Torley's official "Watermelon Revolution" palette now available!
Posted on: February 18, 2008I've posted "Watermelon Revolution", the same palette I officially use on an almost-daily basis, to both Adobe's Kuler and COLOURlovers.
This'll be useful if you ever want to make watermeloney products in Second Life, or simply want to have a bold set to rock out with.
Since Kuler uses un-linkable Flash, search for "Watermelon Revolution". On COLOURlovers, you're just a click away!
If you're wondering why I didn't include the "odd child" of yellow on there, it's because the palettes only go up to 5, not 6 shades. I would've just done 4 and left the lighter variations out, but I use them and the palette has a certain elegant symmetry about it.
Anyway, knock yerself out and have a fun time!


February 18th, 2008 at 4:34 PM PST
Hello Torley ,,,=^_^=,,,
With Windlight settings I made a colorful picture of a carriage in Avilion Grove.
I almost have the carriage "Mellonized" ,,,=^_^=,,, hehehe, posted at -
http://www.flickr.com/photos/nokithecat_writer/2272860519/
February 20th, 2008 at 12:59 PM PST
You could of course have left out the black, which is the easiest one to reproduce, and put your choice of yellow in place. Yellow… there are a gazillion variations on the theme, and black is just black.
But then… it would have been a bit bland, the whole thing.
February 21st, 2008 at 3:09 PM PST
Heh, I always wondered what the official Torley pallet was. Little did I know it's so simple!
Thanks!
-Gigs
February 24th, 2008 at 7:45 AM PST
@Laetizia: Ah, but "black" is more important than "yellow" in that scheme. If I were to rank in order of importance: pink, green, black, yellow.
July 31st, 2008 at 6:05 AM PDT
[...] further exploration on this path, see my personal scheme as featured on Kuler and COLOURlovers. The latter even has a list of Joker-inspired schemes — [...]
July 31st, 2008 at 11:50 AM PDT
[...] further exploration on this path, see my personal scheme as featured on Kuler and COLOURlovers. The latter even has a list of Joker-inspired schemes — [...]