Pantone-Style Picker
Pick any color and get the closest named, Pantone-style match with its HEX code, free to copy.
How to use the Pantone-style picker
- Pick a color on the spectrum or paste a HEX value you already have.
- The picker measures the color distance to a list of named, standardised shades.
- Read the closest match and how near it is, then copy the name and HEX for your notes or brief.
- For print, run the result through the HEX to CMYK converter to get ink values.
What the Pantone-style picker does
The Pantone-style picker takes any color you choose and finds the nearest recognised named shade, so you can describe a color by name instead of a raw code. It works like a spot-color lookup: useful when you need to talk about a shade in a brief, a brand note or a conversation with a printer.
What is a Pantone color, and why approximate it?
Pantone runs the Pantone Matching System, a proprietary set of pre-mixed spot inks identified by number, such as PMS 286. Because the real library is licensed and tied to physical ink standards, free web tools cannot reproduce it exactly. A Pantone-style picker bridges that gap by naming the closest match on screen, which is enough for early design decisions before you confirm with official references.
Spot color vs the picker on screen
When a named match helps
- Briefing a printer or client with a name rather than a long code.
- Documenting a brand palette so shades are easy to discuss later.
- Sketching a print or packaging idea before committing to licensed inks.
- Labelling swatches in a design file with human-readable names.
To find the plain everyday name of any color instead, the Color Name Finder searches a wide list, and the Color Converter turns your match into any other format.
When a Pantone-style match is enough
It is worth being upfront that this is an approximation, not the licensed Pantone library, and for most needs that is fine. Naming a shade in a brief, sketching a packaging idea or talking to a client all work well with a close named match. When money is on the line in a real print run, confirm against an official swatch book.
No. It is a free, approximate name match. Official Pantone colors are licensed and matched to physical ink standards.
Use it for drafts and discussion, then confirm the final color against official Pantone references and a printed swatch book.
Screens emit light while ink reflects it, so a spot color on paper rarely matches a backlit on-screen preview exactly.