ZonoTools
//Color Wheel (spinner)

Color Wheel Spinner — Teams & Zones (Not a Color Converter)

Manage Items

Add options to include in the wheel.

Current items (6)

Red team
Blue team
Green team
Yellow team
Purple team
Orange team
Tap Spin Wheel to draw a random option.

How to use

  1. Rename slices to match physical props—bandanas, cones, or classroom table accent colors.
  2. Clarify upfront this page randomizes labels, not Pantone values or WCAG contrast checks.
  3. Spin once teams need balancing; duplicate slices if certain colors represent heavier workloads.
  4. Screenshot Recent Results when relay races require proof of lane assignments.
  5. Between events, clear history so subsequent tournaments inherit unbiased logs.

FAQ

Is this a design color wheel for HEX/RGB?

No—it is a lucky wheel with color words on slices. Use our Color Converter category for actual color math and accessibility tooling.

Why duplicate hub functionality?

Search intent differs—people typing ‘color wheel spinner’ expect party splits, not chromatic diagrams.

Can color-blind players use it?

Pair slices with icons or patterns in your spoken narration; consider renaming arcs plus pairing tactile props physically.

Is data uploaded?

No cloud pipeline captures spins; color labels remain inside your session tab.

Color wheel spinner teams

A color wheel spinner solves playground logistics faster than arguing over jersey hues—every slice wears a color-coded identity hosts can map to cones, bracelets, or breakout corners instantly.

What is this color wheel?

Mechanically identical to every hub lucky wheel; conceptually it distinguishes itself from design tooling by focusing on human-readable color nouns rather than spectral measurements.

When facilitators narrate spins aloud, participants correlate arcs with tangible markers instead of abstract sliders.

Key features

  • Preset team labels illustrating balanced rotations for field-day mechanics.
  • Manage Items flexibility renaming arcs into bilingual color vocabulary for immersion classrooms.
  • Recent Results trail documenting rainbow relays judged remotely via streamed PE classes.
  • Touch-first UX surviving grassy fingerprints better than paper slips blowing away outdoors.

Common use cases

  • STEM fairs assigning judging lanes via chromatic metaphors kids memorize quickly.
  • Creative retreats splitting critique pods without awkward numbering stigma.
  • Streaming charities painting murals segment-by-segment after spins assign scaffold responsibilities.

Best practices

  • Always pair color names with redundant cues (numbers, shapes) for accessibility parity.
  • Preview arcs on actual projector hardware—neon greens may blow out on cheap bulbs.
  • Translate idiomatic colors carefully (“bleu” vs “blue”) when multinational crews collaborate.
  • Cross-link learners needing true color science back to dedicated converter documentation politely.