Make as many palettes as you like, free. Upgrade when you’re ready to export them into Figma — for about the price of a coffee.
Generating palettes is free and unlimited — design all you want, preview the whole system, and copy any single shade. A subscription unlocks the parts that ship real work: exporting your system — Figma variables, developer JSON, an accessibility CSV, and the canvas reference sheet — plus full customization (your own accent, chroma, and pinning) and every accessibility contrast grid.
Four ways out, all in Pro: a named Figma variables collection; a developer JSON (nested by role plus a flat token map) for code, Tailwind, or Style Dictionary; an accessibility CSV with every color-pairing’s WCAG ratio and APCA score to sort and filter; and the Color System Reference — a 16:9 card with your recipe, accessible safe zones, and palette as art, dropped on your canvas.
Not at all. Bring one brand color — Rhapsody handles hue, chroma, tone, accessibility and dark mode for you.
Yes. A transparent perceptual model produces the same palette every time. No models, no randomness, fully repeatable.
Any color is a valid starting point — warm or cool, vivid or muted. The same rules produce a coherent system every time.
Every ramp runs the full range from near-white to near-black, so dark mode is the same tokens, mirrored — not a second palette.
Absolutely. The palettes you generate are yours to use in any project.
One color in, a complete accessible palette out — light and dark, ready for Figma.