/solarized

:sunglasses: Solarized Cheat Sheet

Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 InternationalCC-BY-SA-4.0

solarized logo

The solarized colour scheme by Ethan Schoonover reduce eye strain and maximize readability. The low contrast palette is designed to use the same hues with a light or a dark background1.

Many applications and terminal console support Solarized. You can also use it to build web site related artefacts such as information architecture, and page layout, interactions & controls. Personally, I use the palette to expound context, describe user profiles, and document workshop findings.

Visual works well to communicate business, IT and security requirements if you don’t spend hours agonizing over the fundamental layers such as colours, and line width. The cheat sheet help me standardize my diagrams no matter the stakeholders. After all, artefacts are most effective when they remain in eyesight as a constant reminder of what is being worked on and why.

1: Only the background and the body text colours are dedicated to a specific mode. Thirteen out of sixteen are shared.

Light color scheme

solarized dark

Dark color scheme

solarized dark


Click here to download the Solarized Cheat Sheet

Licence

Solarized is licensed by Ethan Schoonover under the MIT License.

Solarized Cheat Sheet are licensed CC-BY-SA-4.0. This licence is recommended by Choose a License.com for non-software material such as documentation.

Contributing

As I use this for my own projects, I know this might not be the perfect approach for you. If you have any ideas, just open an issue and tell me what you think 💬.

You'll need the current version of OmnniGraffle and several free IBM Plex Sans fonts (e.g. light, medium and semiBold.). The current Apple Color Palette .clr file is available in the src directory.

  1. Fork it (https://github.com/yourname/yourproject/fork)
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b feature/whatEver)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some whatEver')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin feature/whatEver)
  5. Create a new Pull Request 😁

Related projects