The word 'palette' traces the journey of a flat piece of wood from the garden to the artist's studio. French 'palette' was a diminutive of 'pale' (a flat blade or shovel), which descended from Latin 'pāla' (a spade, shovel, or the broad flat blade of an oar). The connection is purely physical: a palette is a small, flat, blade-shaped board, and the word simply named an object by its shape.
Latin 'pāla' itself has a contested deeper etymology. Some scholars connect it to 'pangere' (to fix, fasten, plant), suggesting an original sense of 'planting tool.' Others relate it to a root meaning 'flat' or 'broad,' connecting it to the same family as 'plain,' 'plane,' and 'palm' (the flat of the hand). The uncertainty hardly matters for the English word: by the time 'palette' entered English in the early seventeenth century, it had already completed its transformation from agricultural implement to artistic tool.
The palette as a physical object has a specific history. Medieval painters typically mixed their pigments in shells, dishes, or directly on the painting surface. The oval or kidney-shaped wooden palette with a thumb-hole — the form that became iconic — emerged in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries as oil painting techniques demanded larger working areas for mixing and blending colors. The palette became an emblem of the painter's art, depicted in self-portraits and still lifes as a symbol of the artist's identity.
The metaphorical extension of 'palette' — from the physical board to the range of colors used upon it — occurred naturally. To speak of 'Rembrandt's palette' is to describe not the piece of wood he held but the warm ochres, deep browns, and luminous golds that characterize his paintings. This metonymic shift (from container to contents) gave 'palette' its most productive modern sense: the total range of expressive resources available to an artist.
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, 'palette' has expanded far beyond painting. A 'color palette' in graphic design refers to a coordinated set of colors used in a website, brand identity, or publication. A 'flavor palette' describes a chef's characteristic range of ingredients and seasonings. A 'tonal palette' in music describes the range of instruments, registers, and timbres a composer employs. An 'emotional palette' describes the range of feelings an actor or writer
The digital revolution has made 'palette' ubiquitous. Every image-editing program offers a 'color palette' — a visual array of available colors. Every word processor offers a 'font palette.' Game designers speak of 'tile palettes' and 'texture palettes.' The word has become the standard term for any organized display of options from which a user selects.
The three English homophones — palette (color board), pallet (shipping platform or straw bed), and palate (roof of the mouth) — create frequent confusion. All three are connected to the idea of flatness: a palette is a flat board, a pallet is a flat platform, and the palate is the flat roof of the mouth. But their etymological paths diverge: 'palette' from Latin 'pāla' through French, 'pallet' from Old French 'paillet' (a bundle of straw, diminutive of 'paille,' straw, from Latin 'palea'), and 'palate' from Latin 'palātum' (roof of the mouth, of uncertain origin).
The most evocative thing about 'palette' is its dual meaning: both the physical tool and the abstract concept, both the board in the painter's hand and the spectrum of possibilities in the painter's imagination. To choose a palette is to choose a vocabulary of color, a set of constraints that simultaneously limits and enables expression. The best artists are often defined not by the colors they use but by the colors they leave out — the palette is as much about exclusion as inclusion.