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    TOOL · COLORS

    Eyedropper: pick colors from an image

    Drop the screenshot, photo or logo, click the exact spot and take that pixel's color as HEX, RGB and HSL — with a history of the last 8 colors so you never lose one.

    Processed in your browser — your files never leave your computer.

    How it works

    1. Drop your image here

      Drag a .jpg, .png or .webp up to 20 MB onto the dotted area, or click to choose. The image opens on screen instantly.

    2. Click the color spot

      The cursor becomes a crosshair: click any pixel and the color shows up beside it as HEX, RGB and HSL. Surgeon-level precision? With the image focused, the arrow keys move the cursor 1 pixel at a time and Enter saves the color.

    3. Copy the format you want

      Each format has its own copy button, and the last 8 colors stay in the history — click any of them to copy its hex again.

    Frequently asked questions

    What is an image eyedropper for?

    For finding the exact color of anything you only have as an image: the blue in a client's logo, a site's background color in a screenshot, the tone of a reference photo. Click and take the code ready for your CSS or editor.

    How do I pick the color of a tiny detail?

    Click near the detail and refine with the keyboard: with the image focused, each arrow key press moves the cursor exactly 1 pixel, and the color value updates in real time. When you hit the spot, Enter saves the color to the history.

    Why is the color different from the original site?

    If the image is a screenshot, it may have been compressed (JPG blends neighboring pixels) or captured with a different color profile. For flat colors, click the center of the colored area, away from edges — that is where the value is pure.

    Which image formats are accepted?

    JPG, PNG and WebP, up to 20 MB. Very large images are displayed at up to 1600 px on the longest side so pixel reading stays instant.

    How many colors does the history keep?

    The last 8, most recent first. Consecutive repeated colors are not duplicated. Switching images clears the history — copy what you want to keep first.

    Is my image uploaded to a server?

    No. The pixel reading happens inside your browser, on your device. The image never leaves your computer.

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