow|This text is different}}

This text is different
to change background color only
Note the two pipe-characters || to keep the text color at default.

Colour generation guide

The method used for selecting the colors for various top-level pages, e.g. Main Page, Community Portal, Contents, and Help:Contents.
The 3 colours are generated using the HSV colour space, then translated into RGB.

Wikimedia colour schemes

Wikipedia

Wikipedia uses this colour scheme on its Main Page and, for the final row, on the Community Portal.

HueLight Box
background / border
Title
background / border
150°#F5FFFA /#CEF2E0 #CEF2E0 /#A3BFB1 
210°#F5FAFF /#CEDFF2 #CEDFF2 /#A3B0BF 
270°#FAF5FF /#DDCEF2 #DDCEF2 /#AFA3BF 
330°#FFF5FA /#F2CEDD #F2CEDD /#BFA3AF 
30°#FFFAF5 /#F2E0CE #F2E0CE /#BFB1A3 

Additional 3-colour palettes using this same generation scheme are at the top of the talk page. In the Monobook skin, the background colour of Wikipedia pages is#F8FCFF. In the Vector 2022 skin, the background colour on all pages in light mode is#FFFFFF.

Commons

The Wikimedia Commons uses this colour scheme on commons:Main Page and commons:Help:Contents. Differing from the English Wikipedia, Commons does not use an extra, darker colour for bordering the header. Also, the colour sets are not derived from a hue the way the above table does.

Light Box
background / border
Title
background / border
#F1F5FC /#ABD5F5 #D0E5F5 /#ABD5F5 
#FAF6ED /#ABD5F5 #FAECC8 /#FAD67D 

Wikimedia Foundation

The Wikimedia Foundation Design team has provided a color palette with colors being marked toward level AA conformance. It is used for all user-interface elements across products and in the main Wikimedia themes, desktop and mobile. However, it does not consider linked text.

Accessibility

It is best to choose background colors that offer sufficient contrast in relation to text and blue links, which is also the color of references, both of which are very common in most articles. Use the WCAG link contrast checker to ensure that the chosen background color offers the recommended WCAG AA level of contrast against normal text (

  #202122) and blue links (  #3366CC for the default Vector 2022 skin).


Schemes for colour-blind readers

Approximately 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women with Northern European ancestry have red-green colour blindness; this and other types affect people worldwide. This table shows "safe" groups of colours which are distinguishable to most colour-blind people, although colour should never be used as the sole method to convey information.

See also Commons:Commons:Creating accessible illustrations for color blind friendly palettes.

Colour 1Colour 2Colour 3Colour 4Colour 5Colour 6
WhiteYellowBlueRedBlackGrey
Green
LimePurpleBrownCyan
OrangePink
  • Pick a maximum of one colour from each column. Do not use more than one colour from any one column.
  • Use large expanses of the colour. If you're colouring text, use bold and a large font.
  • For small expanses of colour, such as thin lines, clearly label them with text, or use non-colour techniques such as font styles (bold or italic), line styles (dots and dashes) or cross-hatching (stripes, checkers or polka-dots).
  • Use bright mid-range colours, like children's crayons. Do not use light or dark variants of the colours.
  • If you need more colours... hard luck. Instead use non-colour techniques such as labelling, font styles (bold or italic), line styles (dots and dashes) or cross-hatching (stripes, checkers or polka-dots).
  • If you are colour-blind yourself, check your revised image with a colour-sighted person to confirm the meaning is intact.

The following utilities may be of use in determining whether a revised image is distinguishable to colour-blind users. Typically they take a web page or image file as an input, and render a colour-blind simulated image as output:

Colour ramps

The standard rainbow should not be used to represent continuous data, because it creates artificial thresholds; humans do not see the spectrum as a smooth ramp. Greyscales, or a perceptually-even colour ramps, or a colour map chosen to deliberately highlight certain features, are preferable. Diverging colour ramps (two colour extremes around a white or black neutral value) tend to hide some high-frequency features.

Colours have cultural connotations; pick ones that match your data. That is, a diverging colour ramp with extremes "hot, cold" will be easier to understand than the reverse (hot, cold).

  • McNeall, Doug (23 June 2015). "Picking a colour scale for scientific graphics". Better Figures.
  • "Elegant Figures - Subtleties of Color (Part 1 of 6)". earthobservatory.nasa.gov. 1 February 2020.
  • Rougier, Nicolas P.; Droettboom, Michael; Bourne, Philip E. (11 September 2014). "Ten Simple Rules for Better Figures". PLOS Computational Biology. 10 (9): e1003833. Bibcode:2014PLSCB..10E3833R. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003833. PMC 4161295. PMID 25210732.

See also

Templates

Encyclopedia articles

Lists of colours

Guide to colours

References

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Help:Using colours, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.