Startup Ideas Bank
A niche tool with grand ambitions but a questionable market.
AI roast score: 58/100 (D)
The idea
nevertoday/zhongguo-traditional-colors — 中华传统色演示、色卡浏览与颜色知识科普开源项目
Chinese Traditional Colors
简体中文 | English | 日本語
If you design interfaces, write visual content, build course material, or put together a cultural website, you often need Chinese colors that look good and can survive a real layout. This repository was organized for that moment.
It collects 742 high-resolution Chinese traditional color cards, mapped one by one to the original 742-color list. Each card keeps the color name, HEX, RGB, CMYK, palette notes, and mood keywords. The website is more than an image archive: you can search colors, test them in real scenes, generate palettes, browse harmony relationships, inspect gradient logic, build background/text usage cards, and save the colors or schemes you want to keep.
Quick Links
Browse the online gallery
Open the scene testing workbench
Open the palette generator
Open the Chinese color palette board
Open gradient logic cards
Open usage cards
Open local favorites
Open Studio Skills
Download the complete ZIP
View the Release
Original 742-color list
742-color harmony Markdown
742-color harmony CSV
Practical Chinese color skills
Author on X
What You Can Do With It
If you need to
You can use
Find a Chinese color reference fast
742 high-resolution PNG color cards
Make visuals for design or content
Preview, copy, download, and favorite individual cards
Build a local color library
Filenames matched to the 742-color source list
Try colors in websites, slides, covers, posters, or brand boards
Scene testing maps one anchor color into background, title, body, button, and accent roles
Produce a usable palette quickly
The generator lets you lock, replace, rotate, copy, export, and favorite full schemes
Look for harmony and inspiration
Browse 8,904 palettes across same-color, analogous, complementary, triadic, warm/cool, light/dark, gray-tone, and neutral relationships
Understand one color as a gradient system
Each traditional color becomes light, anchor, nearby, deep, two-tone, and gradient-path cards
Test background/text/button use
Usage cards check contrast and support copy, remix, nearby-color replacement, and favorites
Keep the combinations that work
Favorites collect color cards, palettes, usage cards, generated schemes, and scene tests
Check names and values
Centralized color names, HEX, RGB, and CMYK references
Use traditional colors in a real project
10 agent skills for practical design workflows
The original image set is about 998 MB. The ZIP is distributed as a GitHub Release asset instead of being committed to the repository.
Feature Screenshots
Browse Color Cards
Search all 742 cards
The roast
Your concept of offering 742 high-resolution Chinese traditional color cards is intriguing but suffers from an acute market fit problem. While the tool might be a hit among a small segment of designers or cultural enthusiasts, its broad appeal, and more importantly, its monetization strategy, are highly questionable. The idea is overly niche, and the freemium model, combined with the solo operation and no funding, makes scaling and sustained growth a tough sell. Your target market (q5=general) is far too broad for such a specialized offering, making your product more of a novelty than a necessity.
Your execution relies heavily on a product-led growth strategy (q17=product_led) for a tool that doesn't inherently possess viral qualities or broad usage appeal. Furthermore, the reliance on a brand moat (q11=brand) without substantial backing or recognition in the market makes it even more vulnerable.
The real problem is whether enough people will pay for this niche tool (q15=will_pay). The need for Chinese traditional colors in design is very specific, and your current positioning doesn't indicate a strong market demand.
Red flags
- Overly niche market
- Solo operation limits scalability
- Unclear monetization potential
Verdict
Unless you can quickly prove substantial demand and willingness to pay, this idea will struggle to scale.
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