As a rule to thumb, everything a link color needs to be is distinctive. It should always be possible for your website visitors to immediately spot what is a link and what is not – without hovering the mouse over it first.
All it takes to make links on your artist website identifiable as clickable is a distinct color – and maybe some text decoration (such as underline, bold, or italic), if you like.
For example, if you use dark text on a white background, and some words or phrases in the text are orange and underlined, then most users will immediately understand that those are links.
If they need confirmation, they can just hover their mouse over it to see if the cursor transforms into a hand… Doing that one time is enough. After that, users should be used to your link design!
Which brings us to the next point: consistency. While good hyperlinks do not always need to be blue, one thing they must be is consistent. That means if you’ve chosen to make links within your blog posts orange – keep them orange all through!
However, consistency means not that ALL links on your site need to be orange. Links in the navigation menu can have their own color, as can links in the footer section.
Consistency for hyperlink best practices means that all links within one area (navigation, header, footer, blog content…) should be consistent in color and style.