These color palettes all came from photos of summer flowers that I took at a local botanical garden. They’ll give you some colors that coordinate with each other to use in craft projects, and as a starting point for Procreate palettes that you make yourself.

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Yellow orchids.

These yellow orchids have a surprisingly wide range of colors in them, and I added some greens into it for leaves. The main colors are pretty muted, so you can draw some flowers in realistic tones.
Wildflower garden.

This garden had a range of floral colors in muted tones, so I focused on the pastel shades that I found in the photo. You can get the full palette with 30 colors for Procreate on Etsy here, with discount code ARTISAN to get 60% off for website readers: Wildflower color palette.

Click here to download a mini Wildflowers palette for Procreate.
Rose garden palette.

These roses were planted in large hedges that covered a huge area in the garden, it was really pretty. These peach and pink shades had a lot of coral tones, and the leaves also have a lot of yellow in them.
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Purple iris color palette.

This purple iris had a wide range of monochromatic shades, plus some yellow and ochre in the center. The greens that went with these flowers had both yellow and blue tones, so I did one of each in those colors.
Magenta peony palette.

This was another color surprise, because I thought I’d get colors that were a lot pinker. There were a lot of pinky red colors, and I added some yellow and green for stamens and leaves.
For another peonies palette plus a free Procreate palette, click here.
Fluffy roses palette.

These roses in shades of pink and peach had a wide range of colors in them, but most of them were ranging toward the peach tones. It’s funny how you can look at the picture and see a shade of pink, but when you pull the individual colors out, they look more peach on their own.
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Peach roses palette.

These peach-colored roses had a wide range of peach shades with a strange little grey in the petals. I added that in there because I like to add the light tone to make highlights, and I thought that this one would be white until I pulled it out of the petal, and it was a light grey color. I thought it was interesting, so it stayed in the mix!
I’ll add more flower palettes as I make them, so bookmark this page and check back!
