Skills / Refine
/colorize
Add strategic color to monochrome interfaces without going garish.
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Monochrome UI → Strategic, harmonious color
AfterWhen to use it
/colorize is the counterweight to "everything is gray". Dashboards that read as a beige wall, forms with no accent, content pages that could be any SaaS product. Reach for it when the interface is functional but emotionally flat, and you want warmth without tipping into the AI color palette (purple-to-pink, cyan neon, dark mode glow).
How it works
The skill starts by reading your brand color if one exists, then decides where color earns its place:
- Primary action gets the strongest expression of the brand hue.
- Secondary accents get muted or tinted variants, not a second full color.
- Neutrals get tinted toward the brand hue at low chroma (around 0.005 to 0.01), which is nearly invisible per pixel but creates subconscious cohesion.
- Content categories get a limited, intentional accent system, not a rainbow.
Importantly, it uses OKLCH rather than HSL so that equal lightness steps look equal. As lightness moves toward the extremes, chroma drops automatically. This is how you get color that feels considered instead of computed.
Try it
/colorize the dashboardExpected diff:
- Brand color moved from a hardcoded hex to
--color-accent: oklch(62% 0.18 240) - Neutrals tinted with 0.007 chroma toward the brand hue
- Primary button gets the full accent, secondary buttons get ink/mist
- Chart series uses 3 distinct hues, all at matched lightness so no series visually dominates
- Empty state illustration picks up a soft accent wash
Pitfalls
- Running it without a brand hue. Colorize needs a starting point. If
.impeccable.mddoes not specify one, it will ask. Do not let it pick from the AI color palette defaults. - Expecting it to fix the AI color palette problem. If your design already has purple gradients and cyan neon, you need
/quieterfirst, then colorize can rebuild. - Using it on already-colorful interfaces. That is a
/quieterjob. Colorize adds, it does not subtract.
Strategically introduce color to designs that are too monochromatic, gray, or lacking in visual warmth and personality.
MANDATORY PREPARATION
Invoke {{command_prefix}}impeccable — it contains design principles, anti-patterns, and the Context Gathering Protocol. Follow the protocol before proceeding — if no design context exists yet, you MUST run {{command_prefix}}impeccable teach first. Additionally gather: existing brand colors.
Assess Color Opportunity
Analyze the current state and identify opportunities:
Understand current state:
- Color absence: Pure grayscale? Limited neutrals? One timid accent?
- Missed opportunities: Where could color add meaning, hierarchy, or delight?
- Context: What's appropriate for this domain and audience?
- Brand: Are there existing brand colors we should use?
Identify where color adds value:
- Semantic meaning: Success (green), error (red), warning (yellow/orange), info (blue)
- Hierarchy: Drawing attention to important elements
- Categorization: Different sections, types, or states
- Emotional tone: Warmth, energy, trust, creativity
- Wayfinding: Helping users navigate and understand structure
- Delight: Moments of visual interest and personality
If any of these are unclear from the codebase, {{ask_instruction}}
CRITICAL: More color ≠ better. Strategic color beats rainbow vomit every time. Every color should have a purpose.
Plan Color Strategy
Create a purposeful color introduction plan:
- Color palette: What colors match the brand/context? (Choose 2-4 colors max beyond neutrals)
- Dominant color: Which color owns 60% of colored elements?
- Accent colors: Which colors provide contrast and highlights? (30% and 10%)
- Application strategy: Where does each color appear and why?
IMPORTANT: Color should enhance hierarchy and meaning, not create chaos. Less is more when it matters more.
Introduce Color Strategically
Add color systematically across these dimensions:
Semantic Color
State indicators:
- Success: Green tones (emerald, forest, mint)
- Error: Red/pink tones (rose, crimson, coral)
- Warning: Orange/amber tones
- Info: Blue tones (sky, ocean, indigo)
- Neutral: Gray/slate for inactive states
Status badges: Colored backgrounds or borders for states (active, pending, completed, etc.)
Progress indicators: Colored bars, rings, or charts showing completion or health
Accent Color Application
- Primary actions: Color the most important buttons/CTAs
- Links: Add color to clickable text (maintain accessibility)
- Icons: Colorize key icons for recognition and personality
- Headers/titles: Add color to section headers or key labels
- Hover states: Introduce color on interaction
Background & Surfaces
- Tinted backgrounds: Replace pure gray (
#f5f5f5) with warm neutrals (oklch(97% 0.01 60)) or cool tints (oklch(97% 0.01 250)) - Colored sections: Use subtle background colors to separate areas
- Gradient backgrounds: Add depth with subtle, intentional gradients (not generic purple-blue)
- Cards & surfaces: Tint cards or surfaces slightly for warmth
Use OKLCH for color: It's perceptually uniform, meaning equal steps in lightness look equal. Great for generating harmonious scales.
Data Visualization
- Charts & graphs: Use color to encode categories or values
- Heatmaps: Color intensity shows density or importance
- Comparison: Color coding for different datasets or timeframes
Borders & Accents
- Accent borders: Add colored left/top borders to cards or sections
- Underlines: Color underlines for emphasis or active states
- Dividers: Subtle colored dividers instead of gray lines
- Focus rings: Colored focus indicators matching brand
Typography Color
- Colored headings: Use brand colors for section headings (maintain contrast)
- Highlight text: Color for emphasis or categories
- Labels & tags: Small colored labels for metadata or categories
Decorative Elements
- Illustrations: Add colored illustrations or icons
- Shapes: Geometric shapes in brand colors as background elements
- Gradients: Colorful gradient overlays or mesh backgrounds
- Blobs/organic shapes: Soft colored shapes for visual interest
Balance & Refinement
Ensure color addition improves rather than overwhelms:
Maintain Hierarchy
- Dominant color (60%): Primary brand color or most used accent
- Secondary color (30%): Supporting color for variety
- Accent color (10%): High contrast for key moments
- Neutrals (remaining): Gray/black/white for structure
Accessibility
- Contrast ratios: Ensure WCAG compliance (4.5:1 for text, 3:1 for UI components)
- Don't rely on color alone: Use icons, labels, or patterns alongside color
- Test for color blindness: Verify red/green combinations work for all users
Cohesion
- Consistent palette: Use colors from defined palette, not arbitrary choices
- Systematic application: Same color meanings throughout (green always = success)
- Temperature consistency: Warm palette stays warm, cool stays cool
NEVER:
- Use every color in the rainbow (choose 2-4 colors beyond neutrals)
- Apply color randomly without semantic meaning
- Put gray text on colored backgrounds—it looks washed out; use a darker shade of the background color or transparency instead
- Use pure gray for neutrals—add subtle color tint (warm or cool) for sophistication
- Use pure black (
#000) or pure white (#fff) for large areas - Violate WCAG contrast requirements
- Use color as the only indicator (accessibility issue)
- Make everything colorful (defeats the purpose)
- Default to purple-blue gradients (AI slop aesthetic)
Verify Color Addition
Test that colorization improves the experience:
- Better hierarchy: Does color guide attention appropriately?
- Clearer meaning: Does color help users understand states/categories?
- More engaging: Does the interface feel warmer and more inviting?
- Still accessible: Do all color combinations meet WCAG standards?
- Not overwhelming: Is color balanced and purposeful?
Remember: Color is emotional and powerful. Use it to create warmth, guide attention, communicate meaning, and express personality. But restraint and strategy matter more than saturation and variety. Be colorful, but be intentional.