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Given a set of 3 colors, keeping the same ratios, but starting with a new color, generate the next two.

For example, the following is a pleasing blue gradient:

rgb(172, 228, 248) - Start

rgb(108, 205, 243) - Finish

rgb(121, 181, 203) - Border

I need to create a series of 10 similar gradients starting from different colors. I'd like the gradients to maintain the same light-to-dark ratios.

So, given the color: rgb(254, 218, 113) (yellow), how can I calculate the end and border colors with the same ratios as above?

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  • 1
    Thanks for helping me find the words @fish2000!
    – Ryan
    Aug 28, 2012 at 21:11
  • My pleasure, sir. I appreciate the opportunity to use my degree.
    – fish2000
    Oct 2, 2012 at 1:01

2 Answers 2

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Here's my try: suppose your initial three colors are:

rgb(a1, b1, c1) --> Start
rgb(a2, b2, c2) --> Finish
rgb(a3, b3, c3) --> Border

And suppose the color which you'd like to calculate the analogous pattern on is rgb(x1, y1, z1). The other two components are calculated like this:

x2 = (a2 / a1) * x1, y2 = (b2 / b1) * y1, z2 = (c2 / c1) * z1
x3 = (a3 / a2) * x2, y3 = (b3 / b2) * y2, z3 = (c3 / c2) * z2

And thus your resulting colors are rgb(x2, y2, z2) and rgb(x3, y3, z3).

Here's the result of applying the method above on your example color (rgb(254, 218, 113)):

enter image description here

The two resulting colors are rgb(159, 196, 110) and rgb(178, 173, 92) (note that they're rounded down to integers/whole numbers).

I hope that helped in any manner!

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  • Hmm... If that's the same relationship as the first set, that's not very pretty. Perhaps I need to reconsider how gradients should work. I would have expected the finish to be a darker version of the start. And the border to be a shade even darker than the finish. Something closer to rgb(254,186,72) and rgb(222,169,79). Instead it moved to a green hue.
    – Ryan
    Aug 29, 2012 at 14:49
  • @Ryan So you want the gradient components to differ in lighting only?
    – Chris
    Aug 29, 2012 at 14:54
  • I'm not sure how to describe it accurately. I have a blue div with the gradient mentioned above in the question. Now I'd like a yellow one. And a red one. (and a dozen more) But I want them all to look like they are part of the same family. I can do this in photoshop by visiting the "hue & saturation" panel and dragging sliders. But how can I do this programmatically?
    – Ryan
    Aug 29, 2012 at 15:30
  • how would you change your answer if it had to do only with lighting?
    – Ryan
    Aug 29, 2012 at 21:14
  • @Ryan You'd convert the RGB colors to HSL, and then manipulate the L (lighting) component only, in the same mechanism of analogizing proportions.
    – Chris
    Aug 30, 2012 at 8:15
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A non-algorithmical solution (read: manual) in case you don't find something more interesting:

http://colorschemedesigner.com/

or http://kuler.adobe.com

Your colors have an advantage: They are all in the same "line", so fairly similar to the automatic values you can get using the monochromatic or complementary functions:

enter image description here

They should be (in theory) an easy way to calculate, since they are in a line and will keep the same distance, but because I don't know how it's done here's how you can do it manually (kuler uses RGB as well as HEX and other formats).

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