I was given this link, it may help.
http://fishingstatus.com/tools/lure-selector
I have seen it give a suggestion in the past, can't get one now.
The issue with it not giving recommendations has been fixed.
A lot of people will tell you colors don’t matter, and others will even swear by certain colors that they are most confident in. Certainly matching the hatch is a huge factor, but picking the right colors according to conditions can be the difference between a “slow” day or an epic one.
Several years ago I researched for several months how different colors appear in the water at different depths, color of water, clarity of water, times of the day, and even different season. What I found were that several of those old wives’ tales were true. Darker colors should be used on darker/cloudy days, poor water clarity, or early morning/late evening, and lighter colors on sunny days or in clean water. Silver in clean water, gold in dirty water. Dark green in green water, dark brown in brown water. Fall colors in autumn. The list goes on, and most of them have solid scientific backing to prove their truth.
There has also been a good bit of research of what colors fish see, and specifically what colors bass see the best. Yes, black makes a great silhouette and a lot of fish are caught with this color, but bass do see
Purple,
Blue,
Green the best, and in that order, which also happens to be the colors that are most easily seen at depth. Other human visible colors quickly become “grayed” out in the eyes of a bass, according to popular scientific opinion, especially at depth. However, all research suggest that bass see
Ultraviolet better than any other color. We can’t see Ultraviolet without a special light, but fish see this color the best. Now here is the kicker…
White, Pink, and Chartreuse naturally reflect UV light, as do silver/gold/mylar/chrome of course. Lures/plastics that have these colors or have been dipped/tipped, or have UV additives will outperform those that do not.
The good news is that many of the major brands have UV additives added to the plastics. Here is a video that explains it in more detail and you can see what I am talking about visually.
[video=youtube;TBe1btqbQ_k]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TBe1btqbQ_k[/video]
I am so convinced that UV is the key to catching more fish that I bought a UV light and went through all of my tackle and removed anything that did not reflect/glow with UV light, even if it was a black/purple/blue/green in color. And there is a difference between “glow in the dark” (aka luminescence) and UV.
Considering all of the above, that
fishing lure selector was built using a formula and algorithm that computes the best colors based on the provided conditions. By changing the water color, weather, time of day, etc., the recommendations are refined. To get a more local fishing analysis, check out the main dashboard/home page:
https://fishingstatus.com/home
Here is an example:
Falls Lake Fishing Forecast
It uses local fishing reports and provides recommendations based on species of fish being caught in your area. There is a lot more saltwater data than freshwater data, so if it does not have any recommendation, it is because there are not any reports in that area for that time of the year. However, if you add a report and specify the species (largemouth bass for example), it will provide recommendations based on that species of fish. It is currently limited to 78 species of fish, and some areas will have way more data than others. If you use the filters, and even changing the time of day, it can give widely different recommendations based on those scientific principles that I mentioned above.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, but I thought some would find this interesting and may be helpful for picking the right color. Feel free to ask any questions.