Build beautiful IDE color themes with AI. Fine-tune colors, syntax highlighting, and typography. Export to VS Code, Cursor, JetBrains, Neovim, Helix, Zed, and more.
I'm Tiago. A few years ago I published a VS Code theme on the marketplace. I made it for myself, dark, neon, unapologetic, and figured a handful of CTF nerds might install it. It's now past 225,000 downloads.
That experience taught me more about editor themes than I ever expected to learn. A few things I didn't see coming:
People use your theme for 8 hours a day.
Every unreadable comment, every low-contrast parameter, every token you forgot to style, they all become a GitHub issue within a week. You learn fast.
"Looks cool in a screenshot" and "holds up in a real codebase" are different products.
My first version photographed beautifully and was exhausting to actually work in. I rebuilt it twice.
Every editor is its own country.
Porting HTB to JetBrains was a month of work. Zed was another week. Neovim had its own semantic token model. I kept shipping inconsistent versions across editors because syncing them by hand was miserable.
Accessibility isn't optional at scale.
Once you're past ~10k installs, every mistake is affecting real humans with real eyes on real monitors. I started measuring contrast after users told me comments were invisible on their laptops, and I found my own theme was failing WCAG AA in places. Humbling.
Themery is the tool I wish I'd had when I shipped HTB.
Describe a vibe, get a theme. Tell it "warm terminal amber, late-night, low eye strain" and it generates a full palette for you. Or bring your own colors, either way, every token lands on a contrast tier (critical, structural, semantic, contextual, ambient) with an enforced floor, validated against both WCAG 2.1 and APCA (the perceptual contrast model that's actually accurate for text on screens). One source of truth compiles to VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf, JetBrains, Zed, Neovim, and every major terminal, all at once, all consistent, all actually legible.
It's the answer to every issue I ever got on Hack The Box, crystallized into a tool so the next generation of theme designers doesn't have to learn it the hard way.
Free for everyone, forever: - AI theme generation (unlimited) - VS Code export - Terminal exports, Alacritty, Kitty, Warp, iTerm2, Windows Terminal
Pro, one-time $4.99, lifetime: - All other IDEs (Cursor, Windsurf, JetBrains, Zed, Neovim) - Dark + Light export together - Animations export - All 13 icon libraries + color overrides - APCA auto-fix to AAA - AI-generated Marketplace README - Procedural SVG extension icon - One-click Marketplace publish - Cloud-saved themes (no expiry)
No subscription. Pay once, own it. To celebrate the launch, use THEMERY60 at checkout for 60% off for the first 1000 users
I'll be in the comments all day. Would especially love feedback from anyone shipping a theme of their own, you know exactly what this is for.
- Tiago
About Themery on Product Hunt
“Build beautiful themes for your IDE”
Themery launched on Product Hunt on April 17th, 2026 and earned 62 upvotes and 5 comments, placing #36 on the daily leaderboard. Build beautiful IDE color themes with AI. Fine-tune colors, syntax highlighting, and typography. Export to VS Code, Cursor, JetBrains, Neovim, Helix, Zed, and more.
On the analytics side, Themery competes within Web App, Design Tools and Developer Tools — topics that collectively have 892.3k followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Themery performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Themery?
Themery was hunted by Tiago Peter. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
For a complete overview of Themery including community comment highlights and product details, visit the product overview.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Tiago. A few years ago I published a VS Code theme on the marketplace. I made it for myself, dark, neon, unapologetic, and figured a handful of CTF nerds might install it. It's now past 225,000 downloads.
That experience taught me more about editor themes than I ever expected to learn. A few things I didn't see coming:
People use your theme for 8 hours a day.
Every unreadable comment, every low-contrast parameter, every token you forgot to style, they all become a GitHub issue within a week. You learn fast.
"Looks cool in a screenshot" and "holds up in a real codebase" are different products.
My first version photographed beautifully and was exhausting to actually work in. I rebuilt it twice.
Every editor is its own country.
Porting HTB to JetBrains was a month of work. Zed was another week. Neovim had its own semantic token model. I kept shipping inconsistent versions across editors because syncing them by hand was miserable.
Accessibility isn't optional at scale.
Once you're past ~10k installs, every mistake is affecting real humans with real eyes on real monitors. I started measuring contrast after users told me comments were invisible on their laptops, and I found my own theme was failing WCAG AA in places. Humbling.
Themery is the tool I wish I'd had when I shipped HTB.
Describe a vibe, get a theme. Tell it "warm terminal amber, late-night, low eye strain" and it generates a full palette for you. Or bring your own colors, either way, every token lands on a contrast tier (critical, structural, semantic, contextual, ambient) with an enforced floor, validated against both WCAG 2.1 and APCA (the perceptual contrast model that's actually accurate for text on screens). One source of truth compiles to VS Code, Cursor, Windsurf, JetBrains, Zed, Neovim, and every major terminal, all at once, all consistent, all actually legible.
It's the answer to every issue I ever got on Hack The Box, crystallized into a tool so the next generation of theme designers doesn't have to learn it the hard way.
Free for everyone, forever:
- AI theme generation (unlimited)
- VS Code export
- Terminal exports, Alacritty, Kitty, Warp, iTerm2, Windows Terminal
Pro, one-time $4.99, lifetime:
- All other IDEs (Cursor, Windsurf, JetBrains, Zed, Neovim)
- Dark + Light export together
- Animations export
- All 13 icon libraries + color overrides
- APCA auto-fix to AAA
- AI-generated Marketplace README
- Procedural SVG extension icon
- One-click Marketplace publish
- Cloud-saved themes (no expiry)
No subscription. Pay once, own it.
To celebrate the launch, use THEMERY60 at checkout for 60% off for the first 1000 users
I'll be in the comments all day. Would especially love feedback from anyone shipping a theme of their own, you know exactly what this is for.
- Tiago