Choosing a wedding palette shouldn’t take a month. Spin our wedding color picker for a complete five-color scheme covering bridesmaids, florals, linens, and stationery — tuned to your season and venue.
Paste your list below, one item per line
Wedding palette decisions cascade through every other decision in the planning process. Linens, florals, bridesmaid dresses, signage, invitations, the groom’s tie, the cake, the welcome bag — every single vendor will ask you for the colors. Locking the palette early frees the rest of the planning to move fast; dragging the decision creates compounding delays.
The wedding color picker is built to give you a defensible starting point in under a minute. Each spin returns a complete five-color palette — not a vague mood, but specific hexes you can hand to your florist and stationer the next morning. Because the palettes are curated against real wedding photography and Pantone’s wedding trend reports, every spin is a viable option, not a hypothetical.
If you’ve been Pinning for months and your board is sprawling, the spinner is a clean way to test whether your favorites actually hang together as a palette or just looked good in isolation. Drop the dominant color in via the Match field and see what the algorithm builds around it.
Spring — soft pastels, fresh greens, and creamy whites. Blush pink, sage, lavender, butter yellow, and warm cream. Garden venues and outdoor ceremonies photograph beautifully in this palette.
Summer — saturated and sunny. Coral, marigold, sky blue, leafy green, ivory. Beach and vineyard weddings can also lean toward terracotta, dusty pink, and olive for a Mediterranean feel.
Fall — rich and warm. Burnt orange, burgundy, mustard, deep plum, warm taupe. The fall palette photographs especially well at golden hour, which is the photography sweet spot for autumn weddings.
Winter — deep, moody, and metallic. Emerald, navy, plum, cranberry, with silver or gold metallics. Snowy outdoor weddings can also play with icy blues, whites, and silver tones for a more luminous palette.
The spinner’s seasonal filter pulls only from palettes historically used in that season, so you won’t accidentally build a winter palette for a beach wedding.
A five-color palette gets stretched across many surfaces. The dominant color (your hero color) shows up on bridesmaid dresses, signage, and the cake’s primary decoration. The two secondary colors live in florals and linens. The accent shows up in small high-impact moments — ribbon tying the bouquet, the cocktail napkins, the welcome sign trim. The neutral does the unglamorous heavy lifting on plates, chairs, and aisle runners.
The picker labels each color in the palette with its intended role, so you don’t have to guess. Stationers love this because they can lay out the suite knowing which color belongs in headers vs body text vs envelope liners.
If you’re still building inspiration boards, try our random palette spinner for general design palettes and our paint color picker if you’re also coordinating a home reception space.