About Us
Last updated: July 16, 2026
About Juxe Pro
Last updated: July 2026
Who This Site Is For
Juxe Pro is a focused editorial publication for designers, front-end developers, brand strategists, and creative hobbyists who work directly with color. If you have ever struggled to choose a palette that feels balanced, or if you have relied on a single color wheel without understanding why certain combinations fail, this site is for you. We serve readers who want to move beyond guesswork and apply proven color harmony models—from the classic triadic and tetradic schemes to less common frameworks like perceptual uniformity and spatial contrast.
Whether you are building a user interface, designing a logo, or curating a photographic series, the content here is structured to help you make deliberate, reproducible color decisions. We do not target absolute beginners who need basic definitions; instead, we address the intermediate practitioner who already knows what a hue is but wants to understand why some palettes feel cohesive while others feel chaotic.
Topics We Cover
Every article on Juxe Pro belongs to one of five editorial pillars. We avoid generic color theory overviews and instead drill into specific models, their mechanics, and their real-world application.
- Classic Harmony Models – In-depth breakdowns of complementary, analogous, triadic, tetradic, and split-complementary schemes. We explain the geometric logic behind each model and show where they tend to break down (for example, why a pure complementary palette often feels harsh in digital interfaces).
- Perceptual & Scientific Models – Coverage of CIELAB, Munsell, and OKLCH-based harmony. These articles focus on why human vision does not match the RGB wheel and how to use perceptual spacing to avoid muddy or vibrating color pairs.
- Common Mistakes & Fixes – A recurring series that diagnoses specific errors: over-reliance on saturation, ignoring value contrast, assuming that “matching” means equal chroma, and misapplying warm/cool logic in screen-based media.
- Tooling & Workflow – Practical guides on using software (Adobe Color, Coolors, Figma plugins, and custom LCH pickers) to test and validate harmony models before committing to a palette.
- Case Studies – Dissections of real brand and product palettes. We reverse-engineer the harmony model used, identify what works, and point out where a different model would have solved a readability or accessibility problem.
Our Editorial Standards
Juxe Pro operates as a content publication, not a marketing agency or consulting firm. We do not publish opinion pieces or trend reports. Every article is built on a problem–solution structure: we state a specific color decision problem, explain why common approaches fail, and then present a harmony model as the corrective framework.
- Fact verification. All claims about color science—including references to the CIE standards, color difference formulas (ΔE), and device gamut limitations—are cross-checked against primary sources (ISO standards, peer-reviewed color science journals, and manufacturer documentation). We do not rely on blog summaries or secondhand interpretations.
- Practice currency. Color tools and rendering technologies evolve. When a new version of a major design tool changes its color engine, or when a browser updates its CSS color interpolation behavior, we review and update affected articles within 30 days. Stale recommendations are flagged and revised.
- No fake personas. We do not attribute articles to fictional experts or inflate credentials. Content is written by a small editorial team with backgrounds in graphic design and color science. Author bios are limited to actual professional history; we do not list “years of experience” or invented job titles.
- Transparency. If an article references a specific tool or service, we disclose any relationship. We do not accept sponsored posts that dictate the editorial angle. All product recommendations are based solely on utility for the harmony model being discussed.
How We Differ from Other Color Resources
Most color blogs fall into one of two traps: they either stay at the level of “here are five color schemes” without explaining why they work, or they become so technical that only a color scientist can follow. Juxe Pro bridges that gap. We assume you understand the basics of hue, saturation, and value, but we do not assume you have a degree in psychophysics. We use problem–solution framing to show exactly which harmony model solves a given visual conflict, and we always include the “why” behind the model’s structure.
We also actively avoid the “10 rules of color” listicle format. Instead, we publish deep, single-topic articles that you can return to as a reference. When you read about tetradic harmony on Juxe Pro, you will understand not only how to place four points on a color wheel, but also why the rectangle shape creates two pairs of complementary tension—and when that tension becomes visual noise.
Contact
We welcome questions, corrections, and suggestions from readers. If you spot an error in an article, or if you encounter a color harmony problem that we have not yet covered, please reach out. We treat reader feedback as a core part of our editorial process.
Email: [email protected]
Address: 785 Second Ave, Manchester, New Hampshire 64087
We do not offer consulting services, custom palette creation, or brand audits. This is a publication, not a design studio. All correspondence should be related to the content of the site.