Match Pantone, HEX, RGB, and CMYK colors from an image
Upload an image - a logo, a photo, a design - and get the closest Pantone (PMS), HEX, RGB, and CMYK matches. Free with no login. Use it to spec a print job, double-check a brand color, or build a palette from a reference photo.
Click on a logo, get its Pantone
The customer doesn’t have brand standards. They have a website. You need the color anyway. Drop the screenshot in, click on the logo, write down the PMS. Whole job, 90 seconds.
The image never leaves your browser. We don’t see it, store it, or transmit it.
Two ways to use it
- Click any pixel for a sample. Pick the 3x3 or 5x5 sample size if the source is a JPG with compression noise - it averages and gives you a cleaner read.
- Hit Auto Palette for the six dominant colors at once. Useful when you’re trying to figure out the actual brand palette from a logo nobody has standards for.
Each sample returns the four closest Pantone Coated matches plus HEX, RGB, and CMYK. Copy button on every value.
Concrete cases
- The customer has a logo and zero brand standards. You’re manufacturing the standards.
- You’re building a palette from a reference photo for a new product line.
- You suspect an existing print piece doesn’t match the brand spec it claims. Sample it.
- You need the PMS so you can hand it to the embroiderer for a thread match.
If you do this often
Free account saves palettes against a customer or project, runs batch uploads, and exports the palette as a CSV or one-page spec PDF.
Frequently asked questions
How do I get the Pantone color from a logo image?
Drop the logo image in above, click any pixel, and we return the four closest Pantone Coated matches with HEX, RGB, and CMYK. For a quick palette, hit Auto Palette and we extract the six dominant colors automatically.
Does this upload my image to a server?
No. The image stays in your browser the whole time - color sampling runs on the canvas locally. We never see, store, or transmit your file.
Why does my sample look slightly off when I click a JPG?
JPEG compression introduces noise around solid color blocks. Use the 3x3 or 5x5 sample size to average over a small region instead of grabbing one pixel. The averaged result is much closer to the original brand color.
Can I extract Pantone colors from a customer's website screenshot?
Yes. Drop the screenshot in and click any element - logo, header bar, button. The picker returns Pantone Coated equivalents for each sample, which you can hand to your screen printer or embroiderer as a starting spec.
One platform. Two free accounts. One public layer for everyone else.
The tool you’re using is one feature in a much bigger app. Here’s the rest, by which side of the order you’re on.
- Every public tool on this site
- 5 conversions a day per IP
- One file at a time
- Output dropped after the request
- No account, no nag
- Every public tool, no rate limit
- Batch 10 files at once
- 30-day download history
- AI vectorization (the $50-redraw replacement)
- AI mockup generator, white-label proofs
- SAGE catalog, 1M+ products
- Quotes, POs, invoices, projects
- Storefront under your brand
- Blind-ship POs to suppliers
- Saved thread palettes per customer
- Email automation for every status
- Every public tool, no rate limit
- Every order in one place
- Approve proofs without email tag
- Two-click reorder
- Saved shipping + tax-exempt files
- Real-time status pings
- See and pay invoices online
- Message your distributor inside the app
- Always free. No card.
Want to save palettes, run batches, and tag matches to projects?
Free account saves palettes per project, runs batches, and exports a one-page spec sheet.