This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Andrew Baisden
Everybody has a brand it does not matter who you are you have a brand. It is your personal uniqueness that separates you from everyone else. The words that you speak the clothes you wear, your interests everything. Having a personal brand makes it easy for people to recognise you.
Brand recognition is extremely important if you are a business or if you are trying to promote a product. Top brands have brand colours that are immediately recognisable. If you think about companies like Apple, Amazon, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, McDonalds and Coca Cola for example. We have become so accustomed to them you don't even need to look them up you can pull out their brand colour scheme from memory.
Choosing a brand colour
Associating a colour with yourself and your brand is a fantastic way to become memorable fast. Whenever anyone thinks or sees that colour you will come to mind. The more they see that colour the more they will associate it with you and all the work that you do. It becomes your presence and your theme. At the moment the brand colour that I am using is purple. Funny story I just kept seeing the colour purple everywhere and there were subliminal references too. I took it as a sign and started to use the colour Purple.
I did some research and apparently the colour purple is associated with nobility, luxury, power, ambition, independence, wisdom, devotion, extravagance, pride, and creativity. It resonates with me a lot so it just reinforced me using it. You can see some really good examples for companies and the brand colours that they use on brandcolors.net.
Design tools for creating a brand colour theme
Creating a brand theme or colour palette can be quite a fun process. The following tools are great for creating colour schemes.
Figma
Canva
Adobe Color
Adobe XD
Adobe Photoshop
Adobe Ilustrator
Developers using brand colours on Twitter
I put together a quick list of a few developers on social media who are using brand colours. Of course there are plenty more out there these are just the ones that I could find at the time.
Purple
@andrewbaiden
@florinpop1705
@ania_kubow
@danielcranney
@MrAhmadAwais
@james_a_rob
@RonanCodes
@johndsaunders
Yellow
@heyOnuoha
@koladev32
@IrinaMariaMocan
@xodewriter
Orange
@natterstefan
@mmgondran
@LauraToddCodes
Pink
Blue
@VladPasca5
@lo_victoria2666
@dadaCoding
@mkhundmiri
@Nichovski
@lilly_code
@CosmasDevelegas
@Dev_suite
Green
@MemRook
@CK0d3r
@koladechris
@ZoCodes
@sunilc_
Teal
Red
@iamsegunajibola
@emernichiobhain
Final Thoughts
I really hope that you enjoyed reading this article and learned something from it. As a content creator and technical writer I am passionate about sharing my knowledge and helping other people reach their goals. Let's connect across social media you can find all of my social media profiles and blogs on linktree.
Peace ✌️
This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Andrew Baisden
Andrew Baisden | Sciencx (2021-08-27T08:44:38+00:00) Why you should consider having a brand colour. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2021/08/27/why-you-should-consider-having-a-brand-colour/
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