First I asked: “If I upload an image would you be able to analyze the colors and give their hexadecimal representation?”
Answer: I can’t analyze images or tables within documents, but I can do that if you upload the image file directly, or paste the tabular data into a separate data file, like a CSV, Excel, or Google Sheet, and upload that to analyze.
Good to know. I uploaded this screenshot of WordCamp Europe’s homepage.

And it analyzed the colors. Here are the hexadecimal codes.
It also gave me a few notes:
Approximations: These are approximate hexadecimal values. The exact color values might vary slightly depending on the image compression, display settings, and the specific tool used for color picking.
Color Picking Tools: For more accurate color analysis, I recommend using a dedicated color picking tool (like the one built into image editing software or online color pickers) directly on the image.
Well, yes, I could have used the color picking tool available im Gimp., sure I was just too lazy.
When I reviewed the results I notice it had forgotten one of the colors: “Did you miss one color? left of the teal colors rectangle?”
The answer: “You are absolutely right! My apologies. I missed that one.
- Dark Blue (Left of Teal): #005293 (This is an approximation)
Thank you for pointing that out. It’s easy to miss subtle color variations.”
Equipped with the hexidecimal values, I added them to the color settings on my test site and now could combine them in a grid.

The font end doesn’t quite follow the editor’s view but it was good enough for my purpose.
Now I can add use it to visually break up a big wall of text.

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