knitr::opts_chunk$set(warning = FALSE, collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>", fig.path = "figure/", fig.height = 1 )
Here are some pallettes I have made from my own holiday snaps. This is based on the excellent wespalette package and is for personal use only.
remotes::install_github("mrc-ide/snapalette")
library(snapalette) # See all palettes names(snapalettes)
snapalette("Mosaic")
snapalette("EspiritoSanta")
snapalette("ST_art")
snapalette("DiscoverySuites")
snapalette("IpanemaSunset")
snapalette("Orchid")
snapalette("CaveHouse")
snapalette("Kalypso")
pal <- snapalette("Kalypso", 21, type = "continuous") image(volcano, col = rev(pal))
snapalette("ThiraJazz")
snapalette("Camden")
snapalette("Venice")
snapalette("Barcelona")
library("ggplot2") ggplot(mtcars, aes(factor(cyl), fill=factor(gear))) + geom_bar() + scale_fill_manual(values =snapalette("Barcelona"))
snapalette("Fjord")
snapalette("Stavanger")
snapalette("SweetShop")
snapalette("Wales")
snapalette("SzimplaKert")
snapalette("BudapestCitadel")
snapalette("Ipanema")
snapalette("Bouquet")
snapalette("Pop")
snapalette("Space")
snapalette("Ember")
snapalette("Tree5")
snapalette("Tree3")
snapalette("Charleston")
If you have your own holiday snap that would make a great palette, you can use snap2palette
. This takes a path to a png or jpeg and produces a palette from that picture.
par(mar=c(1,1,1,1)) snap2palette("figure/lemon.jpeg", 5, plot_palette = FALSE, plot_picture = TRUE)
par(mar=c(1,1,1,1)) snap2palette("figure/lemon.jpeg", 5, plot_palette = TRUE, plot_picture = FALSE)
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.