The alphabet
palette has 26 distinguishable colors that have logical names
starting with the English alphabet letters A, B, ... Z.
This palette is based on the work by Green-Armytage (2010), but uses the
names 'orange' instead of 'orpiment', and 'magenta' instead of 'mallow'.
The alphabet2
palette uses a similar idea with slightly different colors
and slightly different names. This palette comes from the Polychrome package,
generated with the createPalette
function and then manually
arranged and named.
The cols25
palette was created experimentally by Wright (unpublished)
to create a set of colors that are distinct.
The glasbey
palette by Glasbey et al (2007) has 32 colors that are
maximally distinct. Glasbey has 'white' as the second color, but in this
version of the palette, the color 'white' is moved to the end, and is
actually light-gray, #F2F3F4.
The kelly
palette of 22 colors maximize the contrast
between colors in a set if the colors are chosen in sequential order.
Kelly paid attention to the needs of people with color blindness. The
first nine colors work well for such people and people with normal vision.
Kelly did not provide RGB color values, and the paper was in black-and-white.
A color image of the Kelly palette can be found in Green-Armytage (2010).
The color 'white' has been re-defined as light-gray, #F2F3F4.
Commentary: We think the kelly palette has an over-abundance of orange-ish
colors, the purples are not very distinct, color 22 (olive green) is almost
identical to color 2 (black), etc.
The okabe
palette was design to be (1) clear for both colorblind and
non-colorblind people, (2) vividly colored, and (3) good for screen and printed.
The color-blind simulation tools in R suggest this palette is not as useful
as hoped.
The polychrome
palette is also from the Polychrome package.
Colors were given a name from the ISCC-NBS standard.
The stepped
palette has 24 colors (5 hues, 4 levels within each hue, plus
4 shades of gray) that is useful for showing varying levels within categories.
Inspired by (http://geog.uoregon.edu/datagraphics/color_scales.htm), but in
order to better separate these colors in RGB space, red hue 0 was moved to hue 350,
green hue 80 moved to hue 90. The number of colors within each hue was reduced
from 5 to 4, and gray shades were added.
stepped2
and stepped3
are from the 'vega' package
https://github.com/vega/vega/wiki/Scales.
The tableau20
palette has 10 pairs of dark/light colors that are used by
the Tableau software.
The tol
palette has 12 colors by Paul Tol.
The watlington
palette has 16 colors.
The color 'white' has been re-defined as light-gray, #F2F3F4.