Chinese Color Atlas
567 traditional Chinese colors with heritage references, classical citations, design tokens, swatches, AI prompts, and export packs.
ViewChroma Cathay turns cultural colors, photography, architecture, and visual heritage into practical palettes, datasets, and design workflows.
At this stage, the flagship product keeps the search-aligned Chinese Color Atlas name. Chroma Cathay becomes the brand hub for future photo, architecture, East Asian color, and licensing products.
567 traditional Chinese colors with heritage references, classical citations, design tokens, swatches, AI prompts, and export packs.
View →Upload a photo, extract its palette, and match the colors to cultural color atlases and production-ready exports.
View →A visual atlas of photogenic buildings, material colors, city light, shooting angles, and exportable architecture palettes.
View →A source-aware archive of traditional Japanese colors is in preparation, with vocabulary guides, kasane no irome, 72 microseasons, design-token exports, and a palette builder planned.
View →Obangsaek, Dancheong palette systems, and later textile-led East Asian material palettes — research stage.
View →Every serious atlas entry needs provenance, caveats, and a clear distinction between measured color, interpreted color, and design approximation.
A page should let users copy, export, compare, or reuse a palette in Figma, CSS, Tailwind, Procreate, AI prompts, or a design brief.
Chroma Cathay can speak about visual culture, but each shipped product should be concrete: photos, buildings, Japanese colors, Korean systems, textiles.
Make Chroma Cathay legible as the studio behind Chinese Color Atlas without splitting SEO authority.
Upgrade image extraction into a repeatable tool: palette roles, atlas matches, export cards, and design-token output.
Launch a curated MVP of photogenic buildings by material, light, palette, and shooting angle.
The next atlas is being prepared as a source-aware archive of named traditional Japanese colors with vocabulary guides, sub-atlases (kasane, origins, chiyogami), and a 72-microseason koyomi.
Next in the research queue — Obangsaek and Dancheong with a stricter source policy from the start.
Chroma Cathay expands from a credible, exportable, reusable atlas of traditional Chinese colors.