I was just looking at these the other day thinking about which ones to pick up for next spring. I was thinking about getting the bluebill, baby bass, and probably the perch one too. On top of those maybe add a craw and a firetiger. That's already over $35 right there. buying an insurance bait of each kind throws your tab up over $70. This is the only aspect of fishing I don't like.... draining my bank.
You don't really need every color, just a couple right colors for the water you are fishing. Since you are doing a lot of pond fishing, like me, I would definately suggest the bluegill and baby bass patterns. One because most of the bass' diet in those pond are probably coming from bluegill and baby bass. On top of that you mentioned that the water you fish is clear, so you want a natural pattern that is not going to throw the bass off. You want to give them just enough color to spot and react to the bait. You don;t need to throw Vegas lights and an amplifier on it, but bright colors in stained water won;t hurt.
Like I always say, if a bass can find their prey, which is naturally camoflagued, they'll be able to find a lure in a natural pattern without a problem.
Raul struck on a good point. Most of what is going to get a fish to strike your lure is the built in attributes like profile, action, vibration, sound, flash. Then you have to present it in the correct manner: fast, slow, stop start, twitching like an injured prey, burning it by them.
If you are planning on getting any DT 10's or 16's I would go with colors that stand out deeper in the water column like blues and purples.