Screen Color Picker vs Gradient Color Picker
Side-by-side comparison
| Factor | Screen Color Picker | Gradient Color Picker |
|---|---|---|
| Processing | Browser-local | Browser-local |
| Privacy | No server upload | No server upload |
| Best for | Tasks requiring screen-color-picker | Tasks requiring gradient-color-picker |
| Export support | CSS / JSON / Tailwind | CSS / JSON / Tailwind |
| Account required | No | No |
Our verdict
Use Screen Color Picker when your workflow centers on screen color picker. Choose Gradient Color Picker when gradient color picker better matches your design system, accessibility target, or export format. Both are free — test with your own values to decide.
FAQ
- Can I use both Screen Color Picker and Gradient Color Picker?
- Yes. Many workflows chain tools — for example, converting a color first, then checking contrast or generating a palette. Both run in your browser with no account required.
- Which tool is better for accessibility?
- If either tool includes WCAG contrast checking, use it after picking foreground and background colors. Results depend on your exact hex values and target level (AA vs AAA).
- Are my colors uploaded when comparing these tools?
- No. Both Screen Color Picker and Gradient Color Picker process color values locally. Your inputs never leave your device unless you choose to copy or download exports.
Overview
Screen Color Picker and Gradient Color Picker both help with pickers tasks, but they target different outcomes. Screen Color Picker is best when your primary goal aligns with its core output format or operation. Gradient Color Picker suits workflows that need its specific capabilities.
Because both tools run locally in your browser, you can try each with the same color values and compare results without sending data to a server.
Screen Color Picker — strengths
Choose Screen Color Picker when your project requirements match its default output and options. It integrates well with common design pipelines and is often the faster path when you already know the target format or operation you need.
Copy and export actions let you apply consistent values across multiple design tokens in one session.
Gradient Color Picker — strengths
Gradient Color Picker is the better fit when you need its distinct output characteristics — whether that means a different color space, harmony rule, or export format.
If Screen Color Picker does not produce the contrast ratio, palette balance, or token structure you need, Gradient Color Picker is worth testing next.
Workflow recommendation
Start with the tool that matches your end goal. If results are not satisfactory, switch to the alternative and compare contrast ratios, palette harmony, and compatibility with your CSS or design system.
For production work, verify one color pair or palette swatch before applying settings across an entire theme.