Image Color Picker
Extract HEX, RGB & HSL
Ever seen a color in an image and wondered what its exact code is? Just upload the image, hover over any pixel, and you’ll get the HEX, RGB, HSL, and CMYK values right away. No installs, no sign-up, nothing.
Upload & hover to pick
Why Use This Color Picker? Here’s What Makes It Different
Magnifier That Actually Works
Hover over the image and a zoomed-in magnifier follows your cursor. So you’re picking the exact pixel you want, not just somewhere close to it.
Save Colors as You Go
Click any color to add it to your palette. Keep picking, keep saving. When you’re done, export the whole palette as a JSON file in one click.
HEX, RGB, HSL, CMYK — All at Once
You don’t have to choose a format before picking. Every color shows all four values together. Just copy whichever one you need.
Your Image Never Leaves Your Device
Everything runs in your browser. No file gets uploaded to any server. So you can safely use it with client work, private designs, anything.
So here’s the thing — a lot of designers and developers waste time trying to figure out color codes from images. You screenshot something, open Photoshop or some online tool, wait for it to load, upload the file, and then finally get the value. It’s annoying. This Image Color Picker skips all of that.
Just drop your image in, move your mouse, and click. That’s it. You get the HEX, RGB, HSL, and CMYK values instantly. Works with PNG, JPG, WEBP, SVG, and GIF files. No account, no watermark, no limits on how many colors you pick.
If you’re building something for the web, HEX and RGB go straight into your CSS. Working with Tailwind? Copy the HEX and find the closest match. Doing print work? The CMYK value saves you the conversion headache. And if you’re tweaking colors programmatically, HSL is your best friend because adjusting hue, saturation, and lightness separately is way more intuitive.
I built the palette feature because picking one color at a time gets old fast. Click around the image, build up a set of swatches, and export them all at once. It’s useful when you’re trying to extract a brand’s color scheme from a logo or pull a mood board together from a photo.