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Replacing colors not working?

Dec 16, 2011 8:32 PM

Hi,

 

I have a picture of an old retro tv that I want to change the edge color of the tv from red to sky blue.

I follow the steps from the Adobe Photoshop CS5 "Clasroom in a book" using the color replacement tool, size 15 pixels brush, hardness 40%, and spacing 25%, hue, continuous sampling, fine edges, tolerances 32% and auto-alias.

 

I brgan paintng and the color comes out in a very dark blue?

Did I miss something?

Is there a way to change the original red color to sky blue?

 
Replies
  • Currently Being Moderated
    Dec 21, 2011 1:26 PM   in reply to jksf13k

    Are you trying to change the color for a project of your own or just to follow the tutorial?  If you want to use the tutorial method, you should be able to select the blue color you want to use.  Quote from the Community Help:

     

     

    Specify a Replacement color by doing either of the following:

    • Drag the Hue, Saturation, and Lightness sliders (or enter values in the text boxes).
    • Double-click the Result swatch and use the Color Picker to select the replacement color.

     

    If your blue tone is too dark, try to adjust the lightness slider.

     

    Another way you could change the color is to add a hue/saturation adjustment layer, select Reds in the drop-down menu, and move the hue slider to the color you want.  You can use the adjustment layer's mask to mask out the effect on the parts of the image that shouldn't change from red to blue.

     
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  • Currently Being Moderated
    Dec 22, 2011 3:25 PM   in reply to jksf13k

    When you use the Hue/Saturation adjustment layer, activate the hand symbol with the arrows going left and right and click on the part of the image you want to change the color of. This will select the color channel that needs changing.  In the case of your TV screenshot, Cyans will be selected. Moving the hue slider to the right will make the cyans in your image less greenish.

     

     

     

     

    tv.jpg

     

     

    If you know the exact RGB values of the color blue you want, you should be able to input them in the Replace Color dialogue by clicking on the Result swatch and entering the values. However, the success of using that dialogue depends on how accurately you are able to select the color you want to change. The quality of the screenshot I was able to make from your post was quite poor so it was difficult to get an accurate selection of the area you want to change the color of by using the fuzziness slider.

     

    Another possibility would be to make a selection of the area you want to change (e.g. using the pen tool) and fill the selection with the color you want. If you have a swatch of the blue you want, you only have to make it your foreground color and fill the selection via Edit - Fill - Foreground color

     
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  • Currently Being Moderated
    Dec 22, 2011 5:07 PM   in reply to jksf13k

    You should be able to clean up the bottom edge with the clone stamp tool - it just needs some practice.   I just re-read your second post where you said you were helping someone to create a logo for a startup business - I had overlooked that part.  Is this TV part of the logo?  It normally makes sense to create vector artwork for logos (for example using a program like Illustrator) because it is scalable without losing quality, so you can use it in various ways. 

     
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  • Currently Being Moderated
    Dec 23, 2011 12:12 AM   in reply to jksf13k

    The point is if you create the logo as a vector drawing, you can use the same artwork for a letterhead, business card, coffee cup, sign, etc. etc. and the quality won't suffer when you change its size.  If you create it the way you are in Photoshop, you can't change its size without losing quality.  So my personal preference would be to start over and do the logo in Illustrator.

     

    I wish a designer would jump in here and give some professional advice.

     
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  • Currently Being Moderated
    Dec 25, 2011 8:09 PM   in reply to jksf13k

    I'll be brutally honest with you, or I won't be doing you any favors;  that logo cries out to be re-done from scratch in Illustrator.

     

    << non constructive criticism removed >>

     

    Besides, once you reduce that logo to a size that's appropriate for a business card, or even a letterhead, the text will be unreadable without a magnifying glass or loupe.

     

    Sorry.

     

     

    ____________

    Wo Tai Lao Le

    我太老了     

     
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