Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Crazy Colors positions itself as a βcomplete color explorer.β Based on the captured content, it is not just a single palette website, but rather a collection of online tools built around color-related workflows. Users can look up colors directly by HEX, view RGB values, color families, named colors, harmony relationships, palettes, and CSS code, and switch between French, English, Spanish, and Portuguese.
Its feature coverage is fairly broad: HEX/RGB/HSL/CMYK conversion, WCAG AA/AAA contrast checking, color-blindness simulation, a color wheel, shade and tone variations, palette analysis, gradient generation, image color picking, color mixing, UI theme generation, a palette creator, and a font/color readability matrix. In terms of resources, the site explicitly mentions 110+ named colors, 16M+ HEX colors, 6 harmony relationships, and 62+ popular palettes, while also offering inspiration themes such as desert, ocean, sunset, forest, Paris, Japan, and cyber tech.
The site labels many pages as βGratuit,β so it appears to be presented as a free tool at the moment. However, no paid plan, account limits, payment methods, or commercial licensing details were found. For branding or commercial projects, it is still worth confirming the terms of use for its palettes, names, sample code, and image color-picking results.
The main advantage is its complete color workflow: it supports both inspiration discovery and practical code conversion, as well as accessibility contrast checks. It is especially friendly to frontend developers, particularly for quickly generating CSS gradients and checking text readability. The downside is that the captured text does not show team collaboration, cloud saving, version management, an API, plugins, or deep integrations with tools like Figma or Adobe. Support and documentation information also appears limited.
Crazy Colors is suitable for UI/UX designers, brand designers, frontend developers, and design learners, especially for early-stage color exploration, website theme generation, image color picking, and accessibility validation. The captured content does not provide information about access from China, so its status is unknown. If access is unstable, alternatives such as Coolors, Adobe Color, Color Hunt, and Khroma can be considered.
β This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on crazy-colors.net official site.
crazy-colors.net is an France Design & Creative provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach crazy-colors.net directly.